Wes Craven

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Wes Craven

Born: August 02, 1939 (age 67)
Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Occupation: Film director and producer
Spouse: Iya Labunka
Website: Official Site

Wesley Earl Craven (born August 2, 1939 in Cleveland, Ohio) is an American film director and writer best known as the creator of many horror films, including the famed Nightmare on Elm Street series featuring the redoubtable Freddy Krueger character.

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Born to devoutly Baptist parents Paul Craven and Caroline Miller, Craven later earned an undergraduate degree in writing and psychology from Wheaton College in Illinois, and a masters degree in writing seminars from Johns Hopkins University. Prior to landing his first job in the film industry as a sound editor for a post-production company in New York, Craven briefly taught English at Westminster College and was a humanities professor at Clarkson University. With now ex-wife Bonnie Chapin, he is the father of Jonathan and Jessica Craven.

Craven's works tend to share a common exploration of the nature of reality. A Nightmare on Elm Street, for example, dealt with the consequences of dreams in real life. Wes Craven's New Nightmare "brushes against" (but doesn't quite break) the fourth wall by having actress Heather Langenkamp play herself as she is haunted by the villain of the film in which she once starred. At one point in the film, we see on Wes Craven's word processor a script he has written, which includes the exact conversation he just had with Heather — as if the script is being written as the action is unfolding. The Serpent and the Rainbow portrays a man who cannot distinguish between nightmarish visions and reality. In Scream, the characters frequently reference horror films similar to their situations, and at one point Billy Loomis tells his girlfriend that life is just a big movie. This concept was emphasized in the sequels, as copycat stalkers reenact the events of a new film about the Woodsboro killings occurring in Scream. Craven was also set to direct Beetlejuice but dropped out to direct the third outing for Freddy Kruger.

Though there have been seven different Nightmare on Elm Street films (eight if one includes the crossover Freddy vs Jason), two of which have been directed by Craven himself. He has said in several interviews and discussions that he only considers his two films to be accurate depictions of his creation. For years it has been rumored that he would make one more film, essentially completing his trilogy. Rumors about the film vary considerably, from a prequel that would take place before the events in the first film, to a direct sequel to 1994's New Nightmare, to the possibility that Craven might write and direct the next "Freddy vs..." film.[citation needed]

Year Title Genre Other Notes
1999 Fountain Society Novel Author
Year Title Genre Other notes
1972 The Last House on the Left
1977 The Hills Have Eyes
1978 Summer Of Fear
1978 The Evolution of Snuff
1981 Deadly Blessing
1982 Swamp Thing
1984 Invitation to Hell TV
1984 A Nightmare On Elm Street
1985 Chiller TV
1985 The Hills Have Eyes Part II
1985 The Twilight Zone TV series
1986 Casebusters TV
1986 Deadly Friend
1988 The Serpent and the Rainbow
1989 Wes Craven's Shocker
1990 Night Visions TV
1991 The People Under the Stairs
1992 Nightmare Cafe TV Series
1994 Wes Craven's New Nightmare
1995 Vampire in Brooklyn
1996 Scream
1997 Scream 2
1999 Music of the Heart
2000 Scream 3
2005 Cursed
2005 Red Eye
2006 Paris, je t'aime

Year Title Genre Other notes
1971 Together
1981 Kent State
1987 A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors
1989 The People Next Door TV Series
1989 Shocker
1990 Night Visions TV
1991 The People Under the Stairs
1992 Nightmare Cafe TV Series
1993 Laurel Canyon TV
1994 New Nightmare
1995 The Outpost
1997 Wishmaster
1998 Hollyweird TV
1998 Carnival of Souls
1998 Don't Look Down TV
2000 Dracula 2000
2002 They Shoot Divas, Don't They? TV
2005 Feast
2006 The Hills Have Eyes
2006 The Breed
2007 The Hills Have Eyes II
2007 Home
2009 Shocker Announced (remake)

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