Aaron Godfred

Aaron Godfred a film director and producer from Alaska and is notable for his work on in the films Little Blue Pill and John Dies at the End. He is also the founder of Montauk Project Films.

Aaron Godfred
Born
Alaska
OccupationFilm producer
Film director
Writer

Background

Godfred's final education years were spent at Oregon. He went to Linfield College and he earned a bachelor's degree in international business. He also got an MBA in general business. He started out filming his friends while snowboarding. Possibly the deciding factor in Godfred's decision to have a career in film came about as a result of a project he undertook while still at graduate school. He took a film making course and while still doing the course, he produced Oregon's War At Home which was a documentary about the Vietnam War. The film happened to win a Northwest Regional Emmy.[1]

In 2008, he founded the production company Montauk Project Films.[2] Further into his career, he worked for Endeavor Talent Agency, which had represented actors like Matt Damon and Seth MacFarlane. Working long hours there, he wondered why he stayed there. While still there he wrote the script for what would be his first feature film. The script was for Little Blue Pill,[3] a comedy which starred Aaron Kuban, Gerold Wunstel, Trevor Coppola and Jonathan Ahdout.[4][5][6] Among the other films he has been producer or co-producer of is the 2010 horror comedy John Dies at the End that starred Chase Williamson and Rob Mayes.[7][8] He joined the Leo/Hartmann Productions to work on production of Jerry The Movie which is a documentary about Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia.[9][10] He is also the writer of Don't Get Excited which was set to begin production in 2012.[11][12]

In February 2014, he was one of the panel of judges at the Southern California Business Film Festival.[13] He is a member of the Silicon Beach club surf group which is a group of techs who surf at Southern California. The founding member there Robert Lambert, pushed Godfred into a job with Omaze, which raises money for charitable causes by people the chance to spend time and hang out with celebrities. Godfred is the video production manager at the organization.[14][15]

Film work

Director

Producer

  • Jerry: The Movie (documentary) (2015)
  • Little Blue Pill (2010)
  • The Break In (short) (2009)
  • Oregon's War at Home and the Man Who Brought the Peace (short) (2005)

Associate producer

  • Mint Conditioned (short) (2007)

Co-producer

Line producer

  • The Road to Ruin (short) (2010)

Unit production manager

  • Marvel One-Shot: Item 47 (Video short) (2012)

Production manager

  • The Road to Ruin (short) (2011)

Writer

  • Little Blue Pill (2010)
  • The Break In (short) (2009)

Actor

  • John Dies at the End ... Bullet Factory Worker (2012)

Technical

  • John Dies at the End (visual effects supervisor) (2012)

Television work

Producer

  • Channing Tatum Dances at Prank Magic Mike XXL Screening (2015)
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger's Guide to Blowing Sh*T Up (short) (2015)
  • John Legend Dog Wedding (short) (2015)
  • Lowridin with Lopez (short) (2015)
  • Acho's Nachos (short) (2014)
gollark: Folding@Home doesn't recompute everything on every single computer. BitTorrent also does not redo everything on every computer. This is an inaccurate comparison.
gollark: They don't want people using it because they can't ruthlessly monetize it and/or use their users for QA.
gollark: > With the LTSC servicing model, customers can delay receiving feature updates and instead only receive monthly quality updates on devices. Features from Windows 10 that could be updated with new functionality, including Cortana, Edge, and all in-box Universal Windows apps, are also not included. Feature updates are offered in new LTSC releases every 2–3 years instead of every 6 months, and organizations can choose to install them as in-place upgrades or even skip releases over a 10-year life cycle. Microsoft is committed to providing bug fixes and security patches for each LTSC release during this 10 year period.
gollark: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/whats-new/ltsc/
gollark: It's a shame you can't switch to, what is it again, LTSC, the sane version.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.