J. C. Chandor
J. C. Chandor (born Jeffrey McDonald Chandor; November 24, 1973) is an American filmmaker specializing in directing, writing, and producing feature films that explore high-stakes decision-making in confined or pressured environments.[1][2] Raised in Basking Ridge, New Jersey, as the son of an investment banker, Chandor observed Wall Street dynamics from a young age, which informed his early screenwriting.[1][3] After graduating from the College of Wooster in 1996 with a film studies degree, he relocated to New York City, spending over a decade in advertising and commercial production before transitioning to narrative filmmaking.[3] His feature debut, Margin Call (2011), a tense drama depicting 24 hours at an investment bank amid the 2008 financial crisis, earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay and established his reputation for economical, dialogue-driven thrillers reliant on strong ensemble performances.[4][5] Chandor's subsequent films, including the survival tale All Is Lost (2013) starring Robert Redford in a near-silent role and the period business thriller A Most Violent Year (2014) featuring Oscar Isaac, garnered critical acclaim for their visual restraint and focus on moral ambiguity under duress, securing additional nominations from Independent Spirit Awards and critics' groups.[4][1] He has since expanded into larger-scale productions like the Netflix action film Triple Frontier (2019) and the Marvel superhero entry Kraven the Hunter (2024), while maintaining a collaborative approach with actors and producers attuned to character psychology over spectacle.[1] Married to producer Mary Cameron Goodyear since 2004, with whom he has two children, Chandor resides in New York and continues to draw from real-world economic pressures in his work.[6]Biography
Early life and education
Jeffrey McDonald Chandor was born on November 24, 1973, in Morristown, New Jersey.[7][2] He grew up in the Basking Ridge section of Bernards Township, New Jersey, in an upper-middle-class family with significant ties to the financial sector.[2] His father, Jeff Chandor, worked as an investment banker, holding senior roles at Merrill Lynch over a 40-year career, which exposed Chandor from an early age to the dynamics of markets, business operations, and individual accountability in high-stakes financial environments.[8][9] His mother, Mary McDonald, provided a stable household backdrop amid these professional influences.[2] Chandor's childhood involved direct observation of his father's career trajectory, including time in banker communities in New York and London, fostering an early familiarity with economic decision-making and the consequences of fiscal prudence over speculative excess.[9] This environment emphasized practical lessons in personal responsibility and market realism, derived from real-world financial practices rather than abstract theory.[7] He attended Ridge High School in Bernards Township, graduating in 1992.[5] Chandor pursued higher education at The College of Wooster in Ohio, earning a bachelor's degree in 1996 with a focus on film studies.[3][6] At Wooster, he engaged in hands-on projects, including writing, shooting, and editing a film as part of the institution's Independent Study requirement, which honed his initial storytelling skills through structured creative output.[10] This academic phase shifted his interests toward narrative forms that could incorporate economic and decision-based lenses, building on familial foundations without veering into ideological framing.[3]Personal life
Chandor married Mary Cameron Goodyear, an artist, on July 24, 2004, after meeting her in childhood through family connections in Rhode Island.[11] The couple has two children, with Chandor citing family as a stabilizing force amid his career uncertainties.[12] Their relationship, rooted in shared East Coast summer communities, reflects a preference for enduring personal ties over transient professional networks.[12] In 2009, facing escalating living costs in New York City, Chandor relocated with his wife and their first child to Providence, Rhode Island, prioritizing affordability and family proximity to coastal roots.[13] During this period, he briefly worked for a wind energy company in a challenging environment, an entrepreneurial pivot that underscored his adaptability while maintaining focus on domestic stability rather than public pursuits.[13] Chandor has maintained a low public profile, avoiding engagement in political or activist causes, with his personal life centered on work-life balance and privacy.[14]Professional career
Entry into filmmaking
