Phillip Noyce (born 29 April 1950) is an Australian filmmaker. Since 1977, he has directed over 19 feature films in various genres, including historical drama (Newsfront, Rabbit-Proof Fence, The Quiet American); thrillers (Dead Calm, Sliver, The Bone Collector); and action films (Blind Fury, The Saint, Salt). He has also directed the Jack Ryan adaptations Patriot Games (1992) and Clear and Present Danger (1994) and the 2014 adaptation of Lois Lowry's The Giver.
Phillip Noyce | |
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![]() Noyce at the 2010 Comic Con in San Diego | |
Born | (1950-04-29) 29 April 1950 (age 72) Griffith, New South Wales, Australia |
Alma mater | University of Sydney Australian Film, Television and Radio School |
Occupation |
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Years active | 1969-present |
Known for | Newsfront The Cowra Breakout Dead Calm Patriot Games Rabbit-Proof Fence The Quiet American The Giver |
Spouses |
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Children | 4 |
Awards | AACTA Awards Best Director, 1979 Best Screenplay, 1979 Best Film, 2003 |
He has worked with such actors as Val Kilmer, Harrison Ford, Denzel Washington, Michael Caine, Angelina Jolie, Nicole Kidman, Meryl Streep, and Rutger Hauer. He has also directed, written, and executive-produced television programmes in both Australia and North America, including The Cowra Breakout, Vietnam, Revenge, Roots, and most-recently Netflix's What/If.
Noyce's work has won him several accolades, including AACTA Awards for Best Film, Best Director, and a special Longford Lyell lifetime achievement award.
Noyce was born in Griffith, New South Wales, attended high school at Barker College in Sydney and began making short films at the age of 18. A poster for a screening of "underground" films had captured his imagination and the 16 US and Australian experimental films ignited something else. Four months later he shot his first short film, the 15 minute Better to Reign in Hell, financed by selling roles to his friends.
In 1969, Noyce became the manager of the Sydney Filmmakers Co-op, a collective of filmmakers. With Jan Chapman, he ran the Filmmaker's Cinema for three years atop a socialist bookshop in Sydney, screening the short films of the directors who would go on to form the Australian New Wave: Gillian Armstrong, Peter Weir, Bruce Beresford, George Miller, Paul Cox. These were a generation of boomers who had grown up rarely seeing an Australian film, as British and American interests controlled distribution and exhibition Australia wide.
After graduating from Sydney University, he joined the Australian Film, Television and Radio School in 1973, and released his first professional film in 1975. Many of his films feature espionage, as Noyce grew up listening to his father's stories of serving with the Australian Commando unit Z Force during World War II.[1]
After his debut feature, the medium-length Backroads (1977), Noyce achieved huge commercial and critical success with Newsfront (1978), which won Australian Film Institute (AFI) awards for Best Film, Director, Actor, Screenplay, and opened the London Film Festival and was the first Australian film to play at the New York Film Festival.
Noyce worked on two miniseries for Australian television with fellow Australian filmmaker George Miller: The Dismissal (1983) and The Cowra Breakout (1984). Miller also produced the film that brought Noyce to the attention of Hollywood studios – Dead Calm (1988) which launched the career of Nicole Kidman. After Dead Calm, Noyce went to America to direct Blind Fury starring Rutger Hauer for Tri-Star Pictures.
Moving with his young family to the United States in 1991, Noyce directed five films over the following eight years, of which Clear and Present Danger, starring Harrison Ford, was the most successful, critically and commercially, grossing $216 million. After 1999's Bone Collector starring Angelina Jolie and Denzel Washington, Noyce decided to return to his native Australia for Stolen Generations saga Rabbit-Proof Fence, which won the AFI Award for Best Film in 2002. He has described Rabbit-Proof Fence as "easily" his proudest moment as a director: "Showing that film to various Aboriginal communities around the country and seeing their response, because it gave validity to the experiences of the stolen generations."[2] Although independently financed, the film was a huge hit with Australian audiences and sold worldwide.
