Monkeypaw Productions
Monkeypaw Productions is an American film and television production company founded by Jordan Peele in 2012.[1] The company derives its name from W.W. Jacobs' 1902 horror short story "The Monkey's Paw," which features a cursed talisman granting wishes with dire consequences.[2] Headed by Peele with Win Rosenfield as president, it focuses on developing genre-driven content in film, television, and digital media, often blending horror, comedy, and speculative elements.[3] Monkeypaw gained prominence with Peele's directorial debut Get Out (2017), a psychological horror film that earned him the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay and grossed over $255 million worldwide on a $4.5 million budget.[4] Subsequent productions include the horror films Us (2019) and Nope (2022), both starring Peele collaborators like Lupita Nyong'o and Daniel Kaluuya, as well as executive producing Spike Lee's BlacKkKlansman (2018), which received an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay.[5] On television, the company produced the Emmy-winning sketch comedy series Key & Peele (2012–2015) and contributed to HBO's Lovecraft Country (2020) and Amazon's Hunters (2020–2023).[6] Beyond core productions, Monkeypaw has supported emerging filmmakers through initiatives like the No Drama program in partnership with TIFF and Universal, emphasizing innovative short films exploring monstrous themes.[6] Its projects consistently prioritize narrative innovation within genre constraints, achieving commercial success and critical recognition for technical and storytelling craftsmanship, though some works have sparked debate over interpretive layers involving societal dynamics.[7]Founding and History
Establishment and Origins
Monkeypaw Productions was established in 2012 by Jordan Peele, an actor, comedian, and filmmaker known for his work on the sketch comedy series Key & Peele.[1][3] The company was founded during the success of Key & Peele on Comedy Central, with Peele citing tax considerations as one practical motivation for its creation.[8] The name "Monkeypaw Productions" originates from W.W. Jacobs' 1902 horror short story "The Monkey's Paw," which depicts a magical talisman that grants wishes at unforeseen and often horrific costs.[8] Peele has explained that the name encapsulates the "double-sided" nature of the entertainment industry, reflecting experiences like those on MADtv where professional successes came with creative compromises, symbolizing fortune intertwined with adversity.[8] From inception, the company aimed to develop artistic and thought-provoking projects across film, television, and digital platforms, emphasizing original storytelling.[1] Key early personnel included Win Rosenfeld as president and Ian Cooper as creative director, longtime collaborators who helped launch the venture.[9][3] Prior to major breakthroughs like Get Out (2017), Monkeypaw focused on building a foundation for diverse, culturally resonant content, challenging industry biases against films led by people of color.[9]Early Projects and Expansion (2012–2016)
Monkeypaw Productions' debut project was the sketch comedy television series Key & Peele, which aired its first episode on Comedy Central on January 31, 2012.[10] Co-created and starring Jordan Peele alongside Keegan-Michael Key, the series featured satirical sketches addressing race, politics, and pop culture, produced in collaboration with Monkeypaw and entities including Cindylou Productions and Principato-Young Entertainment. Over five seasons comprising 53 episodes, Key & Peele garnered critical acclaim, including a Peabody Award in 2013 for its incisive humor and multiple Emmy nominations for writing and acting. The success of Key & Peele, which concluded its run on September 9, 2015, provided Monkeypaw with its initial commercial foundation and visibility in television production. During this period, the company operated with a lean structure, led by Peele as founder and CEO, Win Rosenfeld as president, and Ian Cooper as creative director, focusing primarily on developing and producing content for the series.[9] This phase marked Monkeypaw's expansion from a nascent entity into a functional production outfit capable of managing multi-episode television output, though it remained centered on sketch-based comedy rather than feature films or horror, genres that would define later output. By 2016, as Key & Peele wrapped, Monkeypaw began transitioning toward broader media development, leveraging the series' momentum to explore script incubation and partnerships for original content.[9] The company's early emphasis on television honed Peele's producing expertise, setting the groundwork for subsequent ventures into film while maintaining a small team that grew incrementally to support administrative and creative needs.[3] No major feature films or additional series were released under Monkeypaw in this interval, reflecting a deliberate buildup phase prior to its 2017 breakthrough with Get Out.[11]Leadership and Operations
