Brian Patrick O'Toole

Brian Patrick O'Toole
Occupation Producer, writer

Brian Patrick O'Toole is an American film producer and screenwriter.[1] O'Toole's work includes co-producing the 2002 horror film Dog Soldiers and his screenwriting debut Cemetery Gates. He writes a monthly column for the prominent American magazine Fangoria and currently works with Black Gate Entertainment, with whom he has written and produced several films, including Basement Jack, Evilution and the upcoming Necropolitan and A Necessary Evil. He also wrote the screenplays for the Atlas Shrugged film adaptations.

Life and work

He began his career as a literary agent with the Leslie Kallen Literary Agency and the Helen Garrett Talent Agency before moving on to film producing. Mr. O'Toole's work as script consultant has brought him work with such producers and directors as Sydney Pollack, George A. Romero, Guillermo Del Toro, Dan Curtis, Hector Elizondo, Mickey Borofsky, Howard Kazanjian and Neil Marshall, among others. He studied extensively with UCLA's Chairman of Screenwriting Richard Walter and was a member of the Player's Workshop of the Second City in Chicago. Over 20 years of screenwriting and producing career, Mr O'Toole rebooted the werewolf genre with Dog Soldiers, combined horror with comedy in Cemetery Gates, and was one of the first independent filmmakers to use a computer generated character in SleepStalker. In 2007, Mr. O'Toole wrote and produced his first digital films: the zombie actioner Evilution and the thriller Basement Jack. His films have received numerous awards from U.S. and International film festivals. Outside the horror genre, Mr. O'Toole has co-produced the festival favorite Neo Ned and the action thriller Death Valley. His script for Atlas Shrugged: Part I, co-written with John Aglialoro, did not prevent that film's failure. Beyond film, he also, for a period of seven years, wrote a monthly column for Fangoria magazine since 2005, commenting on the world of video gaming.

Filmography

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, April 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.