Following his graduation from the College of Wooster in 1996, J. C. Chandor transitioned into creative pursuits by directing television commercials and documentaries, accumulating approximately 15 years of practical experience in the field without enrolling in formal film school programs.[15][16] This hands-on work, often involving tight schedules and resource constraints, served as his primary training, supplemented by direct observation of economic pressures in sectors like real estate and banking during the mid-2000s.[9] Chandor's persistence in attempting to assemble independent film projects—many of which did not materialize—honed his understanding of market realities, emphasizing efficiency over subsidized or connected pathways.[17] In 2005, Chandor conceived the concept for what became Margin Call, initially drafting the screenplay over four days in 2007 amid personal job market stress, before refining it further in the late 2000s.[9] The script drew from observed dynamics of financial decision-making, including a 2006 advisory encounter highlighting prescient risk assessment, and was calibrated to the 2008 crisis to dissect individual incentives and cascading pressures rather than attributing outcomes to overarching institutional flaws.[18] This approach privileged causal chains of human behavior under uncertainty—such as prioritizing short-term survival over long-term stability—rooted in empirical glimpses of market volatility rather than ideological critiques.[9] To facilitate production, Chandor structured the narrative around a single 24-hour period in one primary location, intentionally capping ambitions at a low budget to appeal to skeptical financiers wary of crisis-themed projects.[15] He pitched the spec script in 2009 with a focus on its producibility, securing backing through demonstrations of logistical pragmatism, including a planned 17-day shoot with extended daily hours to minimize costs.[9] This market-oriented strategy, leveraging the script's contained scope and timely resonance with real economic upheavals, overcame initial funding hurdles without reliance on high-profile intermediaries.[9]Breakthrough and early independent works
Margin Call (2011), Chandor's feature-length directorial debut, chronicles a 24-hour span at an investment bank confronting the initial throes of the 2008 financial crisis, where a junior risk analyst's discovery triggers a cascade of executive deliberations culminating in a survivalist sell-off of toxic assets.[19] The narrative eschews overt moral judgment, instead illustrating the sequential logic of self-interested decisions driven by immediate pressures, with characters like CEO John Tuld (Jeremy Irons) opting for pragmatic risk transfer over broader ethical reckoning.[19] Produced on a $3.4 million budget with an ensemble including Kevin Spacey and Zachary Quinto, the film secured Chandor an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay, lauded for transforming arcane financial mechanics into taut interpersonal dynamics.[20][21] In All Is Lost (2013), Chandor shifted to a sparse, dialogue-minimal account of an unnamed sailor's ordeal in the Indian Ocean, where a collision with a shipping container initiates relentless environmental adversities met with methodical improvisation and unflinching resolve.[22] Robert Redford's solo performance underscores personal resourcefulness against indifferent natural forces, foregrounding adaptive actions—such as jury-rigging repairs and navigating storms—without narrative crutches like backstory or companions to diffuse individual accountability.[22] Critics highlighted the film's authentic depiction of survival exigencies, respecting the protagonist's agency through unadorned sequences of cause and response that reveal human limits and tenacity.[22] A Most Violent Year (2014) examines the travails of Abel Morales (Oscar Isaac), an immigrant striving to expand his heating oil enterprise in 1981 New York amid rampant hijackings, rival sabotage, and prosecutorial scrutiny, testing commitments to lawful conduct in a milieu rife with expedient corruption.[23] The plot pivots on Morales' deliberate navigation of high-wire business maneuvers, such as a time-sensitive waterfront acquisition, where deviations from principle invite cascading repercussions, balanced against his wife Anna's (Jessica Chastain) pragmatic counsel.[23] Through dimly lit confrontations and procedural restraint, Chandor conveys the empirical weight of choices in ethically fraught commerce, earning National Board of Review recognition as the year's top film for its incisive rendering of pressured human calculus.[24] Across these works, Chandor cultivated a signature realism via compressed timelines and verbal sparring that expose decision trees branching from discernible incentives, prioritizing observable behavioral sequences over didactic overlays.[23]Genre expansions and collaborations
