John Flynn(1932-2007)
- Director
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
- Writer
John Flynn was a very fine, efficient and sadly underrated director who
excelled at making mean'n'lean crime pictures. His movies are
distinguished by tight plots, a hard, no-nonsense tone, and a taut,
streamlined and fiercely economical directorial style. John was born on
March 14, 1932 in Chicago, Illinois and raised in Manhattan Beach,
California. He served in the coast guard, where he studied journalism
with "Roots" author Alex Haley. Flynn received a degree in journalism
from UCLA. John began his cinematic career as an apprentice to director
Robert Wise on "Odds Against Tomorrow" and was the script supervisor
for "West Side Story." He then went on to work as a second unit
director on such features as "Kid Galahad," "Two for the Seesaw," and
"The Great Escape." Flynn made his debut as director with the obscure
"The Sergent." He followed this film with the equally little seen "The
Jerusalem File." John scored his first substantial commercial success
with the superbly gritty "The Outfit." Flynn achieved his greatest
enduring cult popularity with the marvelously tough and potent revenge
thriller winner "Rolling Thunder." His subsequent movies are likewise
solid and worthwhile; they include the exciting urban vigilante opus
"Defiance," the terrific "Best Seller," the sturdy Sylvestor Stallone
prison drama "Lock Up," the above average Steven Seagal action vehicle
"Out for Justice," and the nifty virtual reality horror outing
"Brainscan." John did two made-for-cable-TV pictures in the early 90s:
the fun Dennis Hopper cop flick "Nails" and the enjoyable crime drama
"Scam." His last film was the passable direct-to-video mobster item
"Protection." John Flynn died at age 75 on April 4, 2007.