John Moore(V)
- Camera and Electrical Department
- Director
- Producer
John Moore was born in Dundalk, Ireland in 1970, a small town situated
about 60 miles from the country's capital Dublin. Moore attended a
technical college in Dublin where he studied filmmaking and after
completing the school he went on to direct and write a series of short
films all produced in his native Ireland. These include
Jack's Bicycle (1990) which has
been broadcasted on Irish TV channel RTV on occasion. Moore then was
hired to make a series of commercials and ended up making the launch
advertisement for the Sega Dreamcast, the ad was so bombastic and
visually impressive that Twentieth Century Fox ended up offering him
the job on
Behind Enemy Lines (2001), a
$40 million action film centered around the conflict in Bosnia. The
film starred Gene Hackman and
Owen Wilson. Whilst a modest
box-office success the film fared only average with critics who varied
in their opinions, and in later years Moore himself admitted that
perhaps his approach had been to lightweight and a conflict of that
scope required a more deep and thoughtful motion picture. On the set of
Behind Enemy Lines (2001)
Moore was nearly killed via a Tank in an action sequence and had his
life saved in the last moment by a stuntman who dragged him from harm's
way. Moore's next film was a remake of
The Flight of the Phoenix (1965)
and shared the same name only dropping the "the" at the titles
beginning.
Flight of the Phoenix (2004)
starred Dennis Quaid and
Miranda Otto and told virtually the same
story as the original, a group of people stranded in the desert after a
plane crash. The picture was a huge box-office flop making just
slightly over $21 million worldwide on a considerably larger budget.
Critics showed the same unsure reaction to the film as they had on
Behind Enemy Lines (2001), lavishing praise on certain aspects but
harshly criticizing others. Moore himself was more pleased with the
finished article on this occasion but the public's financial rejection
suggests others weren't. After this Moore was involved with two other
films one entitled "The last mission" which collapsed due to script
issues and the 2006 smash
X-Men: The Last Stand (2006).
In the end it was not Moore who directed the third in the X-Men trilogy
but Rush Hour 2 (2001) director
Brett Ratner. However Moore did manage to
get a film into cinemas during Summer 2006 in the end, he remade
The Omen (1976) and had it released on
the 06/06/06, a gimmick associated with the films satanic plot.
The Omen (2006) was a fairly faithful
remake and starred Julia Stiles along with
Liev Schreiber and
David Thewlis. Moore agreed to make the
film as he names the 1976 original among his all time favorite movies
along with Jaws (1975) and
Freaks (1932). The film made a worldwide
$120 million from a $25 million budget and thus had to be considered a
success in terms of box-office. The critics were once more split, most
criticized the picture for following the original too closely but by
the same token generally a kind word was spared for Moore's impressive
visuals and the strong cast. This marked the director's third
collaboration with Twentieth Century Fox, a fourth arriving in the form
of video-game adaptation
Max Payne (2008) in October 2008.
Moore currently resides with his son and partner, Fiona Connon in Los Angeles occasionally returning home to Ireland.
Moore currently resides with his son and partner, Fiona Connon in Los Angeles occasionally returning home to Ireland.