Key Personnel and Structure
Monkeypaw Productions is headed by founder Jordan Peele, who maintains oversight as the primary creative force and executive leader.[12] In October 2017, Peele appointed Win Rosenfeld as president, a role in which Rosenfeld manages the company's slate of film, television, and podcast projects.[12] [13] Ian Cooper functions as creative director, with responsibilities centered on the feature film division, including visual development and production coordination for projects such as Us (2019), Candyman (2021), and Nope (2022).[14] Jamal M. Watson serves as senior vice president of development and production, having joined in 2021 initially as vice president to handle expansion of scripted and unscripted content.[15] [16] Keisha Senter was hired in February 2021 as director of social impact, later advancing to senior vice president, focusing on cultural strategy, diversity initiatives, and producer roles.[17] The company maintains a compact organizational framework typical of independent production entities, emphasizing creative development over large administrative layers, with a reported staff of 28 as of October 2022 before development team reductions in April 2025.[9] [18] This structure supports first-look deals with partners like Universal Pictures, enabling focused output in horror and speculative genres without expansive corporate bureaucracy.[12]Business Initiatives and Partnerships
Monkeypaw Productions entered into a two-year first-look deal with Universal Pictures on May 3, 2017, enabling the company to develop, produce, and distribute genre films through the studio.[19] This arrangement laid the groundwork for subsequent collaborations, including the production of films such as Get Out (2017) under Universal's banner. In October 2019, Monkeypaw signed a five-year exclusive first-look production partnership with Universal Pictures, committing to at least two films and prioritizing the studio for financing and distribution of Monkeypaw's projects.[20] [21] Expanding into television, Monkeypaw secured a multiyear overall deal with Universal Studio Group in September 2021, encompassing development and production across divisions including Universal Television, Universal Television Alternative Studio, and Blumhouse Television.[22] [23] This pact consolidated Monkeypaw's TV efforts under Universal, following prior arrangements, and supported series like The Twilight Zone reboot (2019–2020). In a notable acquisition, Monkeypaw partnered with Universal in January 2024 to take over distribution of Monkey Man (2024) from Netflix, securing a theatrical release on April 5, 2024, after the project had been in development limbo.[24] In January 2024, Monkeypaw launched the No Drama Initiative in collaboration with the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) and Universal's Filmmakers Project, aimed at supporting emerging filmmakers through mentorship, funding, and production resources for short films.[25] The program selected five filmmakers for its inaugural cohort, announced on November 5, 2024, providing each with up to $50,000 in production funding, access to equipment, and industry partnerships for post-production.[26] These shorts premiered at TIFF on September 5, 2025, with Monkeypaw facilitating in-kind support from companies in post-production and distribution.[27] Internally, Monkeypaw bolstered its operations in August 2021 by promoting four executives, including Jamal Watson to VP of Production and Development, to handle an expanding slate amid growing partnerships.[15]Productions
Feature Films
