Graham Streeter

Graham Streeter

Known for: Directing
Biography: 1964-01-22 (60 years old)

Biography

Graham Streeter (born January 22, 1964) is an American film director, screenwriter and cinematographer.

Streeter was raised in northern California until high school. He lived in Osaka, Japan for 10 years while working in film and television, then returned to the United States and attended California State University, Sacramento. Streeter earned a double degree in international business administration and Japanese, then worked for Nippon Television in Los Angeles as a television field producer founding Imperative Pictures in Hollywood.

Streeter began his career in filmmaking by making short films, such as Crickets & Potatoes, a look at the absurdity of holiday dinner gatherings, and Frank in Five, with Paul Winfield, Gedde Watanabe, and Zelda Rubinstein.

Streeter wrote, directed and also lensed the 2019 feature film I May Regret, starring Lisa Goodman and Denise Dorado, Imperfect Sky (2015), starring Blake Scott Lewis and Sam Lucas Smith, Blind Malice (2014) starring Grace Zabriskie, Tim Bagley, Grim Hans-Christian Bernhoft and Angelina Prendergast, produced by Imperative Pictures.

Streeter also wrote and directed the 2013 academically proclaimed documentary Boys in Peril, award-winning 2005 feature film Cages starring Mako Iwamatsu, Zelda Rubinstein and Bobby Tonelli. The film stayed in release in Asia for four weeks in 2007 and was the first Asian film to be purchased by the Hallmark Channel.

His 2018 film I May Regret was selected for the San Diego International Film Festival. The film won the Grand Prix at the Vienna Independent Film Festival.

Information

Known For
Directing

Gender
Male

Birthday
1964-01-22 (60 years old)

Citizenships
United States of America

This article uses material from Wikipedia.

Last updated:

  • Graham Streeter
    Graham Streeter
  • Filmography
  • Information
Social Media
X
Facebook
Telegram
Download
iOS Application
Made in Ukraine 🇺🇦
Copyright © MovieFit 2018 – 2024
All external content remains the property of its respective owner.