Bruce McDonald (director)

Bruce McDonald

McDonald at the premier of Trigger
at the TIFF 2010
Born (1959-05-28) May 28, 1959
Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Residence Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Alma mater Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada
Occupation Film director

Bruce McDonald (born May 28, 1959) is a Canadian film and television director, best known for his cult film Hard Core Logo.

Life and career

McDonald was born in Kingston, Ontario, and later graduated from the film program at Ryerson University. His first movie was The Plunge Murderer, followed by a feature-length zombie flick, Our Glorious Dead, made with his grandfather's super-8 camera and shot on location at his Rexdale, Ontario high school, North Albion Collegiate. The film premiered in the school cafeteria and made $100.

His more successful feature films have included Let Me See(...), Knock Knock, Roadkill (1989), Highway 61 (1991), for which he won Best Director at the highly regarded San Sebastián International Film Festival, Dance Me Outside (1994), Hard Core Logo (1996) and Picture Claire (2001). Roadkill won most Outstanding Canadian Film at the Toronto International Film Festival and Hard Core Logo has been frequently ranked amongst the greatest movies ever to come out of Canada.[1] McDonald earned some notoriety when he quipped, while accepting his $25,000 prize from TIFF for Roadkill, that he planned to spend the money on "a big chunk of hash".[2]

He has also directed episodes of many television series, including Lonesome Dove, Twitch City, Degrassi: The Next Generation, Instant Star, Queer as Folk, ReGenesis, This Is Wonderland and Cracked.

He completed shooting The Tracey Fragments (2006) in Toronto, which premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival. While shooting the scenes took him only two weeks, he spent nine months in post-production.

He directed the horror film Pontypool, which was selected as one of the best Canadian films of 2008 by the Toronto International Film Festival and is set for release in March 2009.

He recently completed shooting a video and documentary, entitled The Rawside of Die Mannequin with Canadian sleaze rock band Die Mannequin.[3]

This Movie Is Broken, a concert film on Broken Social Scene was released on June 25, 2010.[4]

In 2009, McDonald directed three short films for the cross-platform project City Sonic. McDonald, along with six other directors, shot 20 short films about Toronto musicians and the places where their musical lives were transformed. McDonald directed films starring Die Mannequin, the Cancer Bats and Geddy Lee of Rush.[5] His 2010 film Trigger was the first film ever screened at Toronto's new TIFF Bell Lightbox.[6]

Hard Core Logo 2 premiered at the Whistler Film Festival on December 4, 2010 with the members of Die Mannequin and McDonald walking the red carpet. It had its second screening at the Victoria Film Festival on February 6, 2011 with McDonald and producer Rob Merilees present.

In 2011, he produced the documentary television series Yonge Street: Toronto Rock & Roll Stories, focusing on the history of the Yonge Street music scene in Toronto in the 1960s, for Bravo.[7]

In 2014, he directed the horror thriller Hellions.

Personal

He currently resides in Toronto with his wife, cinematographer and filmmaker Dany Chiasson, and their daughter.[8]

References

External links

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