Background
He was born in Camp Le Jeune, North Carolina. His father was Italian and his mother was from New England.
("Living in Oblivion" - the screenplay for a highly entert...)
"Living in Oblivion" - the screenplay for a highly entertaining, if little known independent film - is a pleasure to read. In Tom DiCillo's economic prose, the joys, frustrations and occasionally maddening incivilities of making a low-budget film come vibrantly to life. What's more, the unique, and complex structure (switching from color to black-and-white film stock, clearly indicated as part of the script; and a surprising use of dream-sequences throughout) add a textured layer to the story. I don't think it's necessary to see the film before reading the screenplay (though it can't hurt!) because the characters come to life through their individual foibles, ambitions and unexpected emotional entanglements. The story never bogs down in filmmaking minutiae but you still get a vivid sense of what it's like to stagger onto a make-shift film set at 4 a.m., drinking bad coffee and having trouble getting into character. It's also enormously sympathetic towards and forgiving of each individual character, from the macho cinematographer to the egomaniacal leading man, and most especially, the erstwhile director trying somehow to hold everything together. Highly recommended! - By Lee Polevoi "lpolevoi" (San Diego, CA United States)
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Actor director playwright cinematographer
He was born in Camp Le Jeune, North Carolina. His father was Italian and his mother was from New England.
He studied creative writing at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia and went on to study filmmaking at New York University"s Film School alongside Jim Jarmusch, Howard Brookner, Sara Driver and Spike Lee.
Subsequently he worked as an actor, then cinematographer, before making his own films. His first film, Johnny Suede, cast the then-unknown Brad Pitt and Catherine Keener in what would be their first starring roles. Foreign his second film, Living in Oblivion, DiCillo received acclaim for his satire of independent film-making.
This 1995 black comedy, itself a low-budget independent film, features Steve Buscemi as a director driven to near-madness by his cast and crew, including a vain Hollywood actor.
Describing the inspiration for and origin of Living in Oblivion in an interview with Salon, DiCillo described making a movie as "one of the most tedious, boring, painful experiences, and that"s just when something goes right". In 2001, his film Double Whammy was released straight to video.
His next film, Delirious, is a comedy starring Steve Buscemi, Michael Pitt, Alison Lohman and Elvis Costello. DiCillo wrote and directed the movie When You"re Strange, which was released in 2009 and premiered at the Sundance Film festival.
The film, a documentary about seminal rock band The Doors, was nominated for a Grand Jury Prize.
lieutenant has since been nominated for both an Emmy Award - after airing on Public Broadcasting Service" American Masters series - and a Grammy Award - for Best Long Form Video. He has published books of two of his screenplays, Living in Oblivion and Box of Moonlight. Both books contain the full scripts along with commentary, stories and anecdotes.
DiCillo also directed "Weeping Willow", a sixth season episode of the television series Law & Order: Criminal Intent, was inspired by the lonelygirl15 videos on YouTube.
In the episode, a vlogger named Weeping Willow (Michelle Trachtenberg) is kidnapped during a live Internet video, and the kidnappers demand ransom through additional videos.
lieutenant received a nomination for a Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. lieutenant was screened at the San Sebastian Film Festival where it won three awards (Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, and the Signis Award for originality). The film also screened at the Sundance Film Festival in 2007 and won Best Director at the Home Box Office Comedy Film Festival in Aspen.
("Living in Oblivion" - the screenplay for a highly entert...)