Danny Cannon
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Danny Cannon (born 1968, in Luton, England) is a film and television screenwriter, director and producer.
He began making films at the age of 16 in 1984, and started a youth experimental theatre group at 33 Arts Centre. Using the centre's facilities, he was a very prolific director of video dramas and collaborated with a number of other directors in different roles including cameraman. A major influence was the centre's video maker, Dermot Byrne with whom he worked on a number of projects. It was at 33 that he met the future film composer David Arnold who played in a band that rehearsed there. Danny convinced David that he could compose soundtracks for his and other people's videos. David's first but not the last soundtrack for Dermot was 'The Undead' written by Keith Moyes. By 1987 he was awarded the BBC Young Filmmaker of the Year Award for a 40-minute short called Sometimes. He enrolled at the National Film and Television School in 1988, from which he graduated in 1990.
He wrote and directed Strangers (1990) and The Young Americans (1993). Based on his work on the later gangster film, producers signed him up to direct the big-budget, but ultimately poorly-received film Judge Dredd (1995), starring Sylvester Stallone. Since then he has also directed Phoenix (1998), and I Still Know What You Did Last Summer (1998). Beginning in 2000, he has directed and produced [various CSI television series. In 2005 he directed Goal!.
[edit] Trivia
- In 1987 Cannon, then a teenager, entered a competition in the British comic 2000AD to design a poster for a possible future film of Judge Dredd. His work was published in the comic's "Prog 534" edition. In his poster, he imagined that the director of the film would be Ridley Scott, with Harrison Ford starring in the title role. [1]