Martin Campbell

This talented director first gained world-wide attention for his British TV fare, including "Reilly: Ace of Spies" (1984), starring a dashing Sam Neill, and the much-touted series "Edge of Darkness" (1986), an elaborately conceived thriller which depicted murder and high-ranking corruption. Born in New Zealand, Campbell moved to England in 1966 and trained as a cameraman before making his directing debut with the erotic thriller "The Sex Thief" (1974). After the equally naughty "Her Family Jewels" (1975), Campbell made his producing debut with "Black Joy" (1977) and "Scum" (1979).

For British TV, Campbell helmed the police series "Bergerac" (1982), "Reilly: Ace of Spies", the premiere episode of the popular "Edge of Darkness" and "Charlie" (1987). Arguably, it was the critical and popular success of "Edge of Darkness" which paved the way for Campbell's cross-over to American thrillers like "Criminal Law" (1988), starring Kevin Bacon and Gary Oldman, and "Defenseless" (1991), with Barbara Hershey and Sam Shepard. These two modest suspense films rested heavily on their actors, in sharp contrast to Campbell's 1994 effort "No Escape". A futuristic Ray Liotta vehicle, produced by Gale Anne Hurd, it was a departure into the action adventure genre for Campbell.

With his background in action, he was chosen to direct "GoldenEye" (1995), the 17th James Bond film, and the first to star Pierce Brosnan as 007. Campbell then impressed audiences with the stylish and lavishly filmed derring-do of "The Mask of Zorro" (1998), which also subtly sent-up the conventions of the swashbuckling hero, at last made a marquee name out of star Antonio Banderas in America and provided the breakthrough role for Catherine Zeta-Jones--he would return seven years later for the entertaining sequel "The Legend of Zorro" (2005) after his two follow-ups, the lackluster thriller "Vertical Limit" (2000) and the well-intentioned international political melodrama "Beyond Borders" (2003) starring Angelina Jolie failed to drum up much business at the box office. After the second "Zorro" film he returned to another familiar property to helm "Casino Royale" (lensed 2006), the 21st James Bond film and the first to feature Daniel Craig as the superspy in a plotline that promised to adhere more closely to Ian Fleming's original novel than other 007 efforts.

Campbell's talents for TV have not been overlooked in the States: he has directed the detective thriller "Cast a Deadly Spell" (HBO, 1991), two 1993 episodes of the NBC police drama "Homicide: Life on the Street" and, after his big-screen successes, the pilot of the short-lived crime drama "10-8: Officers on Duty" (2003).

  • Born:
    in New Zealand
  • Job Titles:
    Director, Producer, Video cameraman
Significant Others
  • Wife: Carol Campbell.
Milestones
  • 1966 Moved from New Zealand to the UK
  • 1974 Feature directorial debut, "The Sex Thief"
  • 1977 Debut as producer, "Black Joy"
  • 1988 American film directorial debut, "Criminal Law"
  • 1994 Helmed the sci-fi action adventure "No Escape"
  • 1995 Directed the James Bond feature "GoldenEye"
  • 1998 Won plaudits for directing "The Mask of Zorro"
  • 2000 Helmed "Vertical Limits"
  • 2003 Directed Angelina Jolie and Clive Owen in "Beyond Borders"
  • 2005 Reunited with Antonio Banderas and Catherine Zeta-Jones to direct the sequal "The Legend of Zorro"
  • 2006 Directed the 21st James Bond film, "Casino Royale" starring Daniel Craig as 007 and based on the first novel in the James Bond series written by Ian Fleming
  • Made TV directorial debut with the series "The Professionals"

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