Brian Duffield
Brian Duffield (born November 5, 1985) is an American screenwriter, director, and producer recognized for his contributions to horror and science fiction films, particularly through original spec scripts and genre-bending narratives featuring strong female protagonists.[1][2] His breakthrough came with early spec sales including Your Bridesmaid Is a Bitch (2010), Jane Got a Gun (2011), and The Babysitter (2014), all of which landed on the Black List, Hollywood's annual compilation of top unproduced screenplays.[3] He transitioned to directing with the black comedy horror Spontaneous (2020), which he also wrote and produced, earning a 96% critics' score on Rotten Tomatoes for its witty take on spontaneous human combustion among high schoolers.[1] Duffield's 2023 directorial follow-up, the sci-fi horror thriller No One Will Save You, which he wrote and produced, received an 83% critics' score and garnered attention for its minimal dialogue and tense alien invasion premise starring Kaitlyn Dever.[1] Other key writing credits include the action-horror Underwater (2020), the post-apocalyptic adventure Love and Monsters (2020, 94% critics' score), the comedy-horror Cocaine Bear (2023, co-writer and producer), and the Netflix slasher The Babysitter (2017).[1][2] Born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, to evangelical missionary parents, Duffield spent part of his childhood in Ireland before returning to the United States to attend Messiah University and Temple University, where he developed an interest in filmmaking.[4][5] Duffield's professional entry into Hollywood began around 2010 when he sold his first spec script, Your Bridesmaid Is a Bitch, to Skydance Media shortly after connecting with a manager at Circle of Confusion, marking him as a rising talent and earning him a spot on IndieWire's "10 Screenwriters to Watch in 2013."[6][3] He continued building his resume with high-profile rewrites, such as the sequel The Divergent Series: Insurgent (2015) and the Natalie Portman-led Western Jane Got a Gun (2016), though both received mixed reviews (29% and 42% critics' scores, respectively).[1] Transitioning to production and directing, Duffield executive produced The Babysitter (2017, 70% critics' score) and later co-wrote the animated series Skull Island (2023) for Netflix.[2] His work often emphasizes unconventional horror elements and character-driven plots, with recent projects including producing the 2025 thriller Borderline (59% critics' score) and the upcoming directing project Whalefall (2026).[1]) Duffield's scripts blend humor, tension, and social commentary in genre storytelling.Early life and education
Childhood in Pennsylvania
Brian Duffield was born on November 5, 1985, in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He spent the first nine years of his life in the area, where his family maintained a strong connection to evangelical Christianity. His parents, Brian and Brenda Duffield, were actively involved in missionary work, which shaped the household environment and emphasized values of faith and community service. Growing up in this missionary-oriented family, Duffield experienced early exposure to narrative traditions through religious teachings and family discussions centered on moral and inspirational stories. These dynamics fostered an appreciation for structured storytelling, even as the family's commitments foreshadowed future changes. The evangelical context provided a foundation of communal narratives that influenced his developing worldview. Duffield's initial interest in film and writing emerged during his Pennsylvania childhood, where he immersed himself in pop culture as a self-described nerd. He frequently attended movies, drawing inspiration from cinematic experiences in a setting that offered accessible entertainment options. Local outings to theaters sparked his fascination with visual narratives and creative expression, laying the groundwork for his later pursuits in screenwriting.Family move to Ireland
In 1995, Brian Duffield's family relocated from suburban Pennsylvania to rural County Kildare, Ireland, when he was nine years old, as his parents, Brian and Brenda Duffield, pursued evangelical missionary work with Bible Centered Ministries (BCM) Ireland.[5][4] The family initially settled in Newbridge, where the senior Duffields supported youth clubs and church activities, before moving to Shannon in County Clare in 1998 to assist in establishing a new congregation.[5][4] This shift to farmland communities meant living without modern conveniences like nearby movie theaters or reliable video playback, with their small television receiving only three channels—occasionally broadcast in Gaelic—and no VCR for years.[7][8] The relocation brought significant challenges in cultural adjustment and isolation for the young Duffield, who described the experience as "kind of miserable" amid the remote, pastoral setting an hour from urban centers.[3] Far removed from the pop culture he had enjoyed in Pennsylvania, he faced a "huge lonely void" with limited social and entertainment options, adapting to a slower-paced Irish rural life centered on family and church community.[8] The family remained in Ireland for nearly a decade, during which Duffield attended a local school but contended with the broader seclusion of missionary life in these areas.[9] This period profoundly shaped Duffield's worldview, fostering a deep reliance on books and imagination for escapism due to scarce access to Hollywood films.[10] He turned to his school's library for movie novelizations and resources like Roger Ebert's 100 Great Movies and a Jurassic Park making-of book, which inspired him to write his own fan fiction, including unauthorized sequels to The Lost World that he scripted in notebooks.[8][10] These self-created stories filled the gap left by infrequent theater trips—often just once or twice a year—and ignited his early passion for storytelling, emphasizing creativity born from constraint rather than consumption.[7]Return to the United States and college
