logo
James Foley, Director of ‘Glengarry Glen Ross,' ‘House of Cards' and ‘Fifty Shades,' Dies at 71

James Foley, Director of ‘Glengarry Glen Ross,' ‘House of Cards' and ‘Fifty Shades,' Dies at 71

Yahoo11-05-2025

James Foley, the Brooklyn-born filmmaker who collaborated with A-list stars like Al Pacino, Sean Penn, Madonna and Mark Wahlberg across a 30-plus-year career in film, TV and music videos, has died. He was 71.
Foley's rep said Thursday he died 'peacefully in his sleep earlier this week' at his Los Angeles home following a 'years-long struggle' with brain cancer.
More from The Hollywood Reporter
Jirí Bartoska, Czech Actor and Longtime Karlovy Vary Film Festival President, Dies at 78
Paul Nichols, Longtime TV Publicist, Dies at 76
Carolyn Raskin, Producer of Frank Sinatra Specials and 'Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In,' Dies at 97
Born on Dec. 28, 1953, and raised in New York, Foley graduated from high school and went on to study film at New York University and then at USC in Los Angeles. It was during his final year of film school that a chance meeting would change the course of his life and jump start his career behind the camera.
'I was very lucky, and in the perverse calculus of Hollywood I was in the last year of film school and shared a house with a guy. There was a woman who was pursuing my friend so we had this film school party, which consisted of people projecting their student films onto a white wall and getting stoned,' Foley recalled in a detailed anecdote to Film Freak Central. 'And this girl came. Hal Ashby was pursuing her — she was pursuing my friend and Hal was pursuing her — and Hal called her up and asked to come to this party full of film students. Just as he walked through the door, my film was showing on the wall. I'll never know whether he was being polite or anything, but he told me he liked it and stuff and he was going to form a company that was going to produce other people's movies and what did I want to do? I could write something and direct it.'
Foley admitted that he thought it was all a dream. But by the time he wrote a draft of a screenplay, Ashby had released two films, both of which 'bombed terribly,' leading to a lost opportunity for Foley. 'But at that time, because Hal Ashby had hired me, I became known to other people in Hollywood and got kind of viable in that weird calculus of Hollywood just because someone else, respected, thought I was viable.'
He was able to ride that momentum to his directorial debut, 1984's Reckless, starring Aidan Quinn and Daryl Hannah. He followed it by directing Madonna's 'Dress You Up' music video in what would mark the first of many collaborations with the Material Girl helming many of her iconic music videos, including 'Live to Tell,' 'Papa Don't Preach,' 'True Blue' and 'The Look of Love.' He also directed the 1987 feature film Who's That Girl starring Madonna opposite Griffin Dunne. It was the latest push in the pop superstar's acting career following Desperately Seeking Susan and Shanghai Surprise, and it landed with a thud at the box office, leading Foley to reflect on his career. 'It was a major life experience. That first failure is so shocking,' he once said.
His follow-up film came in 1986 with the Sean Penn- and Christopher Walken-starrer At Close Range. He went on to direct After Dark, My Sweet starring Jason Patric, Rachel Ward and Bruce Dern and an episode of Twin Peaks before helming 1992's Glengarry Glen Ross from a script by David Mamet.
Set in the high stakes world of real estate, the film starred Al Pacino, Jack Lemmon, Alec Baldwin, Ed Harris, Alan Arkin and Kevin Spacey. Pacino landed a best supporting actor Oscar nomination for his work in the film. Foley and Pacino would go on to collaborate again with 1995's Two Bits.
In 1996, Foley saw the release of his thriller Fear, starring Mark Wahlberg and Reese Witherspoon. Though it grossed just $20.8 million at the box office, the film was credited for fueling the careers of its stars who have gone on to become two of Hollywood's most successful actor-producers. After Fear, Foley worked with Gene Hackman and Chris O'Donnell on 1996's The Chamber; again with Wahlberg on 1999's action-packed The Corruptor, co-starring Chow Yun-Fat; with Edward Burns, Rachel Weisz, Andy Garcia, Dustin Hoffman and Paul Giamatti on 2003's Confidence; and with Halle Berry and Bruce Willis on the 2007 thriller Perfect Stranger.
