Gregg Bishop

Gregg Bishop

Writer, Director, Producer Gregg Bishop
Born Powder Springs, Georgia, United States
Occupation Screenwriter, Director, Producer
Website www.greggbishop.com

Gregg Bishop is an American film director, producer, and writer.

Early life

Gregg Bishop grew up in Powder Springs, Georgia and started making movies with his father's Super 8 film cameras when he was 7 years old. He completed over 50 short films by age 16. Bishop attended McEachern High School where he wrote & directed his first full-length feature, a spy-thriller, at 17 years of age.[1]

Bishop attended the USC School of Cinematic Arts in the Film Production Program. When he was a junior at the film school, he wrote and directed the short film Voodoo, which is now screened at orientation for incoming USC film students along with the short films Electronic Labyrinth THX 1138 4EB by George Lucas and The Lift by Robert Zemeckis.[2]

Career

After graduating from the University of Southern California filmschool, Bishop took the profits he made from his short film Voodoo and financed his feature film The Other Side himself with $15,000.[3] The supernatural action/thriller starred Jaimie Alexander in her first leading role and premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival in Park City, Utah where it was picked up for a 2007 theatrical release.[4] In 2008, Bishop began developing the movie as a TV series at Fox Television Studios.[5]

Bishop directed and produced Dance of the Dead in 2008, starring Jared Kusnitz, Lucas Till, Blair Redford, Laura Slade Wiggins and Justin Welborn. The movie had its World Premiere at the SXSW Film Festival and was hand-picked by director Sam Raimi for distribution through Lions Gate Entertainment and Ghost House Pictures.[6]

In 2011, Bishop wrote and directed The Birds of Anger starring Jaimie Alexander for NBCUniversal G4Films. The film was based on the best-selling mobile game, Rovio's Angry Birds, told in the style of the 1963 film The Birds by Alfred Hitchcock.[7] In the same year he directed the segment Amateur Night of the Anthology film V/H/S. The segment was 2015 outcoupled to a feature film, with the title Siren.[8]

Bishop wrote and directed a segment called Dante The Great for the third installment of the highly acclaimed V/H/S franchise called V/H/S: Viral (2014) which hit theaters November 21, 2014. [9]

Bishop sold his spec screenplay Lockdown at Franklin High in a bidding war to Sony Pictures with Michael Bay and Platinum Dunes attached to produce.[10]

Filmography

References

External links

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