Shane Ryan
Birthday:
21 February 1980, Canoga Park, California, USA
Birth Name:
Shane Ryan Reid Gledhill
Height:
168 cm
Shane Ryan began making films at the age of 7 after his father introduced him to video editing at the age of 5. He made action films in hopes to be like and appear in Jean-Claude Van Damme movies, but at the age of 14 he decided to delve into dramas and movies about troubled kids. Ryan directed his own films simply as a means for being able to act ...
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Shane Ryan began making films at the age of 7 after his father introduced him to video editing at the age of 5. He made action films in hopes to be like and appear in Jean-Claude Van Damme movies, but at the age of 14 he decided to delve into dramas and movies about troubled kids. Ryan directed his own films simply as a means for being able to act and write. He never wanted to direct.When Ryan was 19 he saw Tim Roth's The War Zone (1999) and the explicit and confrontational Baise-moi (2000). After that Ryan realized he could have an impact with film in regards to things like rape, a subject which has haunted him since childhood. This caused Ryan to become a controversial figure in his hometown when he began making violent films involving sexual abuse. Soon followed underground and indie appeal via the internet before Ryan debuted his first theatrical release in 2007. Academy Award nominated actress Lesley Ann Warren was so outraged by the promotional materials the Laemmle Theatres displayed of Ryan's film that she successfully argued that Ryan's promotions be banned. Then in 2009 the mainstream news and Associated Press attacked Ryan for announcing plans to make a movie about the Stockholm Syndrome, loosely inspired by the current real-life rescue of Jaycee Dugard, with Lia Marie Johnson set to star. Ryan dropped the project to make My Name Is 'A' by Anonymous (2012), a film about convicted killer Alyssa Bustamante, who Ryan felt was getting unfair treatment in the media as well. Ryan makes frequent posts via his Facebook page insisting on Bustamante's possible innocence.Times changed in 2014 when director Albert Pyun (Cyborg (1989)) cast Ryan in his first starring role (in a film other than his own) for The Interrogation of Cheryl Cooper (2014) which then landed Ryan a role in Gregory Hatanaka's Samurai Cop 2: Deadly Vengeance (2015) and the upcoming Interstellar Civil War (2017), now placing Ryan in the action category of actors who inspired him to make movies in the first place. Show less «
People are meant to die in horror films, I know that, and there's nothing wrong with that. But I still wanted to question peoples fascinatio...Show more »
People are meant to die in horror films, I know that, and there's nothing wrong with that. But I still wanted to question peoples fascination with that. - Interview in Sex Gore Mutants in response to his film Amateur Porn Star Killer (2006) Show less «
I wanted to see if I could make a scene, actually make an entire movie, feel disturbing and violent, without ever showing a single drop of b...Show more »
I wanted to see if I could make a scene, actually make an entire movie, feel disturbing and violent, without ever showing a single drop of blood. - Interview in Sex Gore Mutants Show less «
I think that if you're making a film that has a point or message to it that you should make the best story you can come to life. Be honest. ...Show more »
I think that if you're making a film that has a point or message to it that you should make the best story you can come to life. Be honest. If it's for entertainment, make it campy, make it funny, make it exciting, make it dramatic. But I don't think it's right to take real life tragedies and make a joke out of them while still trying to pull off a serious film. It's a very contradicting thing to do, and that is the only thing I have a problem with. Otherwise fuck responsibility! You're expressing yourself. - Interview in Sex Gore Mutants when asked, 'As a filmmaker, what do you feel is your moral responsibility?' Show less «
It's like a painting. You have an artistic urge and you throw some paint against the wall in rage, passion or confusion. Then you stand back...Show more »
It's like a painting. You have an artistic urge and you throw some paint against the wall in rage, passion or confusion. Then you stand back and look at what came out of it. Then somebody comes along and calls it genius. The next person says it's crap. And the next person doesn't even want to look at it. All the while the painter is just sitting back looking at this mess he created going, 'What the fuck did I make this for in the first place? I can't even remember.' Show less «