Gary Winick Movies
A 1984 graduate of Tufts University, Gary Winick quickly moved into filmmaking as a full-time vocation, placing a stronger emphasis on producing than on directing. He earned M.F.A. degrees from both the American Film Institute and the University of Texas at Austin, then jump-started his career by helming and producing low-budget, direct-to-video efforts for such houses as Roger Corman's New World Pictures and Concrete -- including the 1998 Curfew and the 1990 Out of the Rain. These projects drew little attention, but Winick's fortunes started to shift with the 1996 Sweet Nothing -- an appropriately grueling parable about drug addiction that featured an early Michael Imperioli and Mira Sorvino, which netted favorable remarks from such respected critics as Roger Ebert and Barbara Shulgasser. Winick unveiled his genre versatility by teaming up with writer/star Polly Draper (thirtysomething) and Gregory Hines to direct the family-themed ensemble drama The Tic Code, starring Gregory Hines; while the film was produced in 1998, it wasn't released until two years later.Alongside his directing career, Winick also made impressive advances on a business end, founding an all-digital production company in 1999, InDigEnt. With the digital format substantially driving the cost of filmmaking down, Winick was able to turn out offbeat, profitable indie films right and left with a who's who of stars -- such an extensive list of films, in fact, that his resumé over the following decade reads like a laundry list of important American independent features. Personal Velocity: Three Portraits (2001), Eric Bogosian: Wake Up and Smell the Coffee (2001), Pieces of April (2003), and Starting Out in the Evening (2007), to name only a few, all bore Winick's producing credit.
As a director, Winick made a much bigger splash in the indie film world in 2002 with his drama Tadpole, about a 15-year-old intellectual prep-school student (Aaron Stanford) who sets out to seduce his stepmother (Sigourney Weaver) but winds up attracting the attention of her best friend (Bebe Neuwirth). Winick won the directing award for the film that year at the Sundance Film Festival. For his next movie, he entered the mainstream Hollywood market with 13 Going on 30 (2004), starring Jennifer Garner and Mark Ruffalo, about a 13-year-old who wakes up one day in a 30-year-old body after wishing she could just skip the trials of adolescence and move straight to adulthood. Winick next continued with Hollywood moviemaking, but switched to family films with the star-studded live-action adaptation Charlotte's Web (2006) for Paramount, Nickelodeon, and Walden Media.
He then tried his hand at television work, directing a 2007 episode of the popular comedy drama Ugly Betty and the 2008 pilot of Candace Bushnell's Lipstick Jungle, starring Brooke Shields. The next year witnessed Winick helming the romantic comedy Bride Wars. With a cast featuring Kate Hudson and Anne Hathaway, and a script co-authored by SNL contributor Casey Wilson and June Diane Raphael, the movie concerns best friends who enter crisis mode when they discover that they've both accidentally scheduled their weddings for the same day. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
This unflinching and straightforward look at a middle-class man's descent into drug addiction was based on the diaries of an addict named Angel. Found in a Bronx apartment, the diaries were made into a film by screenwriter Lee Drysdale and director Gary Winick. Angel (Michael Imperioli) is a Wall Street functionary who lives modestly with his wife Monika (Mira Sorvino) and their young children. One day, an old friend from the Marines, Raymond (Paul Calderon), offers Angel a hit on a pipe of crack cocaine and a chance to get in on dealing drugs. Monika reluctantly agrees to the plan, and they set a limit of a couple of months in which they hope that Angel will make a quick killing and get out. The movie then flashes forward three years. Angel has become a hopeless crack addict, while Monika has become enamored of designer clothes. As Angel becomes more unreliable, Raymond kicks him out of the business. Monika achieves independence, gets a job, and finally kicks Angel out. Angel gets more desperate, even trying to sell his wife's jewelry, and finally hits bottom. ~ Michael Betzold, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Michael Imperioli, Mira Sorvino, (more)
In this thriller, a murder throws a small town into chaos. Things get worse when the brother of the deceased wanders back to town and launches a private investigation that exposes a cesspool of corruption. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
After late-night carousing on too many weekends and having her parents impose a curfew upon her, a teen-age girl (Kyle Richards) speeds home to keep from winding up in hot water again but finds when she gets home that two escaped convicts (Wendell Wellman, John Putch) have taken her family hostage. ~ John Bush, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Kyle Richards, Wendell Wellman, (more)









