David Winning
David Winning (born May 8, 1961) is a Canadian and American dual Citizen film and television director, screenwriter, producer, editor, and occasional actor. Although Winning has worked in numerous film and TV genres, his name is most commonly associated with science fiction, thrillers and drama.
David Winning | |
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Born | |
Citizenship | United States, Canadian |
Occupation | director, producer, screenwriter, and actor |
Years active | 1976 – present |
Website | www |
Life and career
Winning was born in Calgary, Alberta.[1] He became a dual citizen of the US and Canada in 2003 and lives in Los Angeles. He was making films at age ten with a Super 8 camera. In 1979, he received a Canada Council grant to make the sixteen millimeter drama Sequence,[2] and expanded the plotline into his first feature film Storm, filmed in the summer of 1983 in Bragg Creek, Alberta. It was shot with money that his father had set aside for film school and was screened at Cannes.[1] It took four years to finish and was released by Golan-Globus' Cannon Films International and Warner Home Video in 1988. A December 11, 1989 Los Angeles Times review called the film "taut, ambitious and darkly comic".[3]
At 27, he directed episodes of Friday the 13th: The Series for Paramount and received three Gemini Award nominations.[4] His second feature Killer Image followed in 1992; the mystery-thriller starred Michael Ironside and M. Emmet Walsh. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s he directed 38 movies and episodes of twenty-nine series, including Stargate: Atlantis,[5] ABC's Dinotopia filmed in Budapest, Nickelodeon’s Are You Afraid of the Dark?, and four seasons on Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda.[6] He directed Kim Cattrall, Sean Young, and Eric McCormack in the award-winning thriller Exception to the Rule. His biggest budget studio movie to date is the $29-million kids sci-fi action sequel Turbo: A Power Rangers Movie for 20th Century Fox.[7] He directed seven episodes of the Cannell police series Street Justice with Carl Weathers.[8] Winning said "Episodic TV gets no respect" in a March 2000 Toronto Star interview.[9] He directed a 16-year-old Ryan Gosling in the Pilot and seven episodes of the Paramount UPN kid series Breaker High.
According to the February 2010 Avatar issue of Sci Fi Magazine, he was slated to direct the movie Sinbad: The Fifth Voyage with Patrick Stewart.[10] He directed episodes of Space Channel's comedy/horror series Todd and the Book of Pure Evil and Lost Girl[1] for SYFY Channel and Showcase—and supervised and directed the far north webisode series YUKONIC online in 2011. He is directing XIII: The Series with Stuart Townsend, produced by Roger Avary for French Canal +, and multiple episodes of the live audience multi-camera sitcom Mr. Young for The Disney Channel. In 2017 he became one of the house directors on the Netflix / SYFY channel series Van Helsing; an explosive post-apocalyptic take on the vampire rising based on a graphic novel. He also started directing over a dozen Christmas and family films for the Hallmark Channel; including A Summer Romance, Tulips in Spring, A December Bride, and Unleashing Mr. Darcy, which broke the network record on social media with 47 Million tweets.
Awards
Winning has won the 1995 Gold Hugo Award and two Silver Plaques from the Chicago International Film Festival, and four national Gemini Award nominations for Best Director/Dramatic Series.[11] In 2002 he accepted the first national team award from the Directors Guild of Canada Best TV series Drama for Twice in a Lifetime and was nominated again in 2006.[12] His episode of Stargate: Atlantis, "Childhood’s End", won three awards for Directing; New York, Houston and Chicago in 2005. In April 2008, Winning won two Directing awards at the Houston Film Festival/WorldFest in Texas and a Special Jury Award for his work on the Lifetime Television vampire series Blood Ties.
2008 Hawaii Career Award and festival screenings
Winning was honored at the 2008 Big Island Film Festival in Hawaii.[13] He received a Special Career award on May 17, 2008 with a reception in his honor in Waikōloa Village. Swamp Devil also won the Golden Honu for Best Foreign feature film. A doublebill of his two monster movies was presented at the outdoor festival; Swamp Devil starring Bruce Dern and Black Swarm starring Robert Englund. The first in his trilogy was Something Beneath with Kevin Sorbo in 2007. Black Swarm also screened at the Boston Film Festival on Friday the 13th of June, 2008. Both films were produced in Montreal by Muse Entertainment for the SYFY Channel, New York City.
