Renny Harlin Movies
Finnish director
Renny Harlin did not come from an artistically inclined family (his parents were in the medical profession), but
Harlin himself had determined his future before he was 12, via extensive use of a home movie camera.
Harlin was a twenty-ish film school graduate when he set up his own production company; while he was fairly successful marketing documentaries and commercial shorts, young
Harlin could not get anyone in Finland to bankroll him for a feature. He moved to the presumably greener pastures of Hollywood, where he finally realized his goal with the 1986 feature
Born American.
Harlan's direction of 1990's
Die Hard 2 seemed to bode well for steady work in action films; unfortunately, his next effort (released the same month as
Die Hard 2) was the ill-fated
Andrew Dice Clay vehicle
The Adventures of Ford Fairlane (1990). The collapse of this enterprise resulted in reams of magazine copy about the "once-promising" and "washed-up"
Harlin. But in 1993, he responded with the successful
Cliffhanger, which managed the remarkable feat of being an actor's picture (the star was
Sylvester Stallone) and a director's picture all in one.
Renny Harlin was married to actress
Geena Davis, whom he directed in the 1995 swashbuckler
Cutthroat Island. Though the couple would re-team the following year for
Harlin's
The Long Kiss Goodnight, they separated in 1997 and divorce soon followed. In 1999
Harlin took the action to the ocean with
Long Kiss co-star
Samuel L. Jackson in
Deep Blue Sea, following in 2001 with the
Sylvester Stallone adreno-racer
Driven.
Next up,
Harlin was called in to rescue the production of the prequel Exorcist: The Beginning after countless problems including a completed film from director Paul Schrader that was virtually scrapped by an unsatisfied studio. Harlin followed this up with the thriller Mindhunters. While neither of those efforts were particularly successful upon release at the box office, in 2006
Harlin had returned to his position behind the camera once again to terrify moviegoers with a tale of four teens forced to do battle with a malevolent supernatural force in The Covenant. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi