理查德·富兰克林 (1948) Richard Franklin
导演 制片人 编剧 演员
Writer, director and producer Richard Franklin was born on July 15,
1948 in Melbourne, Australia. Infatuated with cinema at an early age,
Franklin first began making 8mm films at age 10. Franklin saw Alfred
Hitchcock's "Psycho" two years later and was hooked on movies for life.
Richard enrolled at Monash University in Melbourne and worked as an
assistant cameraman at a television advertising company. Franklin
eventually went to America and attended the University of Southern
California in 1967. While studying at USC Franklin got Hitchcock to do
a Q&A session for a screening of "Rope." Hitchcock in turn invited
Franklin to watch him work on the set of "Topaz." Franklin returned to
Australia following graduation in 1969 and got a job as an assistant
director for the popular TV series "Homicide." Franklin went on to
direct several episodes. He also made several short movies and
documentaries around this time. Franklin made his feature film debut
with the raunchy sex comedy "The True Story of Eskimo Nell." He
followed this picture with the equally bawdy "Fantasm." His third movie
"Patrick" was a nifty horror feature that proved to be a big
international success; it won the Grand Prize at the Avoriaz Fantastic
Film Festival, was nominated for an AFI Award for Best Film, and won
the Best Director Award at the Sitges-Catalonian International Film
Festival. "Roadgames" was a tense and witty "danger on the road"
thriller knockout which was the most expensive Australian film made in
the early 80s. Franklin then did the surprisingly solid and satisfying
belated sequel "Psycho II." His other movies include the delightful
"Cloak and Dagger," the silly "Link," and the hugely enjoyable "F/X 2."
However, Franklin became weary of Hollywood studio politics and
returned to his native Australia. He made the acclaimed play
adaptations "Hotel Sorrento" and "Brilliant Lies." "Hotel Sorrento" won
an AFI Award for Best Adapted Screenplay and was nominated for both
Best Film and Best Director. Franklin also did a made-for-TV adaptation
of Arthur Conan Doyle's classic fantasy adventure novel "The Lost
World." His final feature was the horror thriller "Visitors." In
addition to his film work, Franklin also directed episodes of the TV
shows "Flatland," "A Fine Romance," and "Beauty and the Beast." He was
a drummer in the Melbourne band The Pink Finks and was a lecturer at
the Swinburne School of Film and Television in Australia. Richard
Franklin died from prostate cancer at age 58 on July 11,
2007.