John Landis

John Landis

American filmmaker (born 1950)
more_vert
John Landis
pencil

John David Landis (born August 3, 1950) is an American film director, screenwriter, actor, and producer. He is known for his comedy films, his horror films, and his music videos with Michael Jackson. He directed National Lampoon's Animal House, An American Werewolf in London, Trading Places, Michael Jackson's music video Thriller, The Blues Brothers, and Beverly Hills Cop III.

View details Hide details
expand_more
John Landis was born on Thursday, 3 August 1950 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. His full name at birth was John David Landis. He is best known as a film director. Landis' country of citizenship (nationality) is American. John attended high school at Dropped out. His religion is listed as Atheist. He is 5' 10" (178 cm) tall with an average build. He has light brown eyes and dark brown hair (color). His net worth is reported to be $150,000,000 US dollars. John Landis is 74 years old and his zodiac star sign is Leo.

You can find people similar to John Landis by visiting our lists Comedy film directors and Television producers from Illinois.

Full name at birth
John David Landis
edit
Claim to fame
Animal House
edit
Date of birth
3 August 1950
edit
Place of birth
Chicago, Illinois, USA
edit
Age
Occupation
Actor, Director, Producer, Screenwriter
edit
Occupation category
edit
Nationality
edit

PERSONAL DETAILS

Height
5' 10" (178 cm)
edit
Build
edit
Hair color
edit
Eye color
edit
Gender
edit
Ethnicity
edit
Sexuality
edit
Religion
edit
Zodiac sign
Distinctive feature add_black distinctive feature
Pets add_black pets

ADDITIONAL DETAILS

Residence
Beverly Hills, California
add_black edit
Net worth
$150,000,000 USD
edit
High school
Dropped out
add_black edit
University add_black university
Talent agency add_black talent agency
Political affiliation add_black political affiliation
Political party add_black political party
Partner: Deborah Nadoolman (Married) 2 children
1979-
view couple
See American Werewolf (In London) is not a comedy. People keep calling it a comedy, it's very funny I hope, but it is a horror film. We meet these guys in a truckload of sheep. This is not subtle. I mean these boys are dead by the end of the movie. That's not really a happy tale.
  • The trademark trivia often mentioned in Landis-directed films, the inclusion in some form of the phrase "See you next Wednesday", is a reference to a line in the Stanley Kubrick film 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), where astronaut Frank Poole watches a video sent to him by his wife and father on the occasion of his birthday. At the end of the video his wife says, "See you next Wednesday!", an obvious reference to their next available time to transmit a message to the distant spacecraft bound for Jupiter, though since Frank is killed within the next day or two by HAL, it is perhaps meant as an ironic trademark since it seems to occur in Landis films when characters are in great danger. It appears during the werewolf rampage as the title on the marquee of a porno theater in An American Werewolf in London (1981). It is spoken in German when Vic Morrow is being shot at on the building in the sequence he directed for Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983). In The Blues Brothers (1980) it's on a billboard where the the cops are lying in wait. Then again, it mostly appears as the name on movie posters, so that it probably became merely something to watch for like Alfred Hitchcock's cameos. It first appeared in his first film Schlock (1973) as the name of a movie and as a movie poster in a theater lobby. It appeared again in his second film. The Kentucky Fried Movie (1977), as the title of the "Feel-O-Rama" movie. It surfaces in an apartment in Trading Places (1983) on a movie poster. In Coming to America (1988) it appears in a subway station (the movie claims to star Jamie Lee Curtis, who appeared in "Trading Places"). Another poster is visible in Ophelia's apartment. In Spies Like Us (1985) it appears on the recruitment poster behind the desk of the commander of the army training post. In Into the Night (1985/I) it appears on two posters in the office where Ed and Diana make the phone call. In Innocent Blood (1992) it is once again advertised on a movie marquee across the street from the Melody Lounge exotic dance bar near where a car crash takes place. It also appears in the Michael Jackson video Thriller (1983) (V), which was directed by Landis. One of the men chasing the werewolf finds a note and reads this out while the shot shows MJ in the theater eating popcorn.
  • Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. "World Film Directors, Volume Two, 1945-1985". Pages 555-559. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1988.
  • One of his favorite movies is Charme discret de la bourgeoisie, Le (1972). He admits that this film inspired the use of the dream within a dream gag in An American Werewolf in London (1981).
  • Spouse: Deborah Nadoolman (27 July 1980 - present) 2 children
  • Member of the jury at the Venice Film Festival in 1989.

John Landis is known for his role in the documentary Thriller 40 (2023) as Self.

This page is the FamousFix profile for John Landis. Content on this page is contributed by editors who belong to our editorial community. We welcome your contributions... so please create an account if you would like to collaborate with other editor's in helping to shape this website.

On the John Landis page you will be able to add and update factual information, post media and connect this topic to other topics on the website. This website does skew towards famous actors, musicians, models and sports stars, however we would like to expand that to include many other interesting topics.

Terms of Use · Copyright · Privacy
Copyright 2006-2024, FamousFix · 0.33s