Chandor's mid-career shift toward larger-scale genre filmmaking culminated in Triple Frontier (2019), a Netflix-produced action-heist thriller marking his first venture into ensemble-driven narratives with heightened commercial elements. The film follows five former U.S. Special Forces operatives—portrayed by Ben Affleck, Oscar Isaac, Charlie Hunnam, Garrett Hedlund, and Pedro Pascal—who reunite for a high-stakes robbery targeting a South American drug lord's hoard, delving into the corrosive effects of greed on military veterans confronting post-service disillusionment.[25] Originally developed from a script by Mark Boal dating back to 2009, the project endured years of production limbo, including casting hurdles that saw initial attachments like Tom Hanks and Johnny Depp fall through before the final ensemble solidified in 2018.[26] Adapting to studio-scale constraints, Chandor navigated script revisions to balance intimate moral realism with broader action sequences, incorporating logistical demands such as filming in Hawaii to simulate South American terrain and coordinating shoots near active oil rigs for authenticity amid safety protocols.[27] These changes aimed at commercial viability, expanding from his prior solo-protagonist indies like All Is Lost (2013) to collaborative dynamics with a star-heavy cast and Netflix's global distribution model, while preserving thematic focus on ethical erosion under pressure.[28] Critically, Triple Frontier garnered praise for its tense, vividly executed action and buildup of interpersonal friction, yet faced scrutiny for formulaic plotting and underdeveloped characters that diluted the parable of avarice's toll.[25] Reviewers noted strengths in evoking survivalist realism akin to The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, but critiqued the film's descent into murky, predictable moralizing post-heist, highlighting tensions between genre conventions and Chandor's restraint-heavy style.[29] This collaboration underscored his selective embrace of ensemble formats, yielding empirical successes in suspense delivery while exposing limits in scaling character depth for mass appeal.[30]Recent projects and future directions
Chandor's most recent directorial effort, Kraven the Hunter (2024), marked his entry into the superhero genre as part of Sony Pictures' Spider-Man Universe, portraying the origin of the Marvel Comics anti-hero Sergei Kravinoff with an R-rating to emphasize gritty violence and moral ambiguity.[31] The film stars Aaron Taylor-Johnson in the lead role, exploring Kraven's vengeful path stemming from his abusive relationship with his gangster father, Nikolai Kravinoff, portrayed by Russell Crowe, and incorporates adaptation liberties such as a shamanistic origin for his powers to deepen causal motivations beyond comic fidelity.[32] Production faced multiple delays, initially slated for January 13, 2023, then shifting to October 6, 2023, August 30, 2024, and finally December 13, 2024, partly due to the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike, highlighting commercial risks in aligning independent sensibilities with studio-mandated franchise timelines amid Sony's uneven track record in the universe.[33] In August 2024, Chandor secured a deal with Sony Pictures to write and direct an untitled contemporary drama, signaling a pivot back to character-driven narratives akin to his earlier independent works, potentially as his follow-up to Kraven.[31] By April 2025, the project was reported as titled Zebra Killers, described as a contemporary thriller, underscoring Chandor's strategy to alternate high-stakes studio assignments with grounded, original stories to mitigate blockbuster dependencies while sustaining industry leverage.[34] Looking ahead, Chandor has additional projects in development, including The Robber, slated for potential 2025 release, and an untitled Vince Lombardi biopic, reflecting adaptive navigation of commercial pressures by diversifying between genre spectacles and biographical or thriller formats to preserve directorial autonomy.[35] This pipeline illustrates a deliberate balance, leveraging Kraven's scale for visibility while prioritizing scripts that allow first-principles exploration of human causality over formulaic IP extensions.[36]Artistic style and themes
Directorial techniques
Chandor's directorial approach prioritizes practical realism and resource efficiency, transforming budgetary limitations into structural strengths. In Margin Call (2011), he restricted the narrative to one overnight sequence in a single Manhattan high-rise, employing natural light as the primary visual foundation to underscore the claustrophobic urgency of financial decision-making without artificial enhancements.[37] This technique confined production to under $1 million while heightening tension through spatial restraint and unadorned illumination.[15] Subsequent films extend this efficiency to environmental authenticity via practical effects and on-location filming. For All Is Lost (2013), Chandor utilized three actual 39-foot Cal yachts—sunk and repaired repeatedly in Baja Studios tanks and the Pacific Ocean off Mexico—to replicate causal sequences of maritime peril, minimizing digital intervention beyond background enhancements.[38] Cinematographer Frank G. DeMarco complemented this with natural lighting and wide-angle lenses for yacht interiors, capturing tight compositions against expansive seascapes to evoke immediate, unmediated survival mechanics.[38] In Triple Frontier (2019), the strategy persisted with predominantly natural light during location shoots in Hawaii and practical setups, including a real Mil Mi-8 helicopter, to ground action in verifiable physics over stylized spectacle.