- Academy Award, eight-time Emmy nominated, and Peabody, DGA, and Sundance winning filmmaker Joe Berlinger has been a pioneering force in nonfiction filmmaking for over three decades.
Berlinger is the creator of such landmark documentaries as Sundance winner BROTHER'S KEEPER, which influenced a generation of documentarians and the PARADISE LOST Trilogy, which helped lead to the release of the wrongfully convicted West Memphis Three, and METALLICA: SOME KIND OF MONSTER, which redefined the rockumentary genre. CRUDE, which examined the dire issue of oil pollution in the ancestral homeland of thousands of Ecuadorians in the Amazon Rainforest, won 22 human rights, environmental and film festival awards and triggered a high profile First Amendment battle with the Chevron Corporation. Eight of Berlinger's films, including his Emmy-nominated 2012 Paul Simon documentary, UNDER AFRICAN SKIES, have premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, with three earning Grand Jury Prize nominations. He has also received multiple awards from the Directors Guild of America, the National Board of Review, the Independent Spirit Awards, and the Critics' Choice Awards.
Berlinger is described as a "true crime hit factory" for Netflix, whose work has "redefined crime documentaries as a vehicle for social justice", according to a recent Bloomberg profile. "He's the gold standard in true crime. The moral compass that he has, the sense of responsibility he has for victims and for getting the story right and shining a light on it, that is something that is very unique", said VP for original documentary series at Netflix, Adam Del Deo.
Berlinger's work has often catalyzed real-world change, some directly inspiring justice reform efforts and recognition on state and national levels. After working with Berlinger on his documentary series about the wrongfully convicted Richard Glossip, death penalty abolitionist Sister Helen Prejean (Dead Man Walking) commented: "There is no other documentarian who has consistently been more focused and more effective in using film to pursue the plight of the wrongfully convicted. His work has helped get six people out of prison and has advanced the causes of many other pending cases, including Glossip's."
After Berlinger's feature documentary, INTENT TO DESTROY, was screened for US lawmakers, playing a critical role in the United States Congress finally acknowledging the Armenian Genocide in 2019 after a century of Turkish denial, Aram Hamparian, executive director of the Armenian National Committee of America commented, "Joe Berlinger's INTENT TO DESTROY empowered our community, our coalition partners and our congressional allies to finally persuade both chambers of Congress to formally recognize the massacre of the Armenian people in 1915 as a genocide."
Berlinger holds a streak of chart-topping work on Netflix, attracting enormous audiences with 16 Netflix productions under his belt that have all debuted in the Netflix Top Ten, often at #1. Berlinger is also the first filmmaker to simultaneously cover the same subject in scripted and unscripted forms with CONVERSATIONS WITH A KILLER: THE TED BUNDY TAPES and EXTREMELY WICKED, SHOCKINGLY EVIL, AND VILE, the latter of which starred Zac Efron, Lily Collins, and John Malkovich and sold to Netflix in a Sundance bidding war for almost $10 million. Netflix's GHISLAINE MAXWELL: FILTHY RICH and doc series MADOFF: THE MONSTER OF WALL STREET both debuted as the #1 documentaries on the platform. Berlinger's most recent series, HITLER AND THE NAZIS: EVIL ON TRIAL, debuted as the Top 6 most-watched series globally on Netflix, and was the only documentary on that list. The series ignited a global conversation about the current threats to democracy in the United States and abroad.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Christina Dropulic
- SpouseLoren Eiferman(? - present) (2 children)
- Chronicled his experiences throughout the tumultuous three-year journey of making the award-winning "Metallica: Some Kind of Monster" in his book "Metallica: This Monster Lives", published in 2004 by St. Martins Press.
- Profiled in "Hollywood Horrors from the Director's Chair: Six Filmmakers in the Franchise of Fear" by Simon Wilkinson (McFarland, 2008).
- Member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS), the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and the National Board of Review.
- Is Brother-in-law of casting director Sharon Bialy.
- Son of a lumberyard owner and a third grade teacher.
- [on James 'Whitey' Bulger's possible links to the FBI] Look, I'm not saying whether he was an informant or not an informant, but I think it's intellectually dishonest to just shut down the discussion. All I'm saying is, 'Hey, if he was an informant , we still don't have enough information as to how this was possible and who is responsible. And if he wasn't an informant - man, there are some really deeply troubling questions'.
- [on Intent to Destroy: Death, Denial & Depiction (2017)] I heard Eric [Eric Esrailian] was producing The Promise (2016), and I have long felt that it's a shame that Hollywood has been afraid of making movies about the Armenian Genocide, because of U.S.' complicity in helping Turkey not acknowledge it. So when I heard the film was being made, I thought it was a historic opportunity to use that as the present tense thread to tell the underlying story of the genocide. And more importantly, not just the genocide, but the legacy and aftermath of denial, and the mechanism of denial. [2017]
- [on Intent to Destroy: Death, Denial & Depiction (2017)] By embedding with The Promise (2016), I could tell the whole story of how as early as 1935, Irving Thalberg's attempt to do "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh" [based on Franz Werfel's bestselling 1933 novel] was shut down, and ever since then there's never been a mainstream Hollywood film [about the Armenian Genocide]. So I think that's important to understand, how there are certain stories we are pressured into not telling. And in this age of alternate facts and fake news, I think that lesson has never been more important. [2017]
- [on Intent to Destroy: Death, Denial & Depiction (2017) and the Armenian Genocide] I hope I open people's hearts and get people to start talking about it... Do I think a movie is going to change the overall dynamic? Probably not, but it will help people to have a dialogue about it, and that's always useful and healthy. [2017]
- Generally speaking, there are three different reasons people come to documentary: advocacy, storytelling, and journalism. We all come into filmmaking for different reasons. When I made Brother's Keeper (1992), I didn't consider myself an activist or a journalist; I considered myself a storyteller that was pushing the envelope of cinema. Once we saw the West Memphis Three sent to prison for something they didn't do, that's when I think the activist bug awakened in me. So there are three competing impulses, and sometimes those impulses are mutually exclusive. For example, a lot of activist filmmakers feel like they have to have a very strong message, and anything that might subvert from that or show both sides and confuse the viewer is not good advocacy. I have the opposite view. Just like in Intent to Destroy: Death, Denial & Depiction (2017), I allowed the denial people to have a voice and express their point of view. It's clear I don't believe in the denial argument, but I think you have to treat the other side with humanity and compassion so that you can understand the complexity of the issue. In Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills (1996), 20% of the people who walked out of that film thought Damien [Damien Wayne Echols] and the West Memphis Three might've been guilty because we included such a full portrait and didn't tell you what to think. But 80% saw it the way I saw it: a miscarriage of justice. And that 80% carried a passion that led to a worldwide movement of tens of thousands of people to free the West Memphis Three. The reason you want to show both sides and allow people to come to their own point of view is that it's a much more emotionally engaging experience for an audience. [2017]
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