Julian Gilbey

Julian Gilbey is a British film director, editor and screenwriter.

Julian Gilbey
Born
OccupationFilm director, screenwriter, editor
RelativesNigel Bruce (great-grandfather)
Will Gilbey (brother)

Biography

Gilbey began his movie career in the 2000s with the low-budget 2002 horror film Reckoning Day, working on the project as director, screenwriter, actor, cinematographer, editor, make-up artist and costume designer.[1] In 2006 he wrote, directed and edited the crime drama Rollin' With The Nines.[2] Gilbey wrote, directed and edited Rise of the Footsoldier in 2007.[3] In 2009 he worked as editor on Jake West's comedy horror film Doghouse.[4]

In 2011 he directed and edited survival thriller A Lonely Place to Die, co-written with his brother Will Gilbey.[5]

In 2013 Gilbey directed the international thriller Plastic, that he co-wrote with Will Gilbey and Chris Howard.[6]

In 2014 he directed a short film segment for "The ABC's of Death 2."

In 2018 he directed the drama film Summit Fever starring Freddie Thorp and Emma Tachard-Mackey.[7][8]

Personal life

His great-grandfather was British actor Nigel Bruce and his brother Will is a screenwriter.[9]

Filmography

gollark: Just enumerate all possible strings in order, silly.
gollark: Or "possibly TC but you can't know unless you throw ridiculously insane amounts of computing power at it".
gollark: Hmm, perhaps if you make it use the most recent likely-true-but-hard-to-prove maths problem somehow...
gollark: The twin prime conjecture, say?
gollark: For "probably TC but very hard to prove", maybe tie it to unsolved maths problems?

References


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