Julius Avery is an Australianfilm director renowned for his contributions to the action and horror genres. Born in Pemberton, Western Australia, he holds a Master's degree from the Victorian College of the Arts and first gained international acclaim with his short filmJerrycan (2008), which won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival.[1]Avery's feature film debut, Son of a Gun (2014), a crime thriller starring Ewan McGregor and Brenton Thwaites, marked his transition to long-form storytelling and showcased his skill in crafting tense, character-driven narratives.[2] His subsequent works include the zombie-infused war horrorOverlord (2018), produced by J.J. Abrams, which blended historical fiction with supernatural elements and received critical praise for its inventive premise.[3] In 2022, he directed Samaritan, a superhero drama featuring Sylvester Stallone as a retired vigilante, further demonstrating his versatility in genre filmmaking.[4]Avery's most recent major release, The Pope's Exorcist (2023), a supernatural thriller based on the real-life accounts of Father Gabriele Amorth, starred Russell Crowe and grossed approximately $77 million worldwide, highlighting his ability to helm high-stakes horror with commercial success.[2] He founded the directors' collective Bridle Path Films in 2011 to support emerging Australian talent and has earned additional accolades for earlier shorts like End of Town (2006), which won the Emerging Australian Filmmaker Award at the Melbourne International Film Festival.[1] As of 2025, Avery is directing the alien abduction thriller They Found Us for AGC Studios, continuing his trajectory in genre-driven projects.[5]
Early life and education
Early life
Julius Avery was born in 1977 in Pemberton, a small town in rural Western Australia.[1][6][7]He spent his early childhood in the region's isolated, forested landscape before his family relocated to Mount Helena, on the urban-rural fringe near Perth, where he experienced a semi-rural upbringing marked by the challenges of small-town life.[6] This environment profoundly shaped his worldview, instilling a sense of solitude that later echoed in his cinematic explorations of isolation.Tragedy struck early when Avery's father died while he was five years old, leaving a void that influenced his search for guidance and authority figures in his youth.[8] In the aftermath, an older boy from his community stepped in as a mentor, offering camaraderie and direction during a formative period; Avery later described this relationship as pivotal, with the older figure embodying both protection and a rebellious edge.[9]These rural experiences, including the loss and makeshift mentorship, informed recurring themes in Avery's films, such as the dynamics of isolation, paternal absence, and surrogate father-son bonds, drawing directly from his personal history in Western Australia's rural settings.[8][10]
Education
Avery began his artistic training at age 15 by attending an art college in Western Australia.[11] He later pursued formal training in filmmaking at the Victorian College of the Arts (VCA) in Melbourne, where he earned a Master of Film and Television degree.[12] This program provided him with rigorous instruction in narrative development, cinematography, and production techniques, immersing him in a collaborative environment alongside emerging talents such as director Justin Kurzel and cinematographer Adam Arkapaw.[11]During his studies, Avery gained early exposure to influential filmmaking styles, drawing inspiration from the high-stakes action cinema of the late 1980s and early 1990s, including works by Michael Mann such as Thief (1981).[11] These influences shaped his approach to tension-building and visual storytelling, which he began applying in practical projects at VCA. His academic training marked a pivotal shift from his rural upbringing in Pemberton, Western Australia, to the vibrant urban film scene of Melbourne, fostering connections that propelled his entry into professional Australian cinema.[12]Avery's debut short film, Matchbox (2002), emerged as a student project during this period, serving as his first foray into directing a fast-paced narrative about a mismatched romance.[13] Screened as a finalist at Tropfest 2002, Australia's largest short film festival, the four-minute comedy demonstrated his nascent ability to blend humor with concise visual effects, laying the groundwork for his subsequent work.[14] This educational experience not only honed his technical skills but also bridged his isolated rural roots to broader professional networks in the industry.[11]
Career
Short films
Julius Avery's entry into professional filmmaking began with short films that showcased his emerging talent in Australian independent cinema. Following his graduation from the Victorian College of the Arts, where he honed his craft, Avery directed and wrote End of Town in 2006, a poignant 15-minute drama depicting a young girl standing on a lonely rural road, contemplating escape from her stifling small-town life and familial burdens, which won the Emerging Australian Filmmaker Award at the 2006 Melbourne International Film Festival.[15][1][16] The film's isolated setting and introspective tone highlighted Avery's affinity for psychological depth, exploring themes of adolescent yearning and entrapment in rural Australia.[17]Avery's directorial style further crystallized in Jerrycan (2008), which he also wrote, centering on a group of bored rural teenagers whose prankish game of rock-paper-scissors escalates into a tense, life-altering confrontation with bullying and moral peril.[18] Shot with a raw aesthetic using natural light and local non-professional actors, the 13-minute film emphasized psychological tension and the precariousness of youth in isolated communities, earning selection for the Short Film Competition at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Jury Prize.[19][18]In 2012, Avery served as writer and executive producer for Yardbird, directed by Michael Spiccia, a supernaturalthriller about a girl in a remote wrecking yard who unleashes her hidden abilities to confront tormenting town bullies threatening her father.[20] The story's blend of rural isolation, psychological confrontation, and subtle horror elements aligned with Avery's recurring motifs of vulnerability and resilience under pressure.[21] Nominated for the Palme d'Or for Best Short Film at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival, Yardbird marked another international milestone.[22]These short films collectively established Avery's distinctive voice in Australian independent cinema, characterized by taut, character-driven narratives set against stark rural backdrops that probe the psyche's darker corners.[1] Their critical reception and Cannes exposure propelled Avery onto the global stage, bridging local storytelling with broader appeal and paving the way for his feature-length projects.[23]
