Alan Jacobs (filmmaker)


Alan Jacobs is an American independent film director, screenwriter and producer. His films have been acquired by major distributors, including Miramax and Columbia Pictures and have been invited to several major festivals, including Sundance and Toronto. His career began at Apple Inc., where he was the in-house filmmaker. Jacobs is a graduate of Wesleyan University and the Stanford Business School.

Early life

Jacobs was born in New York City to his parents Bernard and Sara Jacobs. His ties to the entertainment industry began at home – his father worked as a cameraman for NBC in the early days of television and later as an editor for CBS News in New York.
He was editor-in-chief of his high school newspaper at Tappan Zee High School, in Orangeburg, New York Jacobs was also a varsity letterman in soccer.
Jacobs studied writing and literature at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut. He wrote his first screenplay in his mid-20s before which he had almost no interest in movies.

Career

Jacobs realized early on that independent filmmaking offered the creative freedom that best suited his lifestyle. His first feature, Nina Takes a Lover, was a purely independent film that Jacobs wrote, directed and produced for $600,000. Both the Sundance Film Festival and the Toronto International Film Festival accepted the film. Soon after Sundance, Columbia Pictures bought the rights to Nina Takes a Lover and distributed it theatrically. Sundance that year launched the careers of a distinguished group of filmmakers, including, David O. Russell, Kevin Smith, Boaz Yakin and the team of Scott McGehee and David Siegel.
Jacobs demonstrated his versatility as a director in his next film, Just One Night, a screwball comedy about the crazy exploits of an earnest groom-to-be. The film stars Oscar-winning actor Timothy Hutton. Critics described the film as “romantic, lively, sexy, original, flawlessly produced.”
Following Just One Night, Jacobs co-directed the animated film with Evan Ricks. It was the first movie ever created solely from the motion capture process. The film, described by critics as “ adventure story created with state-of-the-art computer technology,” stars Brendan Fraser, Leonard Nimoy and Mark Hamill.
In his next film, American Gun, Jacobs returned to the drama genre. Starring the Oscar-winning James Coburn, the film follows an anguished father's journey to trace the gun that killed his daughter. It was Coburn's final screen appearance, which ends fittingly with the legendary actor staring straight into the camera lens.
Jacobs suggests that his early filmmaking career offered him opportunities to master the craft of film directing. He cites Malcolm Gladwell's book “Outliers”, in which the author postulates that it takes 10,000 hours to master a craft.
His most recent film, Down for Life, is based on a true story about a Hispanic teenage girl who was a gang leader in South Central Los Angeles. The film stars Jessica Romero, who was discovered on a lunch line at Manual Arts High School in Los Angeles, with a supporting cast that includes Danny Glover, Kate del Castillo, Laz Alonso, Elizabeth Peña and Snoop Dogg. The producers of the film visited several inner city schools and conducted brief auditions with approximately 600 teenage girls before casting Romero and her co-stars, Sheila Ochoa, Isamar Guijarro, Ilene Trujillo, and Andrea Valenzuela. Jacobs was inspired by the Italian Neorealist tradition of casting non-actors to heighten a film's authenticity and grittiness. Jacobs cites films like Open City, The Bicycle Thief, and City of God – all of which combined trained actors with authentic amateurs – as blazing a trail for others to make unconventional directorial decisions. Down for Life was invited to both the Toronto and Sundance Film Festivals. Critics described the film as “moving, motivating, and a must-see.”
Jacobs recently started "," an integrated media company which manages talent in addition to producing films.

Filmography