Chris Paine

Chris Paine is an American filmmaker and environmental activist. His notable works as director include the documentaries Who Killed the Electric Car? Revenge of the Electric Car and Do You Trust This Computer? Paine received a nomination for the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Documentary Screenplay for Who Killed the Electric Car?[1]

Chris Paine.

Career

Paine served as Executive Producer on the documentaries Faster, William Gibson: No Maps for these Territories and Charge directed by Mark Neale and Bike vs Cars directed by Fredrik Gertten. Other producing projects include MTV Europe's Buzz and shorts including Mailman and Zoo Life. Paine worked for writer/director Michael Tolkin on the feature films The Rapture, The Player, and The New Age.

Environment

Chris serves on the board of directors for Friends of the Earth and worked on campaigns to end nuclear detonations at the Nevada Test Site and to stop a freeway with a proposed Tunnel in northern California. In 2010, his team won three Webby awards for Counterspill an online project about fossil fuel energy spills.

Education

Paine studied acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse with Sanford Meisner, and film at New York University and Stanford University. He is a graduate of Colgate University.

Entrepreneur

In 1984, Paine co-founded Mondo-tronics, which designed an actuator for the Mars Pathfinder mission and sold materials direct to the public as "The Robot Store".[2] In 1994, Chris founded Internet Outfitters which he took public as part of Commerce One in 2000.

Filmography

Director:

Executive Producer:

Miscellaneous Crew:

  • The New Age (1994)
  • The Player (1992)
gollark: This is what the ICMPv6 is for, of course.
gollark: Networking truly is amazing.
gollark: This is because they travel on IP networks, which are fairly widely deployed.
gollark: You can hide from ICMP packets, but you *cannot* run.
gollark: And by arbitrary I mean nonarbitrary.

References

  1. Kay, Jeremy (16 January 2007). "WGA unveils nominees for documentary screenplay award". Screen Daily. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  2. Needles, Tim. "Director Chris Paine on his Film Who Killed The Electric Car". Short and Sweet NYC. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
  3. https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/982119546420002817
  4. https://vimeo.com/263108265
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