John August- Biography

About John August

Talented young screenwriter John August made his film debut with "Go" (1999), Doug Liman's fast-paced follow-up to the successful independent "Swingers" (1997). Initially written to be a short film entitled "X", his script evolved over two years into the feature length "Go". A thrilling comic caper as sharp as it was exciting, August's clever screenplay featured three intertwined stories held together by surprisingly smart coincidences. This debut showcased his talent for penning smooth and credible dialogue, and setting up situations at once outrageous and strangely plausible. Sometimes billed as a "Pulp Fiction" for the younger set, and accused of being irresponsible in terms of the representation of drugs and sex, the energetic "Go" was mislabeled, often grouped in with the booming teen film resurgence because of its young and attractive cast, but still managed a strong box office showing. August's honest, optimistic, yet largely unglamorous depiction of rave life was an unabashed wild ride, his script served well by the cast's strong performances and Liman's vibrant direction. While enjoying the critical and popular success of "Go" (on which he also served as co-producer and second unit director), August was hard at work on several developing projects including adapting screenplays for the children's themed films "A Wrinkle In Time" and "How to Eat Fried Worms" as well as a feature remake of the popular television program "Fantasy Island". Also in the pipeline were "The Blue Streak" (1999), an action comedy starring Martin Lawrence and Luke Wilson, the script of which he contributed to, and the writer-producer's television series debut, the pilot for a promising politically themed ensemble drama "DC" (The WB).

Education

University of Southern California, Los Angeles , California
Drake University, Des Moines , Iowa

Career Milestones

1999

Co-wrote the Martin Lawrence feature, The Blue Streak

1999

Debut film as writer, co-producer and second unit director of Doug Liman s well-received fast-paced ensemble, Go

2000

Penned the screenplay for Charlie s Angels, a big screen adaptation of the popular 70 s TV show; directed by McG

2003

Penned the screenplay for Big Fish a classic tale directed by Tim Burton and starring Ewan McGregor and Albert Finney

2003

Reteamed with McG to write the screenplay for Charlie s Angels: Full Throttle

2005

Adapted Roald Dahl s classic tale for the big screen Charlie and the Chocolate Factory ; directed by Tim Burton and Starring Johnny Depp as Willy Wonka

2005

Co-penned Tim Burton s Corpse Bride, a stop-motion-animation film

2007

Directorial debut, an independently-produced drama, The Nines ; also wrote the screenplay; debuted at Sundance