Frank Mancuso Jr.

Frank G. Mancuso Jr. (born October 9, 1958) is an American film producer.[1]

Frank Mancuso Jr.
Born (1958-10-09) October 9, 1958
Buffalo, New York, United States
OccupationFilm producer, studio executive
Spouse(s)Kimberly Mancuso
ChildrenGio, Mila
Parent(s)Frank Mancuso Sr.
Fay Mancuso

Mancuso, the son of the former Paramount Pictures president Frank Mancuso Sr., was born in Buffalo, New York. Mancuso produced sequels to Friday the 13th[2] and co-created Friday the 13th: The Series.[2]

Mancuso later produced Cool World, which he had heavily rewritten during production,[3] Internal Affairs,[2] the Species franchise,[2] Hoodlum,[2] Stigmata,[2] Ronin,[2] I Know Who Killed Me,[2] and Road to Paloma.[2]

Filmography

All films, he was producer unless otherwise noted.

Film

Year Film Credit Notes
1981Friday the 13th Part 2Associate producer
1982Friday the 13th Part III
1983The Man Who Wasn't There
1984Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter
1985Friday the 13th: A New BeginningExecutive producer
1986April Fool's Day
1987Back to the Beach
1988Permanent Record
Friday the 13th Part VII: The New BloodExecutive producer
Uncredited
1990Internal Affairs
1991He Said, She Said
Body Parts
1992Cool World
1995Species
1996Fled
1997Hoodlum
1998Species II
Ronin
1999Stigmata
2002New Best Friend
2005The Lost CityExecutive producer
2006CrossoverExecutive producer
2007I Know Who Killed Me
2008April Fool's DayDirect-to-video
2011RestlessExecutive producer
10 YearsExecutive producer
2016Johnny Frank Garrett's Last Word
As an actor
Year Film Role
1990Internal AffairsRadio Cop
Location management
Year Film Notes
1980Urban CowboyLocation assistant

Television

Year Title Credit Notes
1989−90War of the WorldsExecutive producer
1987−90Friday the 13th: The SeriesExecutive producer
1996The Limbic RegionExecutive producerTelevision film
1998The EscapeExecutive producerTelevision film
2004Species IIIExecutive producerTelevision film
2007Species – The AwakeningTelevision film
As writer
Year Title Notes
1987−90Friday the 13th: The SeriesCreator
gollark: Prosthetics are probably better since they'd only need access to some peripheral nerves.
gollark: I would only trust them if they had an entirely ground-up formally-verified software stack and entirely open-source code/firmware/hardware. Which is unlikely given the pressures to make development go as fast as possible.
gollark: Oops, your neural interface's wireless card has a remotely exploitable vulnerability, your memories will now be overwritten with rickrolls.
gollark: Indeed.
gollark: Computers are wildly insecure and unreliable and humans are complicated.

References


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