[39] Casting reinforces these mechanics by favoring actors who project inherent capability through physical and expressive subtlety, eschewing overt mannerisms. Robert Redford's selection for All Is Lost leveraged his lived-in visage to silently communicate procedural competence amid isolation, aligning with the film's dialogue-free structure of just 51 words.[38] Chandor collaborates closely with performers on character histories to ensure performances integrate seamlessly with practical demands, as seen in Oscar Isaac's restrained portrayal in A Most Violent Year (2014).[15] Sound design similarly adheres to minimalism, as in All Is Lost where Skywalker Sound crafted a sparse yet immersive layer of oceanic and mechanical cues to amplify consequential isolation without verbal crutches.[38]Recurring motifs and philosophical underpinnings
Chandor's films recurrently depict motifs of individual survival predicated on rational, high-stakes decision-making amid pervasive uncertainty, whether financial, environmental, or competitive. In Margin Call (2011), investment bank personnel confront an impending collapse by evaluating data-driven risks over a compressed timeline, prioritizing institutional continuity through calculated maneuvers. All Is Lost (2013) isolates a lone sailor against oceanic hazards, relying on methodical improvisation to mitigate cascading failures without narrative exposition. A Most Violent Year (2014) extends this to urban entrepreneurship, where a heating oil magnate navigates sabotage and regulatory scrutiny via principled yet pragmatic responses to threats. Chandor has articulated that these stories converge on survival as a core thread, thrusting ordinary individuals into raw confrontations with systemic forces.[40] Underpinning these motifs is a philosophical commitment to individual agency and ethical ambiguity within market ecosystems, rejecting reductive attributions of systemic woes to unalloyed greed in favor of incentive alignments and human incentives. Characters inhabit a "complicated" moral terrain, often "wooed into an evil act" by competitive pressures rather than innate vice, as in the tribal loyalties and self-preservation instincts driving Margin Call's protagonists amid the 2008 crisis mechanics. This approach frames capitalism not as a pure ideal but an "insane grind" riddled with imperfections, where pivotal choices oscillate between self-interest and broader societal ramifications, demanding accountability from agents enmeshed in imperfect structures.[40][9] Influenced by real-world upheavals such as the 2008 financial implosion—which Margin Call dissects through rational responses to catastrophic opacity, highlighting misused intellectual capital's dual-edged potential for innovation and peril—Chandor's oeuvre maintains a disinterested lens on causal chains, foregrounding how misaligned incentives amplify risks without excusing personal lapses. In A Most Violent Year, inspired partly by the 1981 New York crime surge and contemporaneous events like Sandy Hook, ethical forbearance amid blurred criminal-business boundaries tests the immigrant's aspirational ethos, revealing villainy as an emergent property of unchecked ambition rather than exogenous corruption. This causal realism privileges verifiable behavioral drivers over collectivist indictments, underscoring that outcomes hinge on discrete, accountable choices within unforgiving incentive matrices.[9][41][42]Reception and impact
Critical evaluations
Margin Call received widespread critical acclaim for its taut depiction of a 24-hour financial crisis at an investment bank, earning an 87% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 166 reviews.[43] Critics praised Chandor's script for building tension through realistic dialogue and ensemble performances, avoiding ideological finger-pointing in favor of examining individual decision-making under pressure.[44] This approach highlighted causal chains of personal choices leading to systemic fallout, rather than attributing the 2008 meltdown solely to abstract institutional failures, a nuance often underemphasized in media narratives prone to broader indictments of capitalism.[45] All Is Lost garnered similar enthusiasm, with a 95% Rotten Tomatoes score from 240 critics, lauded for its minimalist realism in portraying a sailor's survival against natural elements.[46] Roger Ebert awarded it four stars, commending Chandor's directorial confidence in eschewing exposition for visceral, cause-and-effect sequences that underscore human agency amid isolation.[22] However, some reviewers critiqued its simplicity as bordering on facile, arguing the narrative's purity sacrifices depth for stylistic austerity.[47] A Most Violent Year elicited mixed responses, with praise for its exploration of business integrity amid 1981 New York's crime wave, yet frequent complaints about deliberate pacing that verges on sluggishness.[48] Roger Ebert gave it three stars, appreciating Chandor's focus on protagonists resisting violent temptations through principled restraint, though noting the film's pressure-cooker dynamics echo prior works without full innovation.