Noyce was also lauded for The Quiet American, the 2002 adaptation of Graham Greene's novel, which gave Michael Caine an Academy Award Best Actor nomination and earned best director awards from London Film Critics' Circle and National Board of Review in the US. After the Apartheid-set Catch a Fire (2006) in South Africa, Noyce decided to make another big budget studio film with 2010's Salt starring Angelina Jolie, which proved to be his biggest commercial hit to date, making nearly $300 million worldwide.[1]
In 2011, Noyce directed and executive produced the pilot for the ABC series Revenge and has since directed numerous TV pilots, including Netflix's What/If starring Renée Zellweger and the ongoing FOX Network hit The Resident, now in its 5th season. In 2017, he signed a first look deal with 20th Century Fox Television.[3]
Above Suspicion, starring Emilia Clarke and Jack Huston, originally to be released in America in 2020 by Roadside Attractions was delayed until May 2021 due to the Coronavirus Pandemic.
In 2021, Noyce became executive producer on the film Show Me What You Got, written and directed by Svetlana Cvetko. "He clearly believed in our vision and ability to tell this story in the beautiful way we wanted, and just simply helped us enhance it," Cvetko says of Noyce in a 2022 FilmInk Interview.[4]
The Desperate Hour (originally titled Lakewood), starring Naomi Watts, will be released in the US by Roadside Attractions in February 2022.
In late 2021, a 17 feature and 10 shorts retrospective of Noyce's work was presented at the Cinémathèque Française in Paris.
Noyce's next film, shooting in spring of 2022, will be the darkly comedic thriller Fast Charlie, starring Pierce Brosnan, Morena Baccarin and James Caan, written by Richard Wenk.
Noyce has been married three times. He was married to film producer Jan Chapman from 1971 to 1977. From 1979 to 2004, he was married to producer Jan Sharp, with whom he has two children. He is now married to designer Vuyo Dyasi, with whom he has two children.[citation needed]
Noyce was an avid supporter of the Labor government of Gough Whitlam.[citation needed]
Year | Title | Director | Producer | Writer |
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1977 | Backroads | Yes | Yes | Yes |
1978 | Newsfront | Yes | No | Yes |
1982 | Heatwave | Yes | No | Yes |
1987 | Echoes of Paradise | Yes | No | No |
1989 | Dead Calm | Yes | No | No |
Blind Fury | Yes | No | No | |
1992 | Patriot Games | Yes | No | No |
1993 | Sliver | Yes | No | No |
1994 | Clear and Present Danger | Yes | No | No |
1997 | The Saint | Yes | No | No |
1999 | The Bone Collector | Yes | No | No |
2002 | Rabbit-Proof Fence | Yes | Yes | No |
The Quiet American | Yes | No | No | |
2006 | Catch a Fire | Yes | No | No |
2010 | Salt | Yes | No | No |
2014 | The Giver | Yes | No | No |
2021 | Show Me What You Got | No | Executive | No |
Above Suspicion | Yes | No | No | |
The Desperate Hour | Yes | No | No |
Year | Title | Director | Producer |
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1969 | Better to Reign in Hell | Yes | Yes |
1971 | Sun | Yes | Yes |
Memories | Yes | Yes | |
Intersection | Yes | Yes | |
Home | Yes | Yes | |
Camera Class | Yes | Yes | |
1973 | That's Showbiz | Yes | No |
Castor and Pollux | Yes | No | |
Caravan Park | Yes | Yes | |
1974 | Renegades: Fragments from a Diary of Three Years Experience 1970-73 | Yes | Yes |
1975 | Finks Make Movies | Yes | Yes |
1977 | Disco | Yes | No |
1978 | Tapak Dewata Java | Yes | No |
1979 | Sue and Mario: The Italian Australians | Yes | No |
Bali: Island of the Gods | Yes | No |
Year | Title | Director | Producer | Notes |
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1971 | Good Afternoon | Yes | Yes | No |
1976 | God Knows Why, But It Works | Yes | Yes | No |
2004 | Welcome to São Paulo | Yes | Yes | Segment "Marca Zero" |
Year | Title | Director | Producer | Writer | Notes |
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1980 | Fact and Fiction | Yes | No | No | TV movie |