Monkeypaw Productions entered feature film production with Keanu (April 29, 2016), a comedy directed by Peter Atencio and starring founder Jordan Peele alongside Keegan-Michael Key as two men protecting a kidnapped kitten amid criminal underworld antics.[28] The company's collaboration with Blumhouse Productions yielded Get Out (February 24, 2017), written and directed by Peele, centering on a Black man's encounter with his white girlfriend's family that uncovers sinister hypnosis-based coercion.[11] In 2018, Monkeypaw co-produced BlacKkKlansman (August 10, 2018), directed by Spike Lee and adapted from Ron Stallworth's memoir, depicting an African American Colorado Springs detective's infiltration of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1970s alongside a Jewish colleague posing as him.[29] Peele's sophomore directorial feature, Us (March 22, 2019), portrayed a family's vacation interrupted by violent doppelgängers representing societal underclass resentment, produced in partnership with Universal Pictures.[11] The horror relaunch Candyman (August 27, 2021), directed by Nia DaCosta from a screenplay by Jordan Peele and Win Rosenfeld, reimagined the urban legend as a manifestation tied to historical trauma and gentrification in Chicago's Cabrini-Green neighborhood.[30] Nope (July 22, 2022), Peele's third film as director, followed sibling ranchers investigating unidentified aerial phenomena linked to Hollywood spectacle and animal exploitation on a remote California property.[28] Additional releases encompass Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul. (September 2, 2022), Adamma Ebo's satirical examination of a megachurch pastor and his wife navigating scandal; the stop-motion animated Wendell & Wild (October 21, 2022), co-directed by Henry Selick and Peele, featuring demon brothers scheming with a teen girl in a tale of grief and corporate greed; and Monkey Man (April 5, 2024), Dev Patel's directorial debut as an action thriller about a vendetta against corrupt elites in Mumbai-inspired settings.[31] Monkeypaw's most recent feature, Him (September 19, 2025), stars Marlon Wayans as a disillusioned ex-NFL player mentoring a rising Black quarterback amid psychological horror elements.[11]Television Series
Monkeypaw Productions entered television production with the sketch comedy series Key & Peele, co-created by Jordan Peele and Keegan-Michael Key, which aired on Comedy Central from January 31, 2012, to September 9, 2015, across five seasons comprising 53 episodes.[19] The series featured satirical sketches addressing race, pop culture, and social issues, earning a Peabody Award in 2013 and multiple Emmy nominations for writing and acting.[32] The company expanded into scripted comedy with The Last O.G., a series starring Tracy Morgan as a recently paroled ex-convict navigating modern family life, which premiered on TBS on April 3, 2018, and ran for four seasons until June 14, 2021, totaling 32 episodes.[1] Monkeypaw served as a key production entity alongside other partners, with the show drawing on Morgan's stand-up roots for humor centered on urban life and redemption.[22] In genre television, Monkeypaw executive produced the 2019 reboot of The Twilight Zone, hosted and narrated by Jordan Peele, which streamed on CBS All Access (later Paramount+) for two seasons from April 1, 2019, to June 25, 2020, with 20 episodes emphasizing speculative fiction and social allegory akin to the original Rod Serling series.[1] The anthology format allowed for standalone stories tackling contemporary themes like technology and inequality.[33] Monkeypaw also contributed to horror-drama with Lovecraft Country, a single-season HBO series adapted from Matt Ruff's novel, premiering August 16, 2020, and concluding October 18, 2020, across 10 episodes; it followed a Black family in 1950s America confronting racism and Lovecraftian monsters, produced in collaboration with HBO and Warner Bros. Television.[1] The series received critical acclaim for its blend of historical fiction and supernatural elements but faced cancellation after one season due to production challenges amid the COVID-19 pandemic.[34] Additional television projects include the Amazon Prime Video series Hunters, co-created by David Weil with Peele as executive producer, which debuted February 21, 2020, for two seasons ending January 13, 2023, spanning 18 episodes; it depicted a group of Nazi hunters in 1970s New York uncovering a conspiracy, noted for its pulp thriller style and controversy over historical depictions.[35] Monkeypaw's involvement extended to shorter-form content like the 2019 YouTube Premium anthology Weird City (six episodes) and the Amazon docuseries Lorena (2019, four episodes), focusing on speculative futures and the Lorena Bobbitt case, respectively.[35]| Title | Platform | Years Active | Episodes | Genre/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Key & Peele | Comedy Central | 2012–2015 | 53 | Sketch comedy; satirical social commentary[32] |
| The Last O.G. | TBS | 2018–2021 | 32 | Sitcom; ex-convict reintegration theme[22] |
| The Twilight Zone | CBS All Access | 2019–2020 | 20 | Anthology; sci-fi/horror reboot, Peele-hosted[1] |
