David Levien & Brian Koppelman

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Born
David Levien

OccupationsScreenwriter, director, producer
Yearsactive1997–present
David Levien and Brian Koppelman
Born
David Levien

EducationUniversity of Michigan (BA)
OccupationsScreenwriter, director, producer
Years active1997–present

Born
Brian William Koppelman

EducationTufts University (BA), Fordham University (JD)
OccupationsScreenwriter, director, producer
Years active1997–present

David Levien & Brian Koppelman are an American screenwriting, directing, and producing duo.[1][2] They have worked together on several film and television projects since the late 1990s. Their work includes co-writing Rounders (1998) and Knockaround Guys (2001), as well as co-creating the television series Billions, which aired on Showtime from 2016 to 2023.[3]

Other credits include Runaway Jury (2003), Ocean’s Thirteen (2007), and Solitary Man (2009).[4] In addition to writing and directing, they have served as creators and showrunners for Billions and the anthology series Super Pumped.[5]

Brian Koppelman and David Levien met as teenagers and developed a friendship based on mutual interests in film, literature, and music.[6][7] They later attended different colleges and started separate careers but maintained communication and continued to exchange ideas. In the mid-1990s, their discussions led to a formal collaboration as co-writers of screenplays.[6]

Career

Collaboration in film

Koppelman & Levien began their screenwriting collaboration in the late 1990s with the poker drama Rounders (1998).[3][8] Inspired by Koppelman's experiences in New York’s underground poker clubs, and the research in those clubs they then did together, they co-wrote the original screenplay. Rounders, starring Matt Damon and Edward Norton, was acquired by Miramax and marked their first major Hollywood project.[7] Although the film achieved modest initial success, it developed a cult following and is frequently associated with the poker boom of the early 2000s. Professional poker player and World Series of Poker champion Chris Moneymaker credited the film with influencing his interest in poker.[9]

Following Rounders, Levien and Koppelman continued collaborating on various film projects. They co-wrote and co-directed the crime thriller Knockaround Guys (2001), featuring Vin Diesel and John Malkovich.[3][10] They then contributed the screenplay for the John Grisham adaptation Runaway Jury (2003), earning an Edgar Award nomination for Best Motion Picture Screenplay.[3][10] In 2004, they wrote the screenplay for the action remake Walking Tall, starring Dwayne Johnson.[11]

In 2006, Levien and Koppelman served as producers on Neil Burger’s film The Illusionist, starring Edward Norton.[12] They subsequently co-wrote Ocean’s Thirteen (2007), directed by Steven Soderbergh, and reunited with Soderbergh for The Girlfriend Experience (2009), a drama set in the world of high-end escorts.[13][14] That same year, Koppelman wrote and they co-directed Solitary Man, featuring Michael Douglas in a lead role praised by critics.[15]

Other projects include producing the war drama The Lucky Ones (2008), co-writing and producing the online gambling thriller Runner Runner (2013) starring Justin Timberlake and Ben Affleck, and producing independent films such as Interview with the Assassin (2002) and I Smile Back (2015).[4]

Television work

Koppelman & Levien expanded into television in 2005 with the ESPN dramatic series Tilt, centered on Las Vegas poker culture.[16] The series aired for one season, with Levien and Koppelman serving as executive producers and occasionally directing episodes.[17] They next directed one of the ESPN 30 for 30 films, This Is What They Want, about Jimmy Connors.[18]

Their most prominent television project is the Showtime series Billions (2016–2023), co-created with financial columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin.[19] Starring Paul Giamatti and Damian Lewis, the series explored the competitive worlds of finance and law. Koppelman and Levien acted as showrunners and executive producers throughout the series.[19] The series was noted for featuring one of American television’s first non-binary main characters, Taylor Mason, portrayed by Asia Kate Dillon.[1]

In 2022, they co-created Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber, an anthology series based on Mike Isaac’s book about Uber’s CEO Travis Kalanick. Koppelman and Levien, along with Beth Schacter, served as showrunners for the first season, featuring Joseph Gordon-Levitt. The series continued their thematic exploration of ambition and corporate culture.[20]

Filmography

Awards and recognition

References

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