Charlie McDowell
Charlie McDowell is an American film director, screenwriter, and producer known for his work in independent cinema, blending elements of science fiction, drama, and thriller genres.[1] Born on July 10, 1983, in Los Angeles, California, he is the son of actors Malcolm McDowell and Mary Steenburgen, and stepson to Ted Danson.[2] McDowell graduated from the AFI Conservatory in 2006, where he honed his skills in directing and screenwriting before making his feature debut with the romantic sci-fi comedy The One I Love in 2014.[3] McDowell's career gained prominence with The One I Love, which starred Mark Duplass and Elisabeth Moss and premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, earning praise for its inventive exploration of relationships.[4] He followed this with The Discovery (2017), a Netflix sci-fi drama featuring Robert Redford, Jason Segel, and Rooney Mara, delving into themes of afterlife and human behavior in a post-discovery world.[5] His subsequent films include the Netflix thriller Windfall (2022), co-written with his wife Lily Collins and starring an ensemble cast including Jason Segel and Jesse Plemons, and The Summer Book (2024), an adaptation of Tove Jansson's novel starring Glenn Close as a grandmother navigating loss and renewal with her granddaughter.[6][7] In television, McDowell has directed episodes of series such as the FX series Legion (2018).[8] On a personal note, McDowell married actress Lily Collins on September 4, 2021, at Dunton Hot Springs in Colorado, after meeting on the set of Stuck in Love in 2012 and beginning a romantic relationship in 2019.[9] The couple welcomed their first child, a daughter named Tove Jane McDowell, via surrogate in early 2025.[10] McDowell's upbringing in a Hollywood family has influenced his collaborative approach, though he has emphasized carving an independent path distinct from his parents' legacies.[2]Early life
Family background
Charlie McDowell was born on July 10, 1983, in Los Angeles, California, to English actor Malcolm McDowell and American actress Mary Steenburgen.[1][11] His parents met on the set of the 1979 science fiction film Time After Time and married on September 29, 1980.[12][13] The couple had two children together before divorcing on October 1, 1990, when McDowell was seven years old.[14][15] Following the divorce, McDowell divided his time between his mother's home in Los Angeles and his father's in London, navigating a bicoastal childhood shaped by his parents' respective careers in entertainment.[16] McDowell has an older sister, Lilly McDowell, born on January 22, 1981, as well as half-siblings from his parents' other marriages, including three younger half-brothers—Beckett, Finn, and Seamus—from his father's 1991 marriage to artist Kelley Kuhr, and two stepsisters, Kate and Alexis Danson, from his stepfather's previous marriage.[17][16] On October 7, 1995, his mother married actor Ted Danson, who became McDowell's stepfather and further immersed the family in Hollywood circles through his prominent television and film work.[18][19] From a young age, McDowell gained early exposure to the film industry through his parents' professions, frequently visiting sets and observing directors at work, which he described as a "funny place to grow up."[20][21] At age six, he even appeared as an extra in his mother's 1989 film Parenthood, an experience amid the heat of a Los Angeles shoot that initially left him unimpressed but later informed his appreciation for filmmaking.[20] This osmosis-like immersion in the creative environment of his family's careers fostered an early conceptual understanding of storytelling and production dynamics.[22]Education
McDowell attended Crossroads School for Arts and Sciences in Santa Monica, California, where he graduated in 2002.[23][24] Following high school, he pursued undergraduate studies in film at Chapman University's Dodge College of Film and Media Arts, attending for two years before transferring.[11][25][26] In 2004, McDowell enrolled in the graduate directing program at the American Film Institute Conservatory (AFI), earning a Master of Fine Arts degree in 2006.[3][27] During his time at AFI, he developed his filmmaking style through student projects, including his thesis short film Bye Bye Benjamin (2006), a comedy that screened at festivals and received awards.[28] His parents, actors Malcolm McDowell and Mary Steenburgen, provided support for his decision to pursue formal film education.[26]Career
Early career and debut
After graduating from the AFI Conservatory in 2006, where he directed his thesis short film Bye Bye Benjamin, McDowell transitioned into developing feature-length projects.[27] The short, a comedic exploration of a precocious ten-year-old navigating adult-like business pressures and budding romance, featured notable actors including his father Malcolm McDowell, Lolita Davidovich, and Ted Danson, marking an early showcase of his directorial voice.[29] McDowell's professional breakthrough came through his collaboration with screenwriter Justin Lader, whom he met at AFI. Together, they developed the script for The One I Love, initially conceived as a surreal examination of marital strain during a couples' retreat.[30] The project originated from an idea emailed by actor Mark Duplass to McDowell, evolving into a 52-page "scriptment" by Lader that blended dialogue, descriptions, and visual cues to guide the low-budget production.[31] Produced on an estimated $100,000 budget, the indie film starred Duplass and Elisabeth Moss as a couple whose weekend getaway uncovers bizarre doppelgangers, delving into themes of identity and relationship dynamics.[32] The One I Love premiered in the U.S. Dramatic Competition at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival, where it garnered critical acclaim for its original premise and inventive storytelling.[33] Reviewers praised its fresh take on romantic comedy-thriller elements, with The Hollywood Reporter noting its "ingenious" twists that kept audiences engaged. The positive buzz led to a distribution deal with RADiUS-TWC for approximately $2 million in worldwide rights shortly after the festival, enabling a limited theatrical release and further exposure.[33] This debut established McDowell as a promising voice in independent cinema, highlighting his ability to craft intimate, genre-bending narratives on constrained resources.Feature films
