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John Crowley

Highest Rated: 97% Brooklyn (2015)

Lowest Rated: 24% The Goldfinch (2019)

Birthday: Aug 19, 1969

Birthplace: Cork, Ireland

Critical praise for director John Crowley's productions of complex plays by Martin McDonagh and Harold Pinter led to a second career as a filmmaker on such thoughtful and often dark features as "Boy A" (2007), "Is Anybody There?" (2008) and "Brooklyn" (2015). Born Aug. 19, 1969 in Cork, Ireland, Crowley earned his bachelor's degree in English and Philosophy and a master's degree in Philosophy from University College Cork, where he also became interested in theater. He soon began directing plays in Dublin and London before forging relationships with such celebrated theater companies as the Donmar Warehouse and Royal Shakespeare Company in the late '90s. Crowley made his film directorial debut in 2000 with an adaptation of Samuel Beckett's "Come and Go" for "Beckett on Film," a series of screen versions of the playwright's works for RTE, Channel 4 and the Irish Film Board. In 2003, he made his first feature film, "Intermission," a black comedy with interlacing storylines about figures on both sides of the law; that same year, he directed the London production of Martin McDonagh's "The Pillowman," and brought the production to Broadway for its Tony-nominated run in 2005. Crowley continued to remain active in English theater while also honing his screen career with an adaptation of Harold Pinter's "The Celebration" (More4, 2007), with Michael Gambon, Colin Firth and Sophie Okonedo, and the crime drama "Boy A," which earned him and star Andrew Garfield 2008 BAFTA TV Awards. Crowley then directed Michael Caine in the introspective drama "Is Anybody There?" before returning to Broadway for "A Steady Rain" (2009), a two-person drama with Daniel Craig and Hugh Jackman that earned blockbuster ticket sales, and then McDonagh's black comedy "A Behanding in Spokane" (2010), starring Christopher Walken and Sam Rockwell. His next feature, "Closed Circuit" (2013), with Eric Bana and Rebecca Hall, drew mixed reviews, but his next screen effort, "Brooklyn," with Saoirse Ronan as an Irish immigrant in 1950s New York, received excellent reviews and was selected for the Special Presentations section of the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival.

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Highest rated movies

97% 87% Brooklyn Watchlist
88% 87% Boy A
Watchlist
78% 83% We Live in Time Watchlist
73% 75% Intermission
Watchlist
65% 55% Is Anybody There?
Watchlist
43% 31% Closed Circuit
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24% 72% The Goldfinch Watchlist
56% Celebration
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Filmography

Movies

Credit
78% 83% We Live in Time Director - 2024
24% 72% The Goldfinch Director $5.3M 2019
97% 87% Brooklyn Director $38.3M 2015
43% 31% Closed Circuit Director $5.7M 2013
65% 55% Is Anybody There? Director $2.0M 2008
88% 87% Boy A Director $106.4K 2007
No Score Yet 56% Celebration Director - 2007
73% 75% Intermission Director $889.9K 2003

TV

Credit
83% 80% Black Mirror Director 2023
100% 85% Life After Life Director 2022