[23] Detractors, including those in mainstream outlets, highlighted the slow burn as undermining momentum, prioritizing thematic deliberation over kinetic engagement.[49] Triple Frontier drew commendations for competent action sequences but faced substantial criticism for underdeveloped characters, rendering moral dilemmas superficial despite the ensemble's talent.[25] Reviewers noted the film's failure to flesh out interpersonal dynamics, leading to scattered emotional weight in its heist-gone-wrong premise, where greed's consequences feel more procedural than psychologically probing.[50] This shortfall contrasts with Chandor's earlier emphasis on isolated agency, here diluted by group dynamics lacking causal depth.[51] Kraven the Hunter (2024) met with largely negative reviews, scoring low for deviations from Sony's Spider-Man Universe continuity and erratic execution, including rote storytelling and subpar effects.[52] Critics in Variety described it as derivative, with action failing to elevate a muddled origin tale, though the R-rating permitted rawer violence than typical superhero fare.[53] Dissenting voices appreciated attempts at grounded realism in Kraven's brutal ascent, prioritizing visceral hunter instincts over sanitized heroism, a take aligning with appreciations of individual prowess over ensemble or systemic critiques prevalent in left-leaning genre commentary.[54]Commercial performance
Chandor's debut feature Margin Call (2011) was produced on a modest budget of $3.5 million and earned $5.4 million domestically, with worldwide grosses reaching approximately $19 million, demonstrating strong returns for its low-cost, ensemble-driven model.[55][56] This performance validated the efficiency of independent financing and limited theatrical releases in achieving profitability without relying on major studio backing. His follow-up All Is Lost (2013), a survival drama starring Robert Redford, had an estimated budget of $9 million and grossed $6.3 million in the United States and Canada alongside $13.6 million worldwide, reflecting moderate niche appeal amid limited marketing and a specialized audience for minimalist storytelling.[57][58] Similarly, A Most Violent Year (2014) generated $5.7 million domestically on an estimated $20 million budget, with international earnings pushing total grosses to around $17 million, underscoring consistent but restrained box office outcomes for his early period dramas.[59][60] The 2019 Netflix release Triple Frontier, a high-concept action thriller, lacked traditional box office metrics but achieved significant viewership, with 52 million global household accounts watching within its first four weeks, indicating robust streaming engagement despite undisclosed production costs estimated in the tens of millions.[61]| Film | Budget (est.) | Domestic Gross | Worldwide Gross | Platform Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Margin Call (2011) | $3.5M | $5.4M | ~$19M | Theatrical |
| All Is Lost (2013) | $9M | $6.3M | $13.6M | Theatrical |
| A Most Violent Year (2014) | $20M | $5.7M | ~$17M | Theatrical |
| Triple Frontier (2019) | Undisclosed | N/A | 52M views (first month) | Netflix streaming |
| Kraven the Hunter (2024) | $110M | $25M | $62M | Theatrical |
Cultural and industry influence
Chandor's debut film Margin Call (2011) established a model for depicting financial crises through restrained, character-driven realism, emphasizing individual decision-making amid systemic pressures rather than overt moralizing. The film's focus on a single night's events at an unnamed investment bank, inspired by the 2008 Lehman Brothers collapse, influenced subsequent portrayals by prioritizing procedural authenticity over didacticism; for instance, financiers have cited it as a rare accurate reflection of Wall Street dynamics, distinguishing it from more sensationalized accounts.[65][66] This approach avoided investor demands for punitive resolutions, such as mass incarcerations, preserving a causal view of market failures rooted in human agency over institutional scapegoating.[65] In survival thrillers, All Is Lost (2013) contributed to the genre by centering unadorned individual resilience against environmental adversity, with Robert Redford's nameless sailor embodying self-reliant problem-solving devoid of backstory or external salvation. The film's minimal dialogue and real-time escalation of nautical challenges reinforced narratives of personal accountability in isolation, influencing depictions that eschew ensemble rescues or psychological exposition in favor of raw causal sequences of action and consequence.[67][68] Chandor's collaborations have extended his grounded aesthetic to larger-scale productions, adapting independent sensibilities to franchise elements in Kraven the Hunter (2024), where he structured the anti-hero origin as a non-traditional arc emphasizing primal self-determination over conventional heroism. This shift demonstrates his role in bridging indie precision with commercial vehicles, potentially enabling darker comic adaptations like Kraven's Last Hunt if commercially viable, thus injecting realism into superhero genres prone to formulaic empowerment tropes.[69][70] Across his oeuvre, Chandor's works cultivate themes of autonomous navigation through crises—financial, maritime, or ethical—countering media trends toward collective victimhood by highlighting protagonists' volitional responses, as seen in the integrity-testing dilemmas of A Most Violent Year (2014). This consistent motif fosters industry appreciation for scripts that probe human limits without reliance on redemptive ensembles, promoting causal narratives of self-mastery in an era of interdependent plot devices.[13][71]Awards and nominations
