Who is Zack Snyder

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Zack Snyder

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Watchmen Trailer 

Official Watchmen Trailer

Title speaks for itself so people don't have to keep answerin the name of the song is: smashing pumpkins- the beginning is the end is the beginning

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Introduction 

Zack Snyder (born March 1, 1966) is an American filmmaker, screenwriter and producer. After making his feature film debut with the 2004 remake Dawn of the Dead, he gained wide recognition with the 2007 box office hit 300, adapted from writer-artist Frank Miller's Dark Horse Comics miniseries of the same name, and later went on to direct the 2009 superhero film Watchmen.

Biography 

From armies of vengeful undead zombies to armies of death-defying Spartan warriors, director Zack Snyder was hell-bent on proving his ability to deal with crowds, particularly those on movie screens and those who fill the movie theater seats. From a career that began in commercials, Snyder utilized his technique and insider's perspective in service of a greater, more engaging thrill, when he giddily riffed on consumerism in a remake of George A. Romero's "Dawn of the Dead" (2004). Whereas the movie careers of many of his peers in the glossy world of commercials extinguished while trying to extend the commercials for 90 minutes or more, Snyder proceeded to up the stakes with the highly anticipated Spartan epic, "300" (2007).

Snyder was born in Green Bay, WI on March 1, 1966. At the age of 11, photography and filmmaking replaced his previous career aspirations to become an animator, after viewing of "Star Wars" (1977) and receiving a Super 8 film camera from his parents. Snyder was hooked on the moviegoing experience, slipping into a screening of George Romero's "Dawn of the Dead" (1978) by himself on the sly at the age of 12. Even as a commercial director in the early 1990s, Snyder knew he would make the leap into films. He worked at a breakneck pace, typically directing three commercial spots per month. The locales were exotic and the products were sleek. He was often a top choice for prominent ad agencies, which liked his flexibility with ideas and production schedules. Among countless others, Snyder spent the bulk of the '90s on high profile gigs for the likes of Nike, Reebok, Budweiser, UPS and BMW.

In 1996, Snyder met Deborah Johnson, a commercials producer based out of New York who had hired Snyder to direct a spot through the agency Backer Spielvogel Bates. The two clicked personally and professionally over a short California shoot, but Snyder had a wife and Johnson had a boyfriend on the commercial's production team. Years later, in 2002, the two reunited when Johnson brought Snyder on board for a deodorant commercial. While on location in New Zealand, both discovered neither was romantically attached, which now made it easy to fall in love.

By August of 2002, Snyder was venturing into the waters of feature filmmaking. His talents had come to the attention of Hollywood, now very much a commercial director-friendly industry. He signed a deal with Columbia Pictures to make a big budget version of the 1975 television series, "S.W.A.T." (2003). When he left the project due to the studio's concerns about his grittier take, he was quickly snagged by Spyglass Entertainment to helm an adaptation of the comic book "Mage," about an ambivalent superhero. That project stalled, but Snyder was soon offered the chance to remake his boyhood favorite, "Dawn of the Dead," by Strike Entertainment producers Marc Abraham and Eric Newman. The two were wary of getting it wrong, but liked Snyder's enthusiasm - as did actress Sarah Polley, an independent film veteran who was famously picky with her studio projects.

With a cast spearheaded by Polley and Ving Rhames, Snyder was into production of "Dawn of the Dead" in Toronto by June 2003. After the film's wrap in September, Snyder - then a father of six - took time to build his relationship with Johnson and raise the four children from his first marriage. He was also weighing the options for his next film project. By January of 2004, Johnson had relocated to Pasadena, CA where Snyder ran a production company, Cruel and Unusual Inc.