Filmography
Film
Year | Title | Director | Producer | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1987 | Storm | ||||
1992 | Killer Image | ||||
1996 | Profile for Murder | ||||
1997 | Exception to the Rule | ||||
1997 | Turbo: A Power Rangers Movie | ||||
1998 | One of Our Own | ||||
2009 | Swamp Devil | ||||
2014 | The Town That Came A-Courtin’ | ||||
2014 | Mutant World |
Television Films & Series
Year | Title | Director | Producer | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1989-1990 | Friday the 13th: The Series | 3 episodes: aka Friday's Curse | ||
1992 | Neon Rider | Episode: "Straight Home" | ||
1992-1993 | Street Justice | 7 episodes | ||
1993-1995 | Are You Afraid of the Dark? | 10 Episodes | ||
1993 | Matrix | Episode: "False Witness" | ||
1995-1997 | Sweet Valley High | 11 episodes | ||
1996 | Goosebumps | Episode: "... It Came From Beneath the Sink" | ||
1997 | Dead Man's Gun | Episode: "The Black Widow" | ||
1997 | Breaker High | 7 episodes | ||
1998 | Night Man | 3 episodes | ||
1998 | Merlin: The Quest Begins | Television film | ||
1999-2001 | Twice in a Lifetime | 11 episodes | ||
1999 | Don’t Look Behind You | Television film | ||
2000 | Call of The Wild | Episode: "Molly Brown" | ||
2000-2005 | Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda | 10 episodes | ||
2001-2002 | Gene Roddenberry's Earth Final Conflict | 7 episodes | ||
2002-2003 | Dinotopia | 4 episodes | ||
2002 | Body & Soul | Episode: "Saviors" | ||
2002 | He Sees You When You're Sleeping | Television film | ||
2004 | Stargate: Atlantis | Episode: "Childhood's End" | ||
2006-2007 | Naturally, Sadie | 4 episodes | ||
2006 | Past Sins | Television film | ||
2007 | Blood Ties | 4 episodes | ||
2007 | Dinosapien | 4 episodes | ||
2007 | Something Beneath | Television film | ||
2008 | Black Swarm[14] | Television film | ||
2010-2012 | Todd and the Book of Pure Evil | 4 episodes | ||
2012 | Lost Girl | Episode: "Midnight Lamp" | ||
2012 | XIII: The Series | Episodes: "Gauntlet"; "Pong" | ||
2012-2013 | Mr. Young | 3 episodes | ||
2013 | Health Nutz | Episodes: "Juice, Jesus and Rock & Roll"; "Hypno Yoga" | ||
2014-2015 | The Stanley Dynamic | 4 episodes | ||
2014-2015 | Max and Shred | Episodes: "The Boardercross Bionic Boost"; "The Goofy Tamedog Air" | ||
2014 | The Tree That Saved Christmas | Television film | ||
2014 | Paper Angels | Television film Co-executive Producer | ||
2015 | The Magic Stocking | Television film | ||
2016 | Cradle of Lies | Television film: aka Where's My Baby? | ||
2016 | Under Fire | Television film: aka Who Killed My Husband? | ||
2016 | Unleashing Mr. Darcy | Television film | ||
2016 | The Rooftop Christmas Tree | Television film Executive Producer | ||
2016 | The Convenient Groom | Television film | ||
2016 | Tulips In Spring | Television film | ||
2016 | A December Bride | Television film | ||
2016 | The Mistletoe Promise | Television film Executive Producer | ||
2017 | Infidelity in Suburbia | Television film Executive Producer | ||
2017 | While You Were Dating | Television film | ||
2017 | Engaging Father Christmas | Television film: aka A Family for the Holidays (Canada); Winter Wedding (UK) | ||
2017 | Falling For Vermont | Television film | ||
2017 | Finding Santa | Television film | ||
2017 | Van Helsing | 6 episodes | ||
2018 | Winter's Dream | Television film | ||
2018 | Marrying Father Christmas | Television film: aka. Winter Wedding (Canada) (post-production) | ||
2019 | A Summer Romance | Television film | ||
2019 | Sense, Sensibility & Snowmen | Television film | ||
2019 | A Blue Ridge Mountain Christmas | Television film |
References
- Volmers, Eric (2012-01-21). "Calgary director gets shot at a succubus". Calgary Herald. Archived from the original on 2014-12-10. Retrieved 2013-11-11.
- "Calgary Magazine Freeze Frame, September 1987, by: Linda Kupecek, "The Winning Way"".
- "LA Times review by Kevin Thomas, December 11, 1989".
- "1989, 1990 Gemini Awards 3 nominations". Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television. Archived from the original on 2012-02-23. Retrieved 2009-11-12.
- "SYFY Channel's official Stargate: Atlantis site for "Childhood's End"". Archived from the original on 2011-10-08. Retrieved 2009-12-01.
- "The Sci Fi World.Net Interview with David Winning, June 2005".
- Volmers, Eric (January 19, 2009). "Hollywood's Hired Gun". Calgary Herald. Retrieved April 11, 2010.
- "Street Justice Interview, August 2000".
- "Toronto Star, March 17, 2000, by: Jim Bawden, " Carver convincingly troubled in rare TV outing "".
- "Pre-production Begins on Middle Eastern Fairy Tale Sinbad The Fifth Voyage". News Net Publisher. July 16, 2009. Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved December 15, 2009.
- "1989, 1990, 1997 Gemini Awards 4 nominations". Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television. Archived from the original on 2012-02-23. Retrieved 2009-11-12.
- "2002 DGC Team Awards TV Series Drama for "Moonshine Over Harlem"". DGC. Archived from the original on November 23, 2007. Retrieved November 19, 2009.
- Bruce Dern/David Winning Film Swamp Devil Premieres on SCI FI CHANNEL from Encyclopedia.com
- "RHI official site Black Swarm". RHI Films. Retrieved December 25, 2009.