Duffield returned to the United States in 2004 immediately after graduating high school in Ireland, where he had spent nearly a decade living abroad with his family on a farm.[3] This repatriation marked a significant transition, as his experiences in Ireland—with limited access to films and television—had fostered an early habit of inventing stories, which later shaped his creative approach to screenwriting.[8] Upon returning, Duffield enrolled at Messiah College in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where he majored in communications with a concentration in film and screenwriting.[8] He also attended Temple University in Philadelphia as part of a sister-school program, completing additional coursework there, including a summer program in Los Angeles to fulfill final credits.[8] Duffield graduated from both institutions in 2008.[11] During his college years, Duffield focused on film studies and writing courses, producing early short film projects such as strange fantasy and monster movies.[8] These assignments helped him refine his screenwriting skills, as instructors provided feedback on his weaknesses and encouraged him to write multiple scripts to build a portfolio suitable for representation.[8] In Philadelphia, he began initial networking through Temple University connections, forming relationships with peers who would later support his career transitions.[8]Career
Breakthrough spec scripts
Duffield entered the screenwriting industry shortly after graduating from Messiah College and Temple University in 2008, relocating to Los Angeles where he supported himself through temp jobs while honing his craft through self-taught scriptwriting and networking with friends in the industry. His breakthrough came with original spec scripts that garnered significant attention on Hollywood's annual "Black List" survey of unproduced screenplays favored by industry executives. In 2010, Duffield wrote and sold his first major spec, Your Bridesmaid Is a Bitch, a comedy about a man forced to spend a wedding weekend with his ex-girlfriend; the script landed on that year's Black List and was quickly acquired by Skydance Media after a manager at Circle of Confusion passed it along following a casual recommendation from a mutual friend.[12][6] The rapid sale marked a turning point, though Duffield later reflected on the stress of transitioning from financial instability to the pressures of professional expectations.[6] Building on this momentum, Duffield penned Jane Got a Gun in 2011, a Western thriller centered on a woman defending her family; it also earned Black List recognition and was sold to Relativity Media, eventually developing into a feature film despite production delays.[13][14] Throughout his early career, Duffield faced typical challenges for aspiring screenwriters, including mounting debt, periods of professional stagnation, and the demands of extensive rewrites on his specs to meet studio notes, all while relying on post-college friendships to forge initial industry connections rather than formal representation.[15][7]Screenwriting for major films
Duffield's entry into screenwriting for major studio films began with his adaptation of Veronica Roth's novel Insurgent (2015), the second installment in the Divergent series, where he penned the initial screenplay treatment for Summit Entertainment.[16] The project marked his first high-profile adaptation, transforming Roth's dystopian narrative of factional conflict and protagonist Tris Prior's rebellion into a script that emphasized action sequences and character-driven tension, later revised by Akiva Goldsman and Mark Bomback before director Robert Schwentke's production.[17] Released to mixed reviews but commercial success, grossing over $297 million worldwide, the film highlighted Duffield's ability to navigate large-scale YA adaptations while preserving core themes of identity and resistance from the source material. In 2017, Duffield wrote the original screenplay for The Babysitter, a Netflix horror-comedy directed by McG, blending teen slasher tropes with satirical cult elements in a story about a boy discovering his babysitter's involvement in a satanic ritual. The script, which originated as a spec from Duffield's early career, showcased his penchant for genre mashups, combining gore, humor, and coming-of-age awkwardness, and earned praise for its irreverent tone and Samara Weaving's lead performance.[18] Collaborating closely with McG, Duffield's writing emphasized quick-witted dialogue and escalating absurdity, contributing to the film's cult following and a sequel in 2020. Duffield continued his genre explorations with Underwater (2020), co-writing the screenplay with Adam Cozad based on his original story, a sci-fi horror thriller directed by William Eubank starring Kristen Stewart as a deep-sea engineer facing monstrous creatures after a rig collapse. The script drew on Alien-inspired confined-space terror, focusing on survival amid abyssal pressures and Lovecraftian horrors, with Duffield's contributions shaping the film's tense pacing and creature design influences from public domain myths.