James Croak is known for Westworld (2016), Fear the Walking Dead (2015) and The Mandalorian (2019).
James Croft is known for Tied Down with Words (2011) and The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes (2022).
James Cromwell is known for Project Viper (2002), Raptor (2001) and Face the Music (2001).
Born in Los Angeles but raised in Manhattan and educated at Middlebury College and Carnegie-Mellon University, James Cromwell is the son of film director John Cromwell and actress Kay Johnson. He studied acting at Carnegie-Mellon, and went into the theatre (like his parents) doing everything from Shakespeare to experimental plays. He started appearing on television in 1974, gaining some notice in a recurring role as Archie Bunker's friend Stretch Cunningham on All in the Family (1971), made his film debut in 1976, and goes back to the stage periodically. Some of his more noted film roles have been in Revenge of the Nerds (1984), Star Trek: First Contact (1996) and the surprise classic about a charming pig, Babe (1995). He garnered some of the best reviews of his career (many of which said he should have received an Oscar) for his role as a corrupt, conniving police captain in L.A. Confidential (1997).
James Crow is an English writer and director from Kent, who has carved out a successful career as an independent film writer in a wide range of genres, including films sold to Lionsgate and Studio Canal. His first feature film as writer GBH (Riot) featured the legendary Steven Berkoff, and was selected for both the London Independent Film Festival & European Independent Film Festival respectively. It also won Best International film at the Underground Cinema Festival in Ireland, before going on to receive a limited cinema release and going on sale in stores nationwide, staying in the virgin media player top 5 for over a month. The film was re-brought and re-released by Lionsgate the following year. Since then James has written the first film of the He Who Dares action franchise, which was featured on the front page of IMDB's hottest new trailers, and wrote the story for WW2 action film Allies featuring Julian Ovenden and Matt Willis. His first solo film as director, Countrycide, was a short anti-drink driving black comedy that made judge's shortlist at the Theatre Royal Margate, as part of the 2 Days Laughter Festival (with Vanessa Stevenson being nominated for best actress). This was followed straight after by Among Angels being nominated for best matinée film at the 10th Anniversary of 2 days later. His next short horror film, Death Machine 666, was selected in the top 5 films of the Colchester 48 hour film challenge, and went up for best film at the Colchester film awards 2013. James also recently made his first debut as a theatre writer and director, with his first play Vampires, Witches & Antidepressants being nominated for 6 awards and winning best costume.
James Cruz is known for Heneral Luna (2015), Our Mighty Yaya (2017) and Mixtape (2022).
James Cullen is an actor, known for The Gaelic King (2017) and Jessie and the Elf Boy (2022).
James Cullen Bressack is an American producer, director, and screenwriter and son of three time Emmy-award winning writer Gordon Bressack and voice actress Ellen Gerstell. At the age of 18 he received critical attention from audiences and critics alike when he made his debut feature, My Pure Joy. One to push boundaries, James followed up with the bold and unapologetic Hate Crime which forced audiences along for a brutal home invasion, the first found footage feature ever to be made in the style of having no cuts. The entire film plays out painfully in real time. It was promptly banned in the UK for its fearless story telling, one of three films to be banned in the last 25 years and remains so to this day. Ahead of his time, he then started the To Jennifer series, the first feature film to be shot entirely on the iPhone 5. He produced the next three instalments. The prolific filmmaker refused to slow down completing seven more features including Pernicious, 13-13-13, and Blood Lake, starring Shannen Doherty and Christopher Lloyd, which made James the youngest director to ever direct for television. After writing and directing the haunting Bethany, a film that garnered rave reviews and limited theatrical release, James shifted his focus to producing. He has now produced forty-eight features including releases for Lionsgate and Cinedigm and is a member of both the PGA and SAG/AFTRA. His impressive body of work has won him numerous Best Picture and Best Director awards on the film festival circuit. James has achieved all this at the age of 28 and refuses to slow down as he continues to push the envelop and make films no one thought possible. His last directorial feature, Beyond The Law, had a theatrical release that reunited Steven Seagal and DMX, and continues to be a best seller topping charts. He just completed producing two back to back films including the directorial debut and the follow up feature by punk rock legend, Glenn Danzig of the Misfits and Danzig, Verotika, based on the comic book series of the same name, and Death Rider In The House of Vampires, a vampire spaghetti western blood bath epic from the twisted mind of Danzig. James shows no signs of stopping and delivers high quality films consistently.
James Thomas Cummins has been involved in all phases of the motion picture industry. Starting in 1980 as an illustrator and continuing as a special effects designer and, ultimately, screenwriter and director. Studying Film/Video and Character Animation at the California Institute of the Arts, he was awarded the only full scholarship granted by the "Walt Disney Company" during the Institute's 1978-79 academic year. Prior to his screen-writing and directing assignments, Cummins was responsible for designing and executing the special make-up effects for New World Pictures House (1985), Orion's Strange Invaders (1983), ABC's The Intruder Within (1981), as well as television episodes of The Twilight Zone (1985) and The Hitchhiker (1983). He also made design and sculpting contributions to such major motion pictures as: Enemy Mine (1985), Cat People (1982), The Thing (1982), Cocoon (1985), DeepStar Six (1989), Jaws 3-D (1983), Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986), Dead & Buried (1981), The Beast Within (1982), Elvira: Mistress of the Dark (1988), Heartbeeps (1981) and The Exterminator (1980). His credits as a writer-director include Atmosphere Entertainment's Harbinger (1996), Grand AM's Dark:30 (1993), and Prism Entertainment's The Boneyard (1991), starring Phyllis Diller and the late Norman Fell. As a direct result of open heart surgery early in 2002, he created and illustrated "Good Things To Share", an inspirational picture book for all ages, starring cartoon tyke, "Little Doodle". Benefiting directly from the work of the American Heart Association, Mr. Cummins donates a portion of all sales from "Good Things To Share" to the organization's children's health programs, including "Jump Rope For Heart".
James Cummins is known for The Booksellers (2019).