McDowell's feature film directorial debut, The One I Love, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2014.[34]| Year | Title | Roles | Distributor | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | The One I Love | Director, writer (with Justin Lader) | RADiUS-TWC | Original screenplay.[35] |
| 2017 | The Discovery | Director, writer (with Olivia Milch) | Netflix | Original screenplay.[36] |
| 2022 | Windfall | Director, writer (story; screenplay by Andrew Kevin Walker and Justin Lader), producer | Netflix | Original story.[37][38] |
| 2024 | The Summer Book | Director, producer | Music Box Films (North America); SF Studios (Nordic countries) | Adaptation of Tove Jansson's novel; screenplay by Robert Jones.[39][40][37] |
Television and other projects
McDowell expanded his directing career into television following the success of his early feature films, guest-directing episodes across several acclaimed series. He helmed two episodes of HBO's Silicon Valley in 2016: the third-season installment "Meinertzhagen's Haversack," which explores the Pied Piper team's internal conflicts amid corporate pressures, and "Maleant Data Systems Solutions," focusing on the group's desperate pivot to a new business model.[41][42] For Netflix's Dear White People, he directed "Chapter VII" in 2017, examining racial tensions on campus, and "Volume 2: Chapter III" in 2018, delving into themes of racial identity and campus activism through the lens of Sam White's evolving worldview.[43][44] In 2018, McDowell directed the penultimate episode of Legion's second season, "Chapter 15," a surreal installment that heightens the series' psychological intensity as protagonist David Haller confronts delusions and alternate realities.[45] He continued with "A Positive Spin!" of Showtime's On Becoming a God in Central Florida in 2019, an episode centered on ambition and deception in the multi-level marketing world.[46] In 2020, McDowell directed an episode of Amazon's Tales from the Loop, exploring sci-fi themes of time and human connection in a small town, and an episode of AMC's Dispatches from Elsewhere, which follows ordinary people unraveling a mystery in Philadelphia.[47][48] In addition to directing, McDowell has taken on producing roles in television and related projects. In 2022, he co-founded Case Study Films with actress Lily Collins and producer Alex Orlovsky, a production company focused on developing compelling narratives for film and television, with financing capabilities to support independent storytelling.[49] One of its early endeavors was the adaptation of Don DeLillo's novel Zero K into a limited series for FX, announced in 2017, with McDowell set to direct alongside writer Noah Hawley and producer Scott Rudin; the project, centered on cryogenic preservation and familial estrangement, remains in development without a confirmed premiere as of 2025.[50] McDowell also served as a producer on the 2025 psychological thriller Lurker, directed by Alex Russell, which examines obsession and the dark side of celebrity through a retail clerk's infiltration of a pop star's entourage; the film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and explores themes of fame's pathology in the social media era.[51] Among his unproduced projects, a feature film adaptation of the true-crime story behind Gilded Rage—based on the 2015 murder of investment banker Thomas Gilbert Sr.—has seen stalled progress, with McDowell attached to direct but no updates as of late 2025.[52]Personal life
Relationships and marriage
McDowell has maintained a relatively private personal life, with limited public details about his early romantic relationships while transitioning to his career in Los Angeles. In 2007, he briefly dated actress and singer Haylie Duff, followed by a short relationship with actress Kristin Chenoweth from 2008 to 2009.[53] His most notable early partnership was with actress Rooney Mara, which began in 2010 after they met in Los Angeles and lasted until 2016; during this period, McDowell was developing his debut feature film and publishing his book Dear Girls Above Me.[54][25][55] In 2018, McDowell began dating actress Emilia Clarke, a relationship that ended in 2019. Later that year, he started a romance with actress Lily Collins, whom he met on the set of his unproduced film project Gilded Rage through mutual industry connections.[16][56] The couple made their relationship Instagram official in August 2019, and their first public appearance together was at a Los Angeles Lakers game in January 2020.[57] McDowell and Collins announced their engagement on September 25, 2020, with Collins sharing a photo of her custom rose-cut morganite ring on social media.[58] They married on September 4, 2021, in a private ceremony at the Dunton Hot Springs resort in Dolores, Colorado, attended by close family and friends including McDowell's parents, Malcolm McDowell and Mary Steenburgen.[59] Collins wore a custom lace gown and veil by Ralph Lauren, describing the event as an "enchanted forest" setting.[60] Since their marriage, McDowell and Collins have appeared together at industry events, including the Sundance Film Festival in 2022, the premiere of Emily in Paris season three in Paris in 2022, and the Breakthrough Prize Ceremony in 2025.[56][61] Their partnership reflects a shared preference for discretion, influenced by McDowell's family background in the entertainment industry.[16]Family and parenthood
