Bobby Miller (filmmaker)

Bobby Miller is a writer/director whose short film "TUB" world premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2010. It went on to play Cannes, SXSW, and other film festivals around the world.[1] Miller recently worked at BuzzFeed as a video producer, but left to write and direct his first feature film, "The Master Cleanse".[2] He's a 2009 graduate of Columbia University's Graduate MFA Film Program and currently lives in Los Angeles, CA.[1]


Career

While attending Columbia, Bobby got his start in the movie industry working for Warner Brothers in 2006. He went on to work for The Onion in 2007, writing headlines for the newspaper and sketches for the Onion News Network. He then joined Next New Networks writing online commercials. Bobby then moved into the realm of online content for NNN, working as a writer, director, editor, producer, and finally as host. He was the star of two variety shows The Best Short Films in the World and The Reel Good Show, both of which won Webby Awards in 2009 and 2010 respectively.[3] He then wrote, directed, and hosted "That Movie Show",[4] a web series for MTV networks.

In 2012, Miller was named Digital Content Manager for Rainn Wilson’s SoulPancake where he helped find and develop Kid President.[1] From 2013-2014, Bobby worked at BuzzFeed as a video producer, where he created/wrote/directed the “Creepy Things" series, as well as various other videos. The BuzzFeed Creepy Guy series went viral with “Things You Do Online That’d Be Creepy In Real Life" It spawned a total of 8 Creep videos that Bobby wrote/directed, which also continued the viral trend. It’s still the best performing narrative video series on BuzzFeed and features Andrew "Creepy Guy" Ilnyckyj.

In 2014 he left BuzzFeed to write/direct his first feature film, "The Master Cleanse" starring Johnny Galecki, Anna Friel, Anjelica Huston, and Oliver Platt.[5] It will premiere at SXSW 2016 and was named one of "7 Hidden Gems in the 2016 Features Lineup" by Indiewire.[6]

He's represented by Mike Esola and rock and roll band, Compass at UTA.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 23, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.