[19] Though critically middling, the collaboration underscored Duffield's skill in building suspense through environmental dread and ensemble dynamics in a $65 million production. That same year, Duffield co-wrote Love and Monsters (2020) with Matthew Robinson, again from his story, directing Michael Matthews in this post-apocalyptic adventure-comedy about a young survivor traversing a monster-infested world to reunite with his high school sweetheart. The screenplay balanced heartfelt romance with creature-feature action, incorporating Duffield's humorous take on evolutionary monster designs and themes of personal growth, leading to the film's 91% Rotten Tomatoes audience score and a Saturn Award nomination for Best Science Fiction Film. His collaboration with producers Shawn Levy and 21 Laps emphasized visual spectacle and emotional stakes, released amid pandemic-era challenges. As a producer on Cocaine Bear (2023), directed by Elizabeth Banks, Duffield contributed to the development of this black comedy inspired by the true 1985 incident in which a black bear in Georgia died after ingesting kilograms of cocaine dropped by drug smuggler Andrew Thornton during a botched parachute delivery.[20] While the screenplay by Jimmy Warden fictionalized the event into a rampaging bear narrative, Duffield's producing role helped amplify its gonzo horror-comedy elements, resulting in a $88 million worldwide box office for the Universal Pictures release.[21][22] Duffield extended his screenwriting to television with Skull Island (2023), an animated Netflix series in the MonsterVerse franchise, where he served as creator, writer, and showrunner, crafting episodes that expand on the Godzilla lore with shipwrecked characters battling kaiju on the titular island.[23] His scripts integrated high-stakes adventure with character backstories, collaborating with Powerhouse Animation Studios to deliver eight episodes blending horror, action, and environmental themes drawn from the original King Kong public domain elements. The series received solid viewership and praise for its faithful yet innovative take on the MonsterVerse universe.Transition to directing
Duffield made his directorial debut with the 2020 film Spontaneous, an adaptation of Aaron Starmer's young adult novel of the same name, which he also wrote and produced.[24] The coming-of-age black comedy horror follows high school students grappling with spontaneous human combustion, blending elements of romance, grief, and satire, and stars Katherine Langford and Charlie Plummer.[25] Filmed in Vancouver in 2018 over 21 days, production encountered setbacks including severe weather that forced location changes and a company restructuring that delayed post-production for two years, though principal photography predated the COVID-19 pandemic; the film's release on Hulu in October 2020 amplified its thematic parallels to isolation and uncertainty during the crisis.[26] Building on his screenwriting experience with projects like Your Bride and Underwater, Duffield next wrote and directed No One Will Save You (2023), a sci-fi horror thriller produced by 20th Century Studios and starring Kaitlyn Dever as a reclusive young woman fending off an alien invasion in her isolated home.[27] Notable for its nearly dialogue-free structure—relying on sound design, practical effects, and Dever's physical performance—the film was shot in Louisiana over 24 days in 2022 amid a COVID-19 surge that infected key crew members, including the cinematographer, leading to remote directing setups and the absence of department heads for extended periods, which Duffield described as a "f*cking nightmare."[28] Critics praised its tense, inventive execution and Dever's tour-de-force role, with an 82% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, though some noted the ambiguous ending divided audiences.[29] Duffield continues his directorial pursuits with the upcoming survival thriller Whalefall (2026), which he is writing and directing for 20th Century Studios based on Daniel Kraus's novel about a scuba diver swallowed by a sperm whale while searching for his father's remains, starring Austin Abrams, with Josh Brolin in negotiations to co-star; filming took place in the Monterey Peninsula in June 2025.[30][31][32] He also produced Borderline (2025), a dark comedy thriller directed by Jimmy Warden and starring Samara Weaving as a pop star targeted by an obsessive stalker, which received a 59% critics' score on Rotten Tomatoes.[33][34]Filmography
Films as writer
Duffield's screenwriting career gained momentum through his spec scripts, which were featured on The Black List and paved the way for assignments on major studio films.[35] His feature film writing credits, presented chronologically, are as follows:| Year | Title | Co-writers | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | Jane Got a Gun | Anthony Tambakis, Joel Edgerton (screenplay) | Duffield provided the story and initial screenplay for this Western; the film earned mixed reviews with a 42% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes and was a box office disappointment, grossing $3.1 million worldwide against a $25 million budget.[36][37][38] |
| 2015 | Insurgent | Akiva Goldsman, Mark Bomback (screenplay) | Co-writing the adaptation of Veronica Roth's novel, Duffield contributed to the dystopian sequel's script, which received a 29% Rotten Tomatoes score despite its commercial success, earning $297 million globally on a $110 million budget.[39][40][41] |
| 2017 | The Babysitter | None | Duffield's original screenplay powered this Netflix horror-comedy, praised for its sharp humor and gore; it holds a 70% Rotten Tomatoes rating and became a streaming hit, though lacking traditional theatrical earnings.[42][43][44] |
| 2020 | Underwater | Adam Cozad | Duffield co-wrote the sci-fi thriller's script, focusing on deep-sea survival; it garnered a 48% Rotten Tomatoes score and underperformed at the box office with $40.9 million worldwide against an $80 million budget.[45][46][46] |
| 2020 | Love and Monsters | Matthew Robinson (screenplay); Duffield (story) | Duffield originated the story and co-wrote the screenplay for this post-apocalyptic adventure; lauded for its inventive world-building, it achieved a 94% Rotten Tomatoes rating but saw limited theatrical release due to the pandemic, grossing $1.1 million before strong PVOD performance.[47][48]) |