Breck Eisner (born December 24, 1970) is an American film and television director and producer, recognized for his work in genre entertainment, including the adventure film Sahara (2005) starring Matthew McConaughey and the horror remake The Crazies (2010) with Timothy Olyphant.[1] Born in California as the son of former Walt Disney Company CEO Michael Eisner and business advisor Jane Breckenridge, Eisner grew up in a Hollywood environment that influenced his interest in filmmaking.[2]Eisner attended Harvard-Westlake School in Los Angeles before earning a bachelor's degree in English and theater from Georgetown University and a Master of Fine Arts from the University of Southern California's School of Cinematic Arts in 1996.[3] He launched his professional career directing high-profile television commercials for brands such as Budweiser, Coca-Cola, Nike, Sony, and Coors, which honed his visual storytelling skills. Transitioning to scripted content, he directed the pilot for the sci-fi series The Invisible Man (2000) and episodes of the acclaimed miniseries Taken (2002), as well as the TV movie Thoughtcrimes (2003), released direct-to-video, marking his entry into narrative television and film.[1]In feature films, Eisner's debut Sahara—an adaptation of Clive Cussler's novel—grossed $119 million worldwide against a $130 million budget, establishing him in big-budget action. His subsequent projects include the supernatural action film The Last Witch Hunter (2015) starring Vin Diesel and the zombie horror The Crazies, a remake of George A. Romero's 1973 original that earned double its $20 million budget.[1] On television, he has helmed episodes of notable series like The Expanse (2015–2022), Locke & Key (2020–2022), and The Walking Dead (2010–2022), often focusing on science fiction, horror, and thriller genres.[1] In 2024, Eisner co-founded the production company Expanding Universe with The Expanse creators Naren Shankar, Daniel Abraham, and Ty Franck, securing a development deal with Amazon MGM Studios for the sci-fi series adaptation The Captive's War.[4] He is married to producer Georgia Eisner since 2006 and resides in Los Angeles.[1]
Early life and education
Family background
Breck Eisner was born on December 24, 1970, in Los Angeles, California.[1]He is the son of Michael Eisner, who served as chief executive officer of The Walt Disney Company from 1984 to 2005, and Jane Breckenridge, a philanthropist and co-founder of The Eisner Foundation.[1][5][2]Eisner grew up in an affluent, entertainment-connected household in Los Angeles, with early exposure to Hollywood stemming from his father's executive roles at major studios including Paramount Pictures and Disney.[6][7]He has two brothers, Eric Eisner, a film producer, and Anders Eisner.[7][8]
Academic pursuits
Breck Eisner attended Harvard-Westlake School, a prestigious preparatory institution in Los Angeles.[9]Eisner then enrolled at Georgetown University, where he majored in English and Theater, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1992.[10] His undergraduate coursework emphasized dramatic arts and literature, laying a foundational understanding of storytelling essential for his future directing career.[1]Following his bachelor's, Eisner advanced his training at the University of Southern California's School of Cinematic Arts, obtaining a Master of Fine Arts in film directing in 1995.[11] During his graduate studies, he directed early student projects, including the short film Recon, his MFA thesis production that highlighted innovative visual techniques in a tech-noir narrative.[12]
Professional career
Early directing work
Breck Eisner transitioned from his education at the University of Southern California's School of Cinematic Arts, where he earned an MFA in 1995, to professional directing by entering the advertising industry. In October 1996, he joined Palomar Pictures in Los Angeles as a commercial director, having no prior experience in the field but quickly securing assignments from major agencies.[12][11] His early work demonstrated a flair for dynamic visuals and narrative depth, drawing from his student film Recon (1996), which impressed industry professionals and helped launch his career.[13]By 1997, Eisner had directed high-profile television commercials for brands including Nike, Pepsi, Budweiser, Coca-Cola, Sega, and Kodak. Notable among these was a Clio Award-winning Budweiser spot aired during the 1997 Super Bowl, praised for its creative execution, as well as a commercial featuring Jason Alexander that highlighted his ability to blend humor with polished production values.[14][15][16] His collaborations with agencies such as DDB Needham and Wieden+Kennedy on these projects built a robust portfolio, earning him recognition for innovative visual effects and compelling storytelling within the constraints of 30-second formats.[12][13]Eisner's commercial success paved the way for his work on the sci-fi TV movie Thoughtcrimes (2003), a USA Network original he directed. The film follows Freya McAllister, a young woman who discovers her telepathic abilities and becomes an asset in a government program combating crime, marking Eisner's first feature-length project and showcasing his skill in handling speculative fiction on a television budget.[17][18] This work, produced by USA Network, represented a key step in his evolution from short-form advertising to longer-form storytelling, further solidifying his reputation in the industry.[19]
Feature film projects
