Biography
While still a teenager, producer and director Tony Scott made his first foray into film with an appearance in his big brother
Ridley Scott's first short film, Boy and Bicycle. He later attended London's Royal College of Art, as did his brother, and proceeded to get his feet wet behind the camera, at first by directing TV commercials for his brother's production company Ridley Scott Associates. He became a leader in the British commercial industry, directing countless ads and building up an impressive resumé over the years.
By the early '80s, Tony Scott was ready to begin directing films, and for his first project, he agreed to tackle MGM's artful vampire pic
The Hunger, starring
David Bowie and
Catherine Deneuve. The movie was released in 1983 to a disappointing silence at the box office, and for the next few years Scott returned to commercials as he waited for his next opportunity to come along. That project came in the form of an offer from producer
Jerry Bruckheimer to direct a fun action drama about hotshot fighter jet pilots --
Top Gun. Scott's darker artistic sensibilities didn't jive with Bruckheimer's ideas at first -- he had images of
Apocalypse Now and
The Road Warrior in mind, while the producers were envisioning something poppier and easy to digest. Finally, Scott understood what they were asking for and created the rock & roll and blue-skies flick that they had in mind. The movie was a massive box-office hit, ushering Scott into the next tier of filmmakers and making a star out of
Tom Cruise.
Scott almost instantly became the man to call on for fun action romps, directing films like
Beverly Hills Cop II in 1987,
Days of Thunder in 1990, and
The Last Boy Scout in 1991. He also directed a script written by a then unknown named
Quentin Tarantino called
True Romance. Starring a top-notch ensemble cast including
Christian Slater,
Patricia Arquette,
Dennis Hopper,
Christopher Walken,
Gary Oldman, and
Brad Pitt, the film was something of a sleeper at the box office. The exuberant tribute to cinematic expressions of love, crime, violence, and rock & roll quickly became another cult hit -- and a preview of things to come from the writer behind it. The movie also served as a reminder that Scott was capable of more sensitive and artistic sentiments than the testosterone-driven pictures that encompassed much of his filmography.
That is not to say Scott was not quite at home in the action and thriller areas of film, as he spent the 1990s churning out popular titles like
Crimson Tide,
The Fan, and
Enemy of the State. He continued with his trademark action-with-a-sense-of-humor style in the new millennium with films like
Spy Game,
Man on Fire, and
Domino, but by this time he was trying his hand at producing as well. Scott produced and executive produced TV ventures like
The Last Debate,
The Gathering Storm, and
Numb3rs, as well as features such as Tristan + Isolde and
In Her Shoes, and his own
Man on Fire and
Domino. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide