Duncan Gibbins

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Duncan Gibbins
Born Duncan Gibbins
October 13, 1952(1952-10-13)
Malibu, California
Died November 3, 1993 (aged 41)
Years active 1986–1993

Duncan Gibbins (October 13, 1952 - November 3, 1993) was a British film and music video director, as well as a screenwriter.[1] Gibbins was known for his romance and thriller films as well as for the various music videos he directed.[2] Gibbons first break was with the 1986 release of, Fire with Fire, about a young woman who attends a Catholic school and a young man from a nearby prison camp who fall in love with each other and must runaway together to escape the law, the church and their parents.[3] On November 3, 1993 Gibbons died as a result of third degree burns he received from a fire at the home he was renting. He was forty-one years old at the time of his death.[4]

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[edit] Biography

Born in Cornwall, England on October 13, 1952 Duncan Gibbins started his career out as an actor on radio and in television. At one point, Gibbins decided that he wanted to try out journalism but found that he didn’t much care for it. Before coming to the US in the mid-1980s, he produced and directed a few documentaries for the BBC and made music videos for such groups as the Eurythmics and Wham.[5] He made his feature-film debut in the U.S. with the 1986 romantic thriller, Fire with Fire in 1986 which starred actors Craig Sheffer and Virginia Madsen.[6] Later Gibbins co-penned the script for Roger Spottiswoode's Third Degree Burn, a made-for-TV movie in 1989. In 1991 Gibbins released, Eve of Destruction, an action thriller film starring Gregory Hines about a female scientist who creates a sexy android version of herself and equips it with both the passionate emotions she lacks and also a nuclear bomb, then the trouble begins. [7] Gibbins made his final film, A Case for Murder in 1993, which starred Jennifer Grey and Peter Berg about a lawyer who gets involved with her partner, then suspects him of murder in a case they are trying together.[8]

[edit] Death

On November 3, 1993 Duncan Gibbins narrowly escaped a wildfire that was roaring through all of Southern California and was engulfing the home he was renting in flames. Gibbins decided to go back in to rescue a cat that he saw in the burning building. While trying to rescue the cat, he received severe burns and died later at Sherman Oaks Hospital and Health Center's burn unit as a result. Days later, the cat was found unharmed save for a few minor burns.[9]

[edit] Music Videos

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[edit] Feature Films

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[edit] References

[edit] External links