Eduardo Rodríguez (director)

Eduardo Rodríguez is a Venezuelan film director and screenwriter whose professional career in the United States began after Bob Weinstein, founder of Dimension Films, offered Eduardo a contract to direct three feature films in 2002.[1] Details of his unusual deal were featured on the front page of Variety on April 17, 2002, as well in articles from Entertainment Weekly (May 3, 2002) and Premiere Magazine (August 2002). Eduardo was also anointed a member of Entertainment Weekly's 2002 "It List" of the 100 most creative people in entertainment.

Eduardo Rodríguez
Born
OccupationFilm director, screenwriter

He made the 15-minute 35mm short Daughter as his thesis project at Florida State University in Tallahassee, FL, where he received his M.F.A. in August 2001. After graduation, Eduardo toured the festival circuit where Daughter was screened and honored at more than twenty national and international film festivals. To top it all off, for one of the few times in the history of the Cannes Film Festival, his student film Daughter was selected to compete in the professional short film category at the 55th annual celebration of this international event.

Before moving to Florida, Eduardo studied communications at Universidad Catolica Andres Bello in his native Venezuela and was an editor for commercials and TV shows for several years.

In 2005, Eduardo completed his first feature film, entitled Curandero, which was produced by Dimension Films and written and executive produced by Robert Rodriguez.[2][3] The film had its US premiere in 2005 at the Screamfest Film Festival.

In 2006, he directed the reshoot of several scenes for The Messengers, which was released by Screen Gems on the first quarter of 2007.

In 2008, Eduardo wrote and directed a Web series called Blood Cell which was originally produced by 60 Frames and was later bought by Warner Bros. Interactive.

In 2009, Eduardo directed an episode of the NBC horror anthology Fear Itself, entitled The Circle which was included in the Fear Itself: The Complete First Season DVD.

In 2010, he directed an episode for America's Most Wanted entitled Jose Corona.

In 2011, Eduardo directed two movies consecutively for After Dark Films and Silver Pictures. Stash House with Dolph Lundgren and El Gringo with Scott Adkins and Christian Slater and were released simultaneously theatrically and on VOD on May 11, 2012.

In 2012, Eduardo helmed Fright Night 2: New Blood, starring Jaime Murray, for Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment. The movie was released on October 1, 2013.

In 2016, he directed the short film Inwards, starring Johnny Whitworth, which was released on December that year.

In 2020, You're Not Alone Eduardo's indie directorial debut, starring Katia Winter, was released on VOD where available.

Filmography

Feature films

Year Title Director Editor Writer Notes
2005 Curandero Yes Yes Yes Directorial debut
2007 The Messengers Reshoots No No
2012 Stash House Yes Yes No
El Gringo Yes Yes No
2013 Fright Night 2: New Blood Yes No No Direct-to-video
2020 You're Not Alone Yes Yes No
TBA The Darkness of the Road Yes No Yes
The Dragon's Egg Yes No Story

Short films

Year Title Director Producer Editor Writer Cinematographer
2002 Daughter Yes No Yes Yes Yes
2016 Gylt No Yes No No No
Inwards Yes Yes Yes Yes No
2019 Detox No No Yes No No

Series

Year Title Director Producer Editor Writer Creator Notes
2008 Blood Cell Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Web series
2009 Fear Itself Yes No No No No TV Series (Episode "The Circle")
2010 America's Most Wanted No Yes No No No TV Series (First segment in episode "Jose Corona")
2017 Clear Blue Skies No Yes No No No TV Miniseries

References

  1. Frederick Levy (4 May 2004). Short Films 101: How to Make a Short for Under $50K-and Launch Your Filmmaking Career. Penguin. pp. 7–. ISBN 978-1-4406-2134-5.
  2. Scott L. Baugh (2012). Latino American Cinema: An Encyclopedia of Movies, Stars, Concepts, and Trends. ABC-CLIO. pp. 237–. ISBN 978-0-313-38036-5.
  3. Zachary Ingle (9 March 2012). Robert Rodriguez: Interviews. Univ. Press of Mississippi. pp. 23–. ISBN 978-1-61703-272-1.
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