Feature films
Avery's transition to feature films began with his debut as a writer-director on the 2014 Australian crime thriller Son of a Gun, which explores the harsh realities of prison life and a young man's entanglement in a criminal underworld, starring Ewan McGregor as a charismatic inmate leader.[24] Set against the backdrop of Australian prisons and gold heists, the film marked Avery's shift from short-form storytelling to larger-scale narratives grounded in realism.[25]His entry into Hollywood came with Overlord (2018), a genre-blending war-horror film produced by J.J. Abrams that fuses World War II paratrooper action with supernatural Nazi experiments, delivering intense combat sequences and undead horror elements.[26] Directed by Avery, the project showcased his ability to handle high-stakes spectacle and practical effects on a studio scale.[27]Avery continued exploring hybrid genres with Samaritan (2022), a superhero drama starring Sylvester Stallone as a retired vigilante drawn back into action by a troubled teen, emphasizing themes of redemption and urban decay in a gritty, non-traditional take on the genre.[28] Released exclusively on Prime Video, the film achieved significant streaming success, topping the platform's movie charts for three consecutive weeks.[29]In 2023, Avery directed The Pope's Exorcist, a supernatural horror film featuring Russell Crowe as Father Gabriele Amorth, the Vatican's chief exorcist, investigating a demonic possession that uncovers a larger conspiracy.[30] The production grossed approximately $77 million worldwide against an $18 million budget, demonstrating strong commercial performance for a mid-budget horror entry.[31] It later gained traction on Netflix, reaching the global top 10 with over 6 million views in its debut week.[32]Throughout his feature work, Avery co-founded Bridle Path Films in 2011 with Michael Spiccia as a productioncollective to support independent projects, initially backing his shorts and extending to Son of a Gun.[33] This venture facilitated collaborations and provided creative control during his early career.[34][35]Avery's thematic progression reflects an evolution from the grounded, character-driven realism of Australian crime stories in Son of a Gun to ambitious, genre-fusing Hollywood spectacles in his later works, incorporating horror, action, and superhero elements while maintaining a focus on moral ambiguity and high-tension set pieces.[36] His short films, such as Jerrycan and Yardbird, served as foundational stepping stones, honing his skills in tense, narrative-driven shorts that informed his feature approach.[2]Avery has also been attached to unproduced projects, including a planned remake of Flash Gordon for 20th Century Fox in 2018, where he was set to write and direct a fresh take on the sci-fi adventure; he is also attached to direct a Van Helsing reboot for Universal and the alien abduction thriller They Found Us for AGC Studios, with production planned for early 2025 in Australia.[37][38][5]
Awards and recognition
Awards for short films
Julius Avery's short filmEnd of Town (2006) won the Emerging Australian Filmmaker Award at the Melbourne International Film Festival.[16]Julius Avery's short filmJerrycan (2008) garnered significant international acclaim, beginning with the Jury Prize in the Short Film category at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival.[39] It also won the Australian Film Institute Award for Best Short Fiction Film that year.[1] The film received an Honorable Mention at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival.[40] and another Honorable Mention at the 59th Berlin International Film Festival.[41] Additionally, Jerrycan earned the Jury Award for Best Short Film at the 2009 Pacific Meridian International Film Festival.[42]Avery's involvement in Yardbird (2012), which he wrote and produced, further highlighted his early talent, with the film selected for competition at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival, making it eligible for the Palme d'Or in the Short Film category.[43] In Australia, Yardbird won the Dendy Award for Best Live Action Short Film at the 2012 Sydney Film Festival and the Best Australian Short Film at the 2013 Flickerfest International Short FilmFestival.[44]These awards for Avery's early shorts, often exploring rural Australian settings and personal struggles, established him as a promising talent on the global stage.[1] The recognition at major festivals like Cannes and Sundance elevated his profile among international producers and distributors, paving the way for opportunities in feature-length filmmaking.[45]
Nominations and honors for feature films
Julius Avery's feature films have received modest recognition in major festivals and genre awards, primarily highlighting his directorial work in thrillers and horror. His debut feature, Son of a Gun (2014), earned a nomination for Best Film in the Official Competition at the 58th BFI London Film Festival, acknowledging its tense heist narrative and strong ensemble cast.[46]Avery's 2018 horror-action film Overlord garnered further attention in genre circles, receiving a nomination for Best Wide-Release Film at the 2019 Fangoria Chainsaw Awards, which celebrates achievements in horror cinema. The film was also nominated for Best Horror Film at the 45th Saturn Awards, presented by the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, recognizing its blend of World War II action and supernatural elements.[47]Subsequent projects like Samaritan (2022) and The Pope's Exorcist (2023) have not secured notable directing nominations or honors for Avery at major awards bodies, though The Pope's Exorcist received two nominations at the 2024 Irish Film & Television Awards for technical categories unrelated to direction.[48]