George Armitage

For other people named George Armitage, see George Armitage (disambiguation).
George Armitage

George Armitage
Born George Brendan Armitage
Hartford, Connecticut, U.S.
Occupation Director, Writer, Producer, Actor
Years active 1965–present
Children Brent Armitage

George Armitage (born 1942) is an American film director, screenwriter, and producer who got his start as part of the stable of up-and-coming filmmakers who broke into the business through Roger Corman's New World Pictures. He is most well known as the director of the films Miami Blues and Grosse Pointe Blank.[1]

Career

Armitage was born in Hartford Connecticut and moved to Beverly Hills in 1956, when he was 13. "What a culture shock," he reflected later. "I’m still reeling. In Connecticut there wasn’t a hot rod in sight. Out here it was people racing up and down the street, building their own cars—it was teenage paradise, the kids were running everything."[2] He attended UCLA where he majored in economics and political science. While waiting for his real estate licence to come through, Armitage entered the film industry in 1965 via the mail room at 20th Century Fox. He later said:

I have a very personal relationship to film. I've gone to films all the time since I was a kid. I thought I could have some fun trying to make them. I always thought I was pretty close to what people were thinking. There's lots of tricks to be played, things to be done in film. Film is so close to the way the mind works - the way the mind communicates with itself. Film is a dream, an emotional coda.[3]

In 1966 Armitage became an associate producer on Peyton Place, "primarily to deal with the young kids on the show, to help them loop their lines."[3] Armitage recalls his period at Fox as an "incredible experience":

This was just at the time when the fortysomething producers who were kind of hip and jazz-oriented were coming in… I was 21, 22, something like that, and if you were young, if you had an opinion, were kind of hip, knew what was going on with your own generation, you were very valuable. So I went from producer to producer all over the lot pitching ideas, I created series, I wrote a couple of things for television and, about that time, started writing screenplays.[2]

Armitage worked as associate producer on Judd for the Defense and created a TV series and tried to co-produce a TV movie but neither went beyond script stage.

Films

Armitage met Gene and Roger Corman at Fox while they were making The St. Valentine's Day Massacre:

The commissary was a place called the “Gold Room” where the producers would go. They were all sort of mothballed, but they still had energy enough to snob the television people, who were making High Noon, Lost in Space, Batman. The movie producers would sit on the other side of the room from the TV people. This left the TV people with nobody else to snob, so they would snob Roger Corman... And that really pissed me off, because I was a fan of his. So I began to visit him on the set and the whole thing, and told him about the conflict that was going on, and he got a kick out of that.[2]

Armitage left Fox in 1967 to focus on movies. He wrote a script called Carrot Butts about animated cartoon characters coming to life. This was sent to the Cormans, who liked it but could not get financing. However Armitage then wrote Gas-s-s-s for him.[2]

Gas-s-s-s impressed Corman enough to allow Armitage to write and direct Private Duty Nurses.

In 1972 Armitage wrote and directed Hit Man, recently acclaimed in John Cribbs' Obscure Genius series".[1]

In 1975 Armitage was quoted in an article as saying:

I try to follow the Hollywood sports - to see who's winning. It doesn't seem the best system to make films that are both interesting and commercial, but it's the only one that works, at least for me. I think there must be other ways but I can't think of them. It's all new to me, even after ten years. I would like to see more courage and imagination, of course. That's something to look for.[3]

In 1976 Vigilante Force. The picture was not a large success and Armitage's career then became bogged down in "development hell", apart from the movie Hot Rod.[4] Armitage spend the 1980s mostly writing screenplays which were never made.[2]

In 1990 Armitage wrote and directed the critically acclaimed Miami Blues.[5]

In 1997 Armitage directed the further acclaimed Grosse Pointe Blank

Selected filmography

Director

Screenwriter

Producer

Actor

Unmade screenplays

References

  1. 1 2 John Cribbs, 'Obscure Genius: George Armitage'
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Nick Pinkerton, "Interview with George Armitage", Film Comment 28 April 2015
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 9 Directors Rising From the Trashes: Nine Directors Rising From the Trashes 9 Directors Rising From the Trashes 9 Directors Rising From the Trashes From the Trashes From the Trashes From the Trashes Thomas, Kevin. Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File) [Los Angeles, Calif] 21 Dec 1975: m1.
  4. Screwball thriller: 'Miami Blues' bends the cop genre Chicago Tribune (1963-Current file) [Chicago, Ill] 20 Apr 1990: C.
  5. http://www.filmfreakcentral.net/ffc/2015/06/miami-blues.html.
  6. Stars Signed for 'The Devils' Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File) [Los Angeles, Calif] 19 June 1970: f16.

External links

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