Breck Eisner's transition to feature films began with the 2005 adventure Sahara, an adaptation of Clive Cussler's 1992 novel of the same name, starring Matthew McConaughey as explorer Dirk Pitt and Penélope Cruz as archaeologist Eva Rojas.[20] The production faced significant challenges, including budget overruns that escalated from an initial $80 million to $160 million, compounded by extensive location shooting in Morocco and the United Kingdom, leading to lawsuits between Paramount Pictures and Cussler over creative differences.[21] Despite these issues, the film emphasized grand-scale action sequences amid North African deserts, though it received mixed reviews for its uneven pacing and reliance on formulaic tropes, with critics noting the entertaining yet preposterous chases involving vehicles and historical artifacts like a lost Civil War ironclad.[20]Sahara ultimately grossed $119 million worldwide against its inflated costs, marking a modest commercial underperformance.Eisner's sophomore effort, the 2010 horror remake The Crazies, reimagined George A. Romero's 1973 low-budget film, centering on a small Iowa town contaminated by a biological toxin that drives residents to violent madness, led by Timothy Olyphant as Sheriff David Dutten.[22] Produced on a $20 million budget, the film prioritized a claustrophobic yet expansive rural setting to heighten tension, earning praise for its atmospheric dread and use of practical effects in depicting the infected's grotesque transformations and improvised kills, which avoided overreliance on digital gore.[23] Reviewers highlighted the film's taut suspense and character-focused survival dynamics amid escalating chaos, distinguishing it from zombie fare by emphasizing psychological unraveling over mindless hordes.[24] It achieved solid financial success, grossing $55 million worldwide.[25]In 2015, Eisner directed The Last Witch Hunter, a fantasy action vehicle for Vin Diesel as the immortal Kaulder, the last of an ancient order battling witches in a hidden supernatural underworld coexisting with modern New York.[26] The $90 million production showcased ambitious world-building through elaborate production design, including mystical lairs and lore-rich artifacts, bolstered by digital visual effects that brought ethereal witch realms to life.[26] While commended for its immersive mythology and Diesel's committed performance, the film drew criticism for plot inconsistencies, such as vague backstories for its immortal protagonist and recycled conflicts in the script by three writers, resulting in a convoluted narrative that undermined the action's momentum.[27] It grossed $147 million globally, reflecting moderate viability for a genre entry.[28]Throughout the 2010s, Eisner was attached to several unproduced genre projects, including a remake of John Carpenter's Escape from New York for New Line Cinema and a reimagining of the Flash Gordon franchise for Columbia Pictures, underscoring his affinity for dystopian sci-fi and pulpy adventure remakes.[29] These attachments, developed alongside producer Neal H. Moritz, highlighted Eisner's interest in high-concept worlds blending action with speculative elements, though both stalled due to studio shifts and scripting hurdles.[30]Eisner's directing style across these features consistently favors epic landscapes to amplify scale and isolation, as seen in Sahara's sweeping desert vistas and The Crazies' vast Midwestern plains, which frame human vulnerability against overwhelming environments.[31] He integrates practical horror techniques for visceral impact, particularly in The Crazies, where tangible makeup and stunts enhance the film's grounded terror, while maintaining character-driven action that grounds fantastical stakes in personal motivations, evident in The Last Witch Hunter's focus on Kaulder's cursed longevity.[32] This approach, influenced by his early commercial work's visual precision, prioritizes immersive spectacle without sacrificing relational dynamics.[33]
Television directing
Breck Eisner has directed numerous episodes across various television series, bringing his expertise in genre storytelling to serialized formats that demand tight pacing and escalating narratives. His most extensive work came on The Expanse (2015–2022), the Syfy and Amazon Prime Videoscience fiction series, where he helmed multiple episodes, including the Season 1 premiere "Dulcinea." In this installment and others, Eisner emphasized meticulous sci-fi world-building and layered political intrigue, capturing the tensions of a colonized solar system through dynamic camera work and atmospheric tension that heightened the ensemble cast's interpersonal conflicts.[34]Eisner's contributions extended to fantasy and cyberpunk projects, where he adeptly balanced visual spectacle with thematic depth. He directed episodes of The Librarians (2014–2018) on TNT, such as "And the Crown of King Arthur," blending high-stakes fantasy adventure with the show's ensemble dynamics to create engaging, character-focused escapades that explored mythology in a modern context. Similarly, he helmed the Season 1 finale of Altered Carbon (2018) on Netflix, adapting Richard K. Morgan's cyberpunk novel to delve into themes of immortality and fractured identity, using innovative framing and effects to depict consciousness transfer and dystopian societies. His approach in these series prioritized serialized arcs, ensuring each episode advanced broader plotlines while delivering standalone excitement.[35]In procedural dramas like The Brave (2017) on NBC, Eisner directed episodes that adapted his polished commercial style to television's episodic structure, focusing on rapid mission sequences and emotional stakes for elite operatives. Known for efficient shooting schedules, he often completed complex scenes within constrained timelines, a skill honed from early career commercials and applied to TV's demanding production cycles. Eisner also excelled at enhancing visual effects on limited budgets, integrating practical and digital elements seamlessly—as seen in The Expanse's elaborate single-take action sequences that merged multiple locations for immersive realism without excessive post-production costs. This efficiency allowed for ambitious genre visuals, such as interstellar chases and cybernetic augmentations, while maintaining narrative momentum. His feature film experience briefly informed these TV efforts by infusing cinematic action fluidity into shorter formats.[36][37][38]
