Brian Trenchard-Smith
- Director
- Writer
- Producer
Brian Trenchard-Smith is an Anglo Australian film and television
director, producer, and writer, with a reputation for large scale
movies on small scale budgets, many of which display a quirky sense of
humor that has earned him a cult following. Quentin Tarantino referred
to him in Entertainment Weekly as one of his favorite directors. His
early work is featured in Not Quite Hollywood, an award winning
documentary released by Magnolia. Among his early successes were the
20th Century Fox release The Man from Hong Kong, a wry James Bond/Chop
Sockey cocktail, the Vietnam battle movie Siege of Firebase Gloria, and
the futuristic satire Dead End Drive-In, a particular Tarantino
favorite. BMX Bandits, showcasing a 15-year old Nicole Kidman, and
Miramax's The Quest, starring ET's Henry Thomas, won prizes at
children's film festivals in Montreal and Europe. He has also directed
35 episodes of television series as diverse as Silk Stalkings, Time
Trax, The Others, and Flipper. Born in England, where his Australian
father was in the RAF, Trenchard-Smith attended UK's prestigious
Wellington College, where he neglected studies in favor of acting and
making short films, before migrating to Australia. He started as a news
film editor, then graduated to network promos before he became one of a
group of young people that, as he recalls, "pushed, shoved, lobbied and
bullied the government into introducing investment for Australian made
films." He persuaded Australia's largest distribution-exhibition
circuit at the time, the Greater Union Theater Organization, to form an
in-house production company that he would run. The company made three
successful films in a row, and his career was underway. In parallel
careers, he was also founding editor of Australia's quarterly Movie
magazine for 6 years, and has made over 100 trailers for other
directors in Australia, Europe, and America. Among his 39 movies, 5
were commissioned by Showtime, including the remake of the World War II
classic, Sahara, the highly rated, Happy Face Murders, starring
Ann-Margret, and DC 9/11: Time of Crisis, with Timothy Bottoms as
President Bush. His frequently repeated family drama for Lifetime, Long
Lost Son starring Gabrielle Anwar, introduced future Gossip Girl's
Chace Crawford to audiences in the title role." I knew from his first
scene, he was going to be hot." In 2009, Trenchard-Smith shot Porky's -
The College Years, a re-imagining of the famous 80's franchise of teen
comedies. His recent ecological thriller Arctic Blast, starring Michael
Shanks, was chosen to premiere at the 2010 Possible Worlds Canadian
Film Festival in Sydney. Trenchard-Smith writes for
filmindustrybloggers.com as The Genre Director, and is a contributing
guru to trailersfromhell.com. He is married to Byzantine historian Dr.
Margaret Trenchard-Smith, lives in Los Angeles, and is a member of the
British Academy of Film and Television Arts.