Lily Collins and Charlie McDowell welcomed their first child, a daughter named Tove Jane McDowell, via surrogacy on January 31, 2025. The couple announced the birth on Instagram, expressing profound gratitude to their surrogate and the medical team involved, stating, "Words will never express our endless gratitude for our incredible surrogate and everyone who helped us bring her into the world."[62][63] The birth occurred in Northern California, near the home of McDowell's mother, actress Mary Steenburgen, and stepfather, actor Ted Danson, highlighting the couple's reliance on extended family support during this period. Danson later described the experience of having the new family stay with them as a "joy," noting the closeness it brought amid the early days of parenthood.[64] The McDowells, who reside in Los Angeles, have maintained a deliberate emphasis on privacy regarding their family life, with Collins sharing only selective glimpses on social media to protect their daughter's well-being.[16] In response to public backlash and criticism over their choice of surrogacy, McDowell addressed online negativity in a February 2025 Instagram post, advocating for empathy and education on the topic: "It's OK to not be an expert on surrogacy... It's OK to spend less time spewing hateful words into the world." The couple has framed their journey as a modern path to parenthood, underscoring themes of gratitude, choice, and family-building in contemporary contexts.[65][66] This approach aligns with their marriage since 2021, which they have described as the foundation for expanding their family.[67]Filmography
Feature films
McDowell's feature film directorial debut, The One I Love, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2014.[34]| Year | Title | Roles | Distributor | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | The One I Love | Director, writer (with Justin Lader) | RADiUS-TWC | Original screenplay.[35] |
| 2017 | The Discovery | Director, writer (with Olivia Milch) | Netflix | Original screenplay.[36] |
| 2022 | Windfall | Director, writer (story; screenplay by Andrew Kevin Walker and Justin Lader), producer | Netflix | Original story.[37][38] |
| 2024 | The Summer Book | Director, producer | Music Box Films (North America); SF Studios (Nordic countries) | Adaptation of Tove Jansson's novel; screenplay by Robert Jones.[39][40][68] |
| 2025 | Lurker | Producer | Psychological drama thriller directed by Alex Russell.[69] |
Television episodes
McDowell began directing television episodes in the mid-2010s, transitioning from feature films to episodic work on acclaimed series. His contributions often emphasize character-driven narratives and atmospheric tension, aligning with his cinematic style.[1]Silicon Valley (2014–2019)
McDowell directed two episodes of the HBO comedy series Silicon Valley.- Season 3, Episode 3: "Meinertzhagen's Haversack" (2016)[41]
- Season 3, Episode 4: "Maleant Data Systems Solutions" (2016)[42]
Dear White People (2017–2021)
McDowell directed two episodes of the Netflix satirical drama Dear White People.- Season 1, Episode 7: "Chapter VII" (2017)[43]
- Season 2, Episode 3: "Chapter III" (2018)[44]
Legion (2017–2019)
McDowell directed one episode of the FX superhero series Legion.- Season 2, Episode 7: "Chapter 15" (2018)[45]
On Becoming a God in Central Florida (2019)
McDowell directed the pilot and finale of the Showtime dark comedy series On Becoming a God in Central Florida, while also serving as an executive producer for the season.- Season 1, Episode 1: "Go Getters Gonna Go Getcha" (2019)
- Season 1, Episode 10: "The New Man in Town" (2019)
Tales from the Loop (2020)
McDowell directed one episode of the Amazon Prime Video sci-fi anthology series Tales from the Loop.- Season 1, Episode 6: "Parallel" (2020)[70]
Dispatches from Elsewhere (2020)
McDowell directed the season finale of the AMC mystery drama series Dispatches from Elsewhere.- Season 1, Episode 10: "The Boy" (2020)[71]
Awards and nominations
Film awards
Charlie McDowell's feature films have garnered recognition from critics' circles and independent film organizations, highlighting his innovative storytelling in intimate dramas. His debut The One I Love (2014) earned a Special Citation from the San Francisco Film Critics Circle for its fresh take on relationship dynamics.[72] The film's screenplay, co-written by McDowell and Justin Lader, received a nomination for Best First Screenplay at the 30th Film Independent Spirit Awards.[73] The Discovery (2017) premiered in competition at the Sundance Film Festival, receiving praise for its philosophical sci-fi elements, but did not secure formal awards.[5] McDowell's most recent feature, The Summer Book (2024), has been nominated for directorial honors at major international festivals in 2025.[74] His producing work on the psychological thriller Lurker (2025) earned a nomination at the Gotham Awards.[75]| Award | Year | Film | Category | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| San Francisco Film Critics Circle | 2014 | The One I Love | Special Citation (Director) | Won[72] |
| Film Independent Spirit Awards | 2015 | The One I Love | Best First Screenplay | Nominated[73] |
| Gotham Awards | 2025 | Lurker (producer) | Best Feature | Nominated[75] |
| Miami Film Festival | 2025 | The Summer Book | Knight Marimbas Award (Director) | Nominated[74] |
| Munich Film Festival | 2025 | The Summer Book | CineKindl Award (Director) | Nominated[74] |