Three Vietnamese Stories | Yes | No | No | ||
1983 | The Dismissal | Yes | No | Yes | Miniseries Director - Episode: "Part Two" |
1984 | The Cowra Breakout | Yes | No | Yes | Miniseries 3 episodes |
1985-89 | The Hitchhiker | Yes | No | No | 5 episodes |
1987 | Vietnam | No | Yes | Yes | Miniseries |
1992 | Nightmare Cafe | Yes | No | No | Episode "Pilot" |
1998 | The Repair Shop | Yes | No | No | Unaired pilot |
2003 | Tru Calling | Yes | Executive | No | Director - Episode "Pilot" Executive producer - 2 episodes |
2006-07 | Brotherhood | Yes | Executive | No | Director - 2 episodes Executive producer - 3 episodes |
2011-12 | Revenge | Yes | Yes | No | Director - 2 episodes Consulting producer - 21 episodes Executive producer - 2 episodes |
2011 | Lights Out | No | Executive | No | 3 episodes |
2012 | Americana | Yes | Executive | No | Unaired pilot |
Luck | Yes | No | No | Episode "Ace Meets With a Colleague" | |
2013 | Mary and Martha | Yes | No | No | TV movie |
2014 | Crisis | Yes | No | No | Director - Episode: "Pilot" Executive producer - 13 episodes |
2015 | Warrior | Yes | No | No | Unaired pilot |
2016 | Roots | Yes | No | No | Miniseries Episode "Part 1" |
2018 | The Resident | Yes | No | No | Director - 2 episodes Executive producer - 40 episodes |
2019 | What/If | Yes | Executive | No | Director - 2 episodes |
Year | Title | Awards and nominations |
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1978 | Newsfront | Australian Film Institute Award for Best Director Australian Film Institute Award for Best Screenplay, Original Best First Film Award (Taormina Film Fest) Best Director Award (Taormina Film Fest) Nominated- Golden Charybdis (Taormina Film Fest) |
1982 | Heatwave | Special Mention (Mystfest) Nominated- Best Film of Festival Award (Mystfest) |
1989 | Dead Calm | Nominated- Australian Film Institute Award for Best Director |
1993 | Sliver | Nominated- Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Director |
2002 | Rabbit-Proof Fence | Australian Film Institute Award for Best Film Christopher Award for Best Film Film Critics Circle of Australia Award for Best Director London Film Critics' Circle Award for Director of the Year (shared with The Quiet American) National Board of Review Award for Best Director (shared with The Quiet American) San Francisco Film Critics Circle Special Citation (shared with The Quiet American) Audience Award (Durban International Film Festival) Audience Award (Edinburgh International Film Festival) Audience Award (Leeds International Film Festival) Audience Award for Best Foreign-Language Film (São Paulo International Film Festival) Audience Award for Feature Film (Valladolid International Film Festival) People's Choice Award for Beat Feature-Length Fiction FIlm (Denver Film Festival) Nominated- Australian Film Institute Award for Best Director Nominated- Inside Film Award for Best Director |
The Quiet American | London Film Critics' Circle Award for Director of the Year (shared with Rabbit-Proof Fence) National Board of Review Award for Best Director (shared with Rabbit-Proof Fence) San Francisco Film Critics Circle Special Citation (shared with Rabbit-Proof Fence) Nominated- Satellite Award for Best Director Nominated- Golden Kinnaree Award for Best Film (Bangkok International Film Festival) | |
2014 | The Giver | Truly Moving Picture Award - Feature Film (Heartland Film Festival) |
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Films directed by Phillip Noyce | |
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London Film Critics' Circle Award for Director of the Year | |
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1980–2000 |
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2001–present |
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Longford Lyell Award | |
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General | |
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National libraries | |
Biographical dictionaries | |
Other |
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