| Lovecraft Country | HBO | 2020 | 10 | Horror-drama; 1950s racism and monsters[1] |
| Hunters | Amazon Prime | 2020–2023 | 18 | Thriller; Nazi-hunting conspiracy[35] |
Short Films and Other Media
Monkeypaw Productions initiated the "NO DRAMA" project in January 2024, in partnership with the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) and Universal's Filmmakers Project, to support emerging writer-directors in creating horror-themed short films centered on internal "monsters" such as personal fears and psychological turmoil, with selected works intended for potential expansion into feature-length productions.[36] The program selected five filmmakers, providing resources for production while emphasizing culturally resonant horror narratives.[37] These shorts premiered as a showcase at TIFF 50 on September 12, 2025, featuring opening remarks from Jordan Peele and a post-screening Q&A.[38] The anthology includes the following films, each exploring distinct manifestations of inner horror:- Imago (directed by Ariel Zengotita, USA, 13 minutes): Depicts a codependent mother-daughter relationship strained by the mother's transformation into an insect.[38]
- Morty (directed by Chandler Crump, USA, 12 minutes): Follows a teenage girl observing sinister alterations in her brother after she gifts him a stuffed animal linked to an online entity.[38]
- Spilled Milk (directed by Jared Leaf, USA, 11 minutes): Centers on a father's routine errand disrupted by an encounter with a figure known as "The Milk Man," leading to escalating dread.[38]
- Thick Skin (directed by Helena Hawkes, USA, 14 minutes): Portrays a young woman's confrontation with self-imposed demons in her pursuit of weight loss.[38]
- The Pigs Underneath (directed by Charlie Dennis, UK, 11 minutes): Examines a community's subjugation under oppressive quotas, where failure incurs severe repercussions.[38]
Themes, Reception, and Impact
Recurring Themes and Style
Monkeypaw Productions' projects recurrently utilize horror, thriller, and science fiction genres to dissect racial tensions, class divisions, and American cultural myths, framing supernatural threats as allegories for systemic exploitation. In Get Out (2017), affluent white characters' hypnosis and body auctions symbolize racial commodification and liberal hypocrisy, grossing $255 million worldwide while earning Peele an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. Similarly, Us (2019) employs doppelgangers to contrast societal "haves" and "have-nots," critiquing inequality through underground clones representing repressed underclasses. Nope (2022), with its $171.3 million box office, interrogates spectacle and exploitation via an alien entity mimicking Hollywood's commodification of Black performers. These narratives, produced under Monkeypaw, leverage genre elements like body horror and invasion motifs to highlight deceptive social ontologies, often drawing on historical traumas such as slavery and segregation.[9][40] Stylistically, Monkeypaw emphasizes genre subversion through intertextual references and "signifyin(g)"—a rhetorical strategy of playful critique rooted in African American literary traditions—reworking classic tales like W.W. Jacobs' "The Monkey's Paw" (the company's namesake) to underscore unintended consequences of power imbalances. Peele has described horror as a "Trojan horse" for smuggling social commentary into mainstream audiences, blending suspenseful eeriness with Peele's sketch-comedy roots for satirical humor and warmth, as seen in the rhythmic fight scenes spliced with dance in Us. Visual aesthetics prioritize metaphorical depth, such as equine symbolism in Nope evoking Western myths, while supporting directors like Nia DaCosta in Candyman (2021) reanimate urban legends to probe gentrification and cyclical violence. This collaborative approach extends Peele's auteur vision, fostering innovative narratives that defy Hollywood's formulaic inclusion by prioritizing specific cultural milieus over generic diversity.[9][40] Television and other media under Monkeypaw, such as Lovecraft Country (2020), fuse cosmic horror with factual depictions of 1950s racism, including lynchings and redlining, to expose intersections of mythology and real oppression. Podcasts like Quiet Part Loud (2022) evoke political terror through audio suspense, maintaining the company's focus on unsettling everyday assumptions. Overall, these works cultivate thought-provoking disruption, using precise genre mechanics—twists, visual metaphors, and hybrid tones—to challenge racial tropes without diluting causal links between historical inequities and contemporary fears.[41][42][40]Critical and Commercial Reception
