Mark Levin (director)

Mark Levin (born August 20, 1968) is an American film director and screenwriter. He has been a screenwriter, producer, and director in both television and film for over twenty years.[1] He is mostly known for directing the films Little Manhattan and Nim's Island. He is married to his collaborator, the screenwriter and director Jennifer Flackett.[2] They are the creators of The Man’s Guide To Love, which began as a successful video blog offering man to man advice on the subject of love. The Mans Guide To Love book will be published by Simon & Schuster, and a feature film they are directing and producing alongside Laurence Mark.

Mark Levin
Born (1968-08-20) August 20, 1968
OccupationFilm director, producer, screen/television writer
Years active1992–present
Spouse(s)Jennifer Flackett
Children2

Career

During the 1990s, he was a writer and producer for the television series The Wonder Years, Missing Persons (produced by Stephen J. Cannell) and Earth 2, a series he co-created and executive produced. As a screenwriter, he and Flackett also wrote the films Madeline, Wimbledon and Journey to the Center of the Earth.

In 2016 he co-created the animated sitcom Big Mouth.[3] The series stars Nick Kroll and John Mulaney and is being produced for Netflix.

Personal Life

Levin grew up in Detroit, born in a Jewish family,[4] the son of Donald Marvin Levin.[5] He has one sister and one brother. Levin, his wife and two children live in New York City and Los Angeles.[2] Levin & Flackett recently returned from a one-year journey around-the-world with their two children. Dubbed “A Year To Think,” they visited 38 countries and 110 cities across six continents over 365 days, during which they made 120 short films about their experiences.[6]

Filmography

As director

As screenwriter

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gollark: It;s a really stupidisoiasufi feature.
gollark: Can we do a capitalist takeover instead?
gollark: Think about it. What if they intentionally left an apparent flaw in the system to allow banning people so that they could trap evildoers?
gollark: What if it's a trap to detect people who are willing to break the rules and randomly get people banned?

References

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