Production company and recent developments
In late 2024, Breck Eisner co-founded Expanding Universe Productions, a multi-platform content company specializing in science fiction narratives with expansive world-building and elevated storytelling, alongside The Expanse showrunner Naren Shankar and authors Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck (collectively known as James S.A. Corey).[4][39] The venture secured a development deal with Amazon MGM Studios to produce original sci-fi content across television and film, building on Eisner's prior directing experience with The Expanse.[4][40]The company's inaugural project is the TV adaptation of James S.A. Corey's The Captive's War trilogy for Amazon Prime Video, announced in November 2024 and currently in development as of 2025.[4][39] Eisner serves as director for select episodes and co-executive producer, with the series depicting a group of prisoners rising against an interstellar empire in a narrative inspired by the biblical Book of Daniel, expanding elements of the Expanse universe through themes of catastrophe and rebellion.[4][41]In 2025, Eisner contributed a new audio commentary track to the 15th-anniversary 4K UHD release of his 2010 horror filmThe Crazies, released by Lionsgate on May 13, where he discussed directing techniques and the film's horror elements alongside legacy extras.[42][43][44]
Personal life
Marriage and family
Breck Eisner married Georgia Leigh Irwin, a television director and producer, on June 24, 2006, in a ceremony attended by family and friends.[45] The couple first met as students at Georgetown University, where Irwin's then-boyfriend appeared in one of Eisner's student films, though they reconnected years later at their 10-year class reunion.[45] Both graduated from Georgetown in 1992.[45] Eisner and Irwin became engaged during a trip to Thailand in March 2005.[45]The couple has two children: a son named Noah, born in 2008, and a daughter named Grace.[46] Eisner and his wife maintain a private family life, rarely sharing personal details publicly, though they have made occasional joint appearances at industry events and family-oriented philanthropy gatherings connected to the Eisner Foundation.[7]
Residences and lifestyle
Breck Eisner was a long-time resident of Bel-Air in Los Angeles, owning a custom compound that overlooks the Stone Canyon Reservoir.[47][48]The 4,349-square-foot property, originally built in 1981 and reconstructed in 2007, embodies a nature-focused design inspired by resorts in Bali and Thailand, with tiered architecture, expansive views, and dedicated creative spaces including a detached two-story workshop.[47][48]In July 2024, Eisner listed the compound for $14 million; it sold on August 15, 2025, for $9,386,040.[47][48][49]Eisner maintains a lifestyle that balances his directing career with family commitments, including service on the board of the Eisner Foundation, which funds arts education and youth programs.[2][50]
Fear Itself: "The Sacrifice" (Season 1, Episode 1, 2008) – Director[54]
The Expanse: "Dulcinea" (Season 1, Episode 1, 2015) – Director
The Brave: "It's All Personal" (Season 1, Episode 4, 2017) – Director[36]
The Expanse: Additional episodes, including season premieres and finales from seasons 2 through 6 (2017–2022) – Director[55]
Awards and nominations
Commercial awards
Breck Eisner's early career in commercial directing garnered recognition through prestigious advertising awards, particularly in the late 1990s and early 2000s, highlighting his innovative visual style and storytelling in short-form content.[56]In 1997, Eisner won a Clio Award for his direction of a BudweiserSuper Bowl commercial, praised for its creative execution and impact during one of television's highest-profile ad slots.[14]Eisner achieved further acclaim at The One Show in 2000, securing five awards in the Director category for outstanding work across multiple spots, including the PowerBar campaign, which exemplified his ability to blend dynamic visuals with brand messaging for visual innovation.[57][58]While Eisner directed over 100 commercials in the 1990s and 2000s for clients such as Nike, Pepsi, and Coors, no major commercial awards for his work have been documented after 2005, as his focus shifted toward feature films and television.[56][59]
Film and television recognitions
His episodes of the science fiction series The Expanse (2015–2022) earned Hugo Award nominations and wins in the Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form category. Eisner received a nomination in 2020 for directing the episode "Cibola Burn" (season 4, episode 10), and wins in 2022 for "Nemesis Games" (season 5, episode 10) and 2023 for "Babylon's Ashes" (season 6, episode 6).[60][61]As of November 2025, Eisner has secured no major awards or nominations for his recent film and television projects, including ongoing production work through his company Expanding Universe Productions.