Jack Hill
Jack Hill was born on Jan 28, 1933 in USA. Jack Hill's big-screen debut came with The Bellboy and the Playgirls directed by Francis Ford Coppola in 1962.
Jack Hill, sometimes referred to as a legendary cult-film director, grew up around movies--his father was a set designer for Warner Brothers since 1925, and later for Walt Disney Studios, where he eventually designed the Disneyland Castle. Jack went to the University of California to study film, where he was a classmate of Francis Ford Coppola--they worked together on student productions and later both apprenticed with Roger Corman, working on The Terror, among other films. While Coppola went on to Oscardom, Jack continued with low-budget exploitation films, several of which were highly profitable, especially The Big Doll House, which initiated the short-lived women-in-prison genre. His so-called "blaxploitaton" films Coffy and Foxy Brown were major hits. Nowadays his films are hailed as cult classics, thanks primarily to Quentin Tarantino, who saw Jack Hill's work as it made its way to video, with almost all of his films now available for viewing on various streaming channels as well as DVD releases.
Birthday
Jan 28, 1933Place of Birth
Los Angeles, California, USA
Movies & TV Shows
- 1982
writer, director
4.4 - 1980
writer
4.8 - 1979
writer
4.3 - 1978
writer
3.9 - 1975
writer, director
6.5 - 1974
writer, director
5.1 - 1974
writer, director
6.5 - 1973
writer, director
6.8 - 1972
director, writer
5.9 - 1971
writer, director
3.4 - 19715.8
- 1970
writer, director
4.5 - 1969
director, editor, writer
6.7 - 1968
writer, director
3.7 - 1967
Spider Baby or, The Maddest Story Ever Told
writer, director, editor
6.8 - 1966
writer, director
5.2 - 1963
writer
5.7 - 1963
writer, director
5.0 - 19622.9