Academy Awards and major accolades
J. C. Chandor received one Academy Award nomination for Margin Call (2011), in the category of Best Original Screenplay at the 84th Academy Awards on February 26, 2012. This recognition highlighted the screenplay's merit in crafting a precise, dialogue-driven narrative compressing 24 hours of escalating financial crisis events into a single-location thriller, drawing from Chandor's research into investment banking dynamics. The film competed against nominees including Midnight in Paris, which won the award, but Chandor's debut script stood out for its economical structure and avoidance of overt exposition, earning praise for technical rigor amid broader industry acclaim for financial-themed works post-2008 recession. No wins followed for Chandor at the Oscars. Subsequent projects like All Is Lost (2013), A Most Violent Year (2014), and later collaborations such as Triple Frontier (2019) generated strong reviews in specialized circuits but yielded zero additional Academy Award nominations for Chandor in directing or writing categories. This pattern aligns with empirical trends where genre diversification—from ensemble corporate intrigue to solo survival epics and action-thrillers—often correlates with diminished Oscar contention, as Academy voters historically favor narrative familiarity over innovative format shifts, per nomination data across similar debuts. Chandor's win rate at elite levels remains at 0%, underscoring reliance on initial breakout validation rather than sustained prestige-cycle success. Major accolades beyond the Oscars for early works include Independent Spirit Award nominations for Margin Call in Best First Screenplay and Best First Feature, reflecting peer validation in independent cinema for scripting efficiency and debut execution. Similarly, Critics' Choice nods for the same film affirmed technical achievements in tension-building, though without conversions to wins, consistent with low empirical success rates (under 10%) for first-time directors in such honors. These merits-based markers emphasize Chandor's strengths in screenplay economy over broader directorial tropes, absent in later genre experiments.Other recognitions
Chandor's directorial debut Margin Call (2011) earned him a nomination for the Golden Berlin Bear at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival.[72] The film premiered in the Premieres section of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, receiving industry attention for its screenplay but no jury award.[73] For A Most Violent Year (2014), Chandor received the National Board of Review's designation of Best Film of the Year, recognizing the film's tense exploration of business ethics amid 1981 New York corruption.[74][24] The Film Independent Spirit Awards provided multiple nods to Chandor's work, including Best First Screenplay for Margin Call (2012), Best Director for All Is Lost (2014), and Best Screenplay for A Most Violent Year (2015), highlighting his economical scripting and independent sensibilities across projects.[4]Filmography
Feature films as director
Chandor made his feature directorial debut with Margin Call (2011), a film he also wrote, distributed by Lionsgate with a runtime of 107 minutes.[56][75] His second directorial effort, All Is Lost (2013), was written solely by Chandor, distributed by Roadside Attractions, and runs 106 minutes.[57][46] A Most Violent Year (2014), another Chandor-written project, was distributed by A24 and has a runtime of 125 minutes.[76][77] In 2019, Chandor directed Triple Frontier, co-written with Mark Boal, released by Netflix with a 125-minute runtime.[78] His most recent feature as of 2024, Kraven the Hunter, released on December 13 by Sony Pictures with a 127-minute runtime, marked Chandor's entry into superhero films, though he did not write the screenplay.[63][79]| Year | Title | Key Credits | Distributor | Runtime |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2011 | Margin Call | Director, writer | Lionsgate | 107 min[56] |
| 2013 | All Is Lost | Director, writer | Roadside Attractions | 106 min[57] |
| 2014 | A Most Violent Year | Director, writer | A24 | 125 min[76] |
| 2019 | Triple Frontier | Director, co-writer | Netflix | 125 min[78] |
| 2024 | Kraven the Hunter | Director | Sony Pictures | 127 min[63] |