Monkeypaw Productions' feature films have demonstrated strong commercial performance, collectively grossing over $657 million worldwide as of 2025.[31] Jordan Peele's directorial debut Get Out (2017) earned $255 million globally on a $4.5 million budget, marking a substantial return and contributing to its status as a breakout horror hit.[43] The follow-up Us (2019) similarly succeeded, grossing $256 million worldwide against a $20 million budget, with its opening weekend of $70 million setting a record for original horror films at the time.[44] Nope (2022) achieved $171 million worldwide, though its higher $68 million budget yielded more modest profits compared to predecessors.[45] Productions like Candyman (2021) faced pandemic-related challenges, opening to $22.4 million domestically but totaling under $80 million globally.[46] More recent efforts, including Monkey Man (2024) at $35 million and Him (2025) with a $13.8 million opening, indicate sustained but variable box office results.[47] Critically, Monkeypaw's films have earned high aggregate scores, reflecting praise for innovative horror blending social themes with genre conventions, though some reviewers noted diminishing subtlety in later works. Get Out holds a 98% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on over 400 reviews, lauded for its sharp satire on race relations.[48] Us secured 93% approval from 553 critics, appreciated for its thematic depth on duality and inequality.[49] Nope received 83% approval across 479 reviews, with acclaim for visual spectacle but criticism for an uneven narrative.[45] Candyman garnered 84% from 335 reviews, valued for updating the original's urban legend motifs amid gentrification critiques.[50] However, Him debuted with a record-low Rotten Tomatoes score for a Peele-produced project, drawing backlash for underdeveloped execution despite its horror premise.[51]| Film | Release Year | Rotten Tomatoes Score | Worldwide Gross (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Get Out | 2017 | 98% | $255 million |
| Us | 2019 | 93% | $256 million |
| Candyman | 2021 | 84% | ~$73 million |
| Nope | 2022 | 83% | $171 million |
| Monkey Man | 2024 | N/A | $35 million |
| Him | 2025 | Low (record for Peele) | Opening $13.8M domestic |
Achievements and Awards
Monkeypaw Productions' flagship film Get Out (2017) secured the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for founder Jordan Peele at the 90th Academy Awards on March 4, 2018, marking the first such win for an African American screenwriter in that category.[56] The film's low-budget production, with a reported $4.5 million cost, achieved over $255 million in worldwide box office earnings, demonstrating the company's early commercial viability in genre filmmaking.[12] The company's involvement in BlacKkKlansman (2018), co-produced with Blumhouse Productions and others, contributed to its win for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 91st Academy Awards, awarded to Spike Lee and co-writers Charlie Wachtel, David Rabinowitz, and Kevin Willmott.[9] This success built on Monkeypaw's growing reputation for supporting socially incisive narratives, with the film earning six total Oscar nominations.[20] In television, Monkeypaw-produced series Key & Peele (2012–2015) won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Variety Sketch Series at the 68th ceremony in 2016, recognizing its innovative sketch comedy format.[10] The series also received a Peabody Award for excellence in electronic media.[57] Later, Lovecraft Country (2020) garnered 18 Primetime Emmy nominations, including for Outstanding Drama Series and Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series (Jurnee Smollett), though it did not secure wins.[58] Subsequent productions like Us (2019) and Nope (2022) received critical acclaim and nominations from groups such as the Saturn Awards but no major competitive wins at the Oscars or Emmys. Monkeypaw's partnerships, including a five-year first-look deal with Universal Pictures signed on October 1, 2019, have facilitated ongoing production output, underscoring institutional achievements in industry expansion.[20]| Production | Award Category | Winner(s) | Year | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Get Out | Best Original Screenplay (Academy) | Jordan Peele | 2018 | [56] |
| BlacKkKlansman | Best Adapted Screenplay (Academy) | Spike Lee et al. | 2019 | [9] |
| Key & Peele | Outstanding Variety Sketch Series (Emmy) | Key & Peele team | 2016 | [10] |