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Richard Wenk

Highest Rated: 83% Fast Charlie (2023)

Lowest Rated: 11% Renegades (2017)

Birthday: Not Available

Birthplace: Plainfield, New Jersey, USA

Screenwriter and director Richard Wenk began his career in the low-budget horror field with Roger Corman's "Vamp" (1986), but eventually worked his way up to one of Hollywood's most successful action writers, with box office hits like "The Expendables 2" (2012) and "The Equalizer" (2014) among his credits. Born in Plainfield, New Jersey in 1956, Wenk developed an interest in film while in high school through a teacher who introduced him to the vibrant revival house scene in New York City. He pursued a degree in film studies at New York University, and began landing production jobs shortly after graduation. While working on a "ABC Afterschool Special" (ABC, 1972-1997), Wenk utilized some of the crew from that project to work on a short horror-comedy film called "Dracula Bites the Big Apple" (1979) that made the rounds on the festival circuit. In 1982, Wenk received a master class in filmmaking when he was hired to serve as assistant to John Huston on the screen version of the hit Broadway musical "Annie" (1982); four years later, independent film pioneer Roger Corman saw a screening of "Dracula" and hired Wenk to write the script for a teen-oriented vampire comedy called "Vamp" (1986). After reading Wenk's finished project, producer Donald Borchers allowed him to also direct the picture, which starred Grace Jones and Chris Makepeace. Though a minor hit, "Vamp" did not lay the foundation for Wenk's subsequent film career; he would spend much of the next decade toiling on scripts for Hollywood features that went unproduced. In 1999, he wrote and directed the United Artists comedy-drama "Just the Ticket" with Andy Garcia and Andie MacDowell, which received an uncredited edit by Francis Ford Coppola; the picture went largely unseen, and his next turn in the director's chair, the supernatural thriller "Wishcraft" (2002), went directly to home video. Two decades of work in the film industry finally paid off in 2006 when director Richard Donner made Wenk's thriller "16 Blocks" with star Bruce Willis. The success of the picture led to a slow but steady string of big-budget genre films, including a stint as producer on the comedy "The Girl Next Door" (2004) and screenplays for the Jason Statham-led remake of "The Mechanic" in 2011. The following year, Wenk was tapped to pen "The Expendables 2" (2012), the follow-up to the massively successful Sylvester Stallone action-comedy; Wenk's next effort, "The Equalizer" (2014), which cast Denzel Washington in the vigilante role played by Edward Woodward in the CBS series (1985-1989), was an equally sizable hit and prompted word of a sequel, also with Washington.

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Highest-Rated Movies

83% 83% Fast Charlie Watchlist 76% 94% The Equalizer 3 Watchlist
68% 67% The Expendables 2
Watchlist
64% 82% The Protégé Watchlist 64% 71% The Magnificent Seven Watchlist 61% 77% The Equalizer Watchlist
55% 57% 16 Blocks
Watchlist
54% 51% The Mechanic
Watchlist
52% 61% The Equalizer 2 Watchlist
40% 49% Vamp
Watchlist

Filmography

Movies TV Shows
Kraven the Hunter 16% 74% 2024 Screenwriter Fast Charlie 83% 83% 2023 Screenwriter The Equalizer 3 76% 94% 2023 Screenwriter The Protégé 64% 82% 2021 Screenwriter The Equalizer 2 52% 61% 2018 Screenwriter Renegades 11% 40% 2017 Screenwriter Jack Reacher: Never Go Back 37% 42% 2016 Writer The Magnificent Seven 64% 71% 2016 Screenwriter Countdown 33% 2016 Screenwriter Countdown 2016 Writer The Equalizer 61% 77% 2014 Screenwriter The Expendables 2 68% 67% 2012 Screenwriter The Mechanic 54% 51% 2011 Screenwriter 16 Blocks 55% 57% 2006 Writer Just the Ticket 23% 38% 1999 Director, Writer National Lampoon's Attack of the 5' 2" Women 24% 1994 Director Vamp 40% 49% 1986 Director
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