"Dawn of the Dead" (2004) was released in March and went on cross the $100 million mark with a budget of just over $25 million. Its success showed Hollywood executives that Snyder could do a lot with a little and primed him for his next passion project, "300." Based on Frank Miller and Lynn Varley's iconic graphic novel about the real battle of Thermopylae in which 300 Spartans fought under King Leonidas to defend their city against the armies of Persian king Xerxes, Snyder would co-write the screenplay with plans to direct. In the meantime, Snyder and Johnson were married in Manhattan on Sept. 25, 2004 and Snyder signed a deal with Paramount Pictures to adapt and direct his military ops novel "Rainbow Six."

The ambition to realize "300" on the screen could very well have been a metaphor for the director's career itself. It took some convincing to get Warner Brothers, the studio behind "300," to see the movie could be made using the same digitally-enhanced blue-screen filming that was employed by another of Miller's properties, "Sin City" (2005). Things gelled when he found his King Leonidas during a brief coffee shop meeting with Scottish actor Gerard Butler - formerly best known for playing the Phantom in Joel Schumacher's big screen remake, "Phantom of the Opera" - and, armed with a budget relatively small for the action genre, Snyder spent four months shooting the film entirely on soundstages.

In June 2006, Snyder boarded the troubled big-budget production of another beloved comic book property. Paramount Pictures had acquired the rights to Alan Moore's "Watchmen" (2008) from Universal Pictures after the film's development stalled, due to enormous budgets under director Paul Greengrass, who had replaced previously-attached director Darren Aronofsky. It was revived when the studio was convinced through the early footage of "300," that Snyder could streamline the costs while keeping the story's impact intact.

While continuing to fine tune the postproduction elements of "300" over the bulk of 2006, Snyder inked a deal in October to write and direct an adaptation of the comic book, "Cobalt 60," detailing the trials of a post-apocalyptic vigilante superhero. In February of 2007, "300" was released to theaters and Snyder was doing full-time duty on "Watchmen," combining the various screenplays and refining them into one, with an eye towards entering the casting process. "With "Rainbow Six" languishing in the development process, Snyder was ready to give himself completely to the long-gestating "Watchmen" to be released March 6 2009.

Pictures 

Rorschach by photographerpandora

Rorschach

Rorschach poster by photographerpandora

Rorschach poster

Office by eyeSPIVE

Office

Dr Manhattan by eyeSPIVE

Dr Manhattan

Silk Spectre and The Comedian by eyeSPIVE

Silk Spectre and The...

Silk Spectre by eyeSPIVE

Silk Spectre

Watchmen by eyeSPIVE

Watchmen

The Comedian and Silk Spectre by eyeSPIVE

The Comedian and Sil...

Empire free company modelled to be night watchmen by jon_a_ross

Empire free company...

Yeah! Hell yeah! by effenk

Yeah! Hell yeah!

Who watches the Watchmen waiting by el fedora

Who watches the Watc...

Quick, look intense... by whatleydude

Quick, look intense....

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Posters 

300 Movie (Leonidas, Tonight We Dine in Hell!) Poster Print - 24" X 36"

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300 Movie (Leonidas, Tonight We Dine in Hell!, Huge) Poster Print - 39" X 55"

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300 Movie (Prepare for Glory!) Poster Print - 24" X 36"

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300 Movie (You Will Not Enjoy This) Poster Print - 24" X 36"

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300 Movie (Prepare for Glory, Double-Sided International Original) Poster Print - 27" X 40"

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300 DVD And Blu-Ray 

300 - Limited Edition Best Buy Box Set w/ Helmet - 2-Disc Widecreen DVD

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300 (Widescreen Edition)

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300 [Blu-ray]

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300 (Two-Disc Special Edition)

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300 (Combo HD DVD and Standard DVD) [HD DVD]

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Watchmen Movie Action Figures 

Collectables And Merchandise

Watchmen Movie Rorschach Action Figure

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Watchmen Movie Nite Owl Modern Action Figure

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Watchmen Movie Silk Spectre Classic Action Figure

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Watchmen Movie Nite Owl Classic Action Figure

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Watchmen Movie Ozymandias Action Figure

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Watchmen

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