Allan Moyle

Canadian film director (born 1947) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Allan Moyle (born 1947) is a Canadian film director[1], writer, and actor. He is best known for directing the films Times Square (1980), Pump Up the Volume (1990), Empire Records (1995), and New Waterford Girl (1999) .[2]

Born1947 (age 7879)
Shawinigan, Quebec, Canada
OccupationsFilm director, actor, screenwriter
Yearsactive1974–present
Quick facts Born, Occupations ...
Allan Moyle
Born1947 (age 7879)
Shawinigan, Quebec, Canada
OccupationsFilm director, actor, screenwriter
Years active1974–present
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Career

His first major film was Times Square (1980). During the editing of the film he clashed with producer Robert Stigwood who reportedly wanted dialogue scenes removed and replaced with more musical sequences, so that the accompanying soundtrack recording could be expanded to a double-album. Moyle refused to make the cuts so Stigwood fired him and made the cuts himself.

In the eighties he wrote a novel that was never published but became the basis for his screenplay of his movie Pump Up the Volume, which he also directed. It was released in 1990.

Moyle has since directed The Gun in Betty Lou's Handbag (1992), Empire Records (1995), New Waterford Girl (1999) - for which he won the Best Direction Canadian Comedy Award in 2001, XChange (2000), and the made-for-TV movies Jailbait (2000) and Man in the Mirror: The Michael Jackson Story (2004). His film, Weirdsville,[3] debuted at and headlined the 2007 Slamdance Film Festival in January, the film's stars include Taryn Manning.[3]

He is divorced from actress Dianna Miranda and currently married to Chiyoko Tanaka. He attended McGill University in Montreal and apprenticed at the New London Barn Theatre in New Hampshire.

Filmography

References

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