Philip Nutman

Philip Nutman

producer, actor, writer

Philip Nutman was born on Jul 09, 1963 in UK. Philip Nutman's big-screen debut came with The Girl Next Door directed by Gregory Wilson in 2007.

First published at age 15, expatriate Englishman Philip Nutman's writing career began inauspiciously as a movie reviewer for Venue, a Village Voice type publication which covered the arts and entertainment scenes in the cities of Bath and Bristol in England's West Country. By the age of 18, he began contributing feature articles to international film magazines such as L'Ecran Fantastique (France), Segno Cinema (Italy) and Fangoria (US), becoming the latter's first British Correspondent, a position he held for over ten years. For Fangoria, he wrote over 120 feature articles (many of them cover stories) and reported on the making of many of the top horror films of the 1980s.While freelancing as a media journalist in his spare time, he worked for five years as a producer's assistant for BBC TV, working on programs ranging from sit-coms to dramas of the Masterpiece Theater variety, contemporary thrillers such as Edge of Darkness (1985) to numerous arts-oriented documentaries. Quitting the BBC when he was 24 to devote his time exclusively to writing, he continued as a journalist while making his first serious inroads into fiction. With over 1,000 feature articles to his credit, his work can be found in magazines ranging from Penthouse, Melody Maker, Spin, Twilight Zone magazine, Comics Scene, Gallery, The Comic Buyer's Guide, Metal Hammer, Gorezone, the Atlanta Business Chronicle, Atlanta Now and numerous European publications including Vendredi 13. He also worked periodically as a columnist and critic for Bang, Fear, Skeleton Crew and Shock X-Press.Highlights of his less than illustrious career in the press include a delightfully drunken interview with legendary director Ken Russell at London's exclusive St. James Club, getting drenched in fake blood on a Rome soundstage during the filming of H. P. Lovecraft's From Beyond: Aux portes de l'au-delà (1986), and witnessing the first appearance of the Cenobites during the shooting of the original Le Pacte (1987). As British Correspondent for Fangoria, he was the first reporter to interview Clive Barker for a national American magazine and readily cites Barker as a major influence on his writing fiction."Clive was the first successful published author I met who took a serious interest in my initial fumbling attempts at fiction, and who gave me an enormous amount of advice and encouragement. He really was a mentor at the time I needed one the most," Nutman acknowledges.Within a year of leaving the BBC, Nutman sold his first professional short story to editors John Skipp and Craig Spector for their groundbreaking anthology Book of the Dead. The following year he sold an expanded novel version of that story - Wet Work - to Putnam Berkley, achieving the highly unusual feat of selling a first novel on the basis of a 16-page outline with no chapters written, and at the age of 26 no less.Further short stories followed in quick succession in such highly acclaimed anthologies as Borderlands 2 and Splatterpunks. The latter featured the novella Full Throttle, which garnered his first nomination for a Bram Stoker Award by the Horror Writers of America. Three further nominations followed over the next few years, two of which as a finalist (Superior Achievement in a First Novel and Best Short Story). Full Throttle and Churches Of Desire (Borderlands 2) , were chosen by the late author and editor Karl Edward Wagner, for inclusion in The Year's best Horror Stories XIX and XX (1991 and 1992 respectively).Beyond prose fiction, Philip Nutman also has written and edited 50-plus comic books and over a dozen screenplays, several of which have been optioned by different producers. In 2003, he was hired by Gryphon Films (producers of the Oscar-nominated feature Lady Chance (2003)) to adapt the bestselling adventure-thriller novel Thunderhead (penned by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child of Relic (1997) fame) into a big budget studio script. More recently, he has written three projects for Sunwood Entertainment - The Last Blood, Hell's Belle, and Shiver. The latter was filmed in Atlanta in August/September 2005 with Phil at the helm as producer.Nutman co-wrote and produced the 2007 film Jack Ketchum's The Girl Next Door (2007) with Daniel Farrands. Stephen King said about the film, "The first authentically shocking American film I've seen since Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer over 20 years ago. If you are easily disturbed, you should not watch this movie. If, on the other hand, you are prepared for a long look into hell, suburban style, The Girl Next Door will not disappoint. This is the dark-side-of-the-moon version of Stand by Me."Widely regarded as an expert on fantastic fiction and film, Nutman lectured at The School of Visual Arts, in New York City, Roger Williams University, R.I., Dusquesne University, Pittsburgh, P.A. and several high schools.In 2010, Nutman published Cities of Night, a collection of short stories. In 2012, he produced Ryan Lieske's film Abed (2012) and began work with his first writing partner, Mark Shostrom, on a pet film project of theirs.He resided in Atlanta, Georgia, where he died on 07 October 2013.

  • Birthday

    Jul 09, 1963
  • Place of Birth

    Watford, Hertfordshire, England, UK

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