His experience on the latter film led him to take a break from movies. 'For various reasons, it was not the best experience I've had. I kind of withdrew after that moment,' he told FilmInk. Foley then took his talents to the small screen for a spell, directing an episode of Hannibal before checking into Netflix's inaugural series House of Cards, a gig he said he got after a period of being in 'director jail' thanks to the belief of David Fincher. Foley would eventually direct 12 episodes of the acclaimed series. He also jumped behind the camera for two episodes of Showtime's Billions.
But back to the big screen he went, taking over the Fifty Shades franchise from Sam Taylor-Johnson. He directed the final two films in the franchise, Fifty Shades Darker and Fifty Shades Freed, starring Dakota Johnson and Jamie Dornan.
In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter in 2017, Foley talked about the seamless transitions he made throughout his career by moving between TV and film and across various genres.
'What I love is that it's fluid. I've had a very fluid career of ups and downs and lefts and rights, and I always just responded to what I was interested in at the moment and I was very unconscious about genre,' he said while promoting his work in the new Fifty Shades franchise. ' So the thing I would say I least like is there is an understandable tendency to, of course, pigeonhole somebody or identify them as, 'He does this kind of movie, so if we're making that kind of movie, we should get him and he'll make it like the other ones he's made.' That is of no interest to me, personally, to repeat myself. So I've always just followed my nose, for better or for worse, sometimes for worse.'
In an interview with Movie Habit, Foley said he trusted his gut by taking on projects that he liked and ones he felt audiences would as well. 'Not to be eclectic for eclectic's sake, but if I follow this idea of 'what do I like?' I guess it's going to be eclectic. Looking back, I become conscious of connections between a bunch of films. Obviously, males who are alienated and estranged from the mainstream. Groupings of males and the dynamics among them,' he said of the types of characters featured in his films. 'I never thought about it until it was over, but I think Confidence is kind of an interesting cousin to Glengarry, in that it is a group of guys together in pursuit of money, and what their allegiance is, and their betrayals.'
He also credited an attention to detail and involvement in all aspects of filmmaking to his longevity. 'I am incredibly hands-on about everything,' he told FilmInk. 'You have to know when to apply or relieve pressure. You have to make the actors aware that you're empathetic. The best actors want to be directed. Once you're on the same wavelength, you get incredible results.'
Foley is survived by his brother, Kevin; sisters Eileen and Jo Ann; and nephew Quinn (fiancé of Antea Kalinic). He was predeceased by another brother, Gerard (husband of Ann Marie Quinn Foley).
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now
"A Nutless Monkey Could Do Your Job": From Abusive to Angst-Ridden, 16 Memorable Studio Exec Portrayals in Film and TV
The 10 Best Baseball Movies of All Time, Ranked

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Johnny Depp doesn't regret Amber Heard trial, calls himself a 'crash test dummy for MeToo'
Johnny Depp doesn't regret Amber Heard trial, calls himself a 'crash test dummy for MeToo'

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Johnny Depp doesn't regret Amber Heard trial, calls himself a 'crash test dummy for MeToo'

To some, Johnny Depp's headline-making defamation trial with ex-wife Amber Heard was a stain on his gleaming Hollywood career. But despite the legal drama, Depp wouldn't change a thing. The Oscar-nominated actor reflected on the 2022 court battle in an interview with The Sunday Times published June 21. "Look, none of this was going (to) be easy, but I didn't care," he told the British outlet. "I thought, 'I'll fight until the bitter (expletive) end.' And if I end up pumping gas? That's all right. I've done that before." Depp sued Heard in 2019, claiming she defamed him in a 2018 Washington Post op-ed in which she said she was a victim of domestic abuse without specifically naming him. A Virginia jury in 2022 awarded him more than $10 million in damages following six weeks of widely watched testimony, during which both parties and witnesses testified about alleged abuse throughout their 15-month marriage. 'A soap opera': Johnny Depp shades Amber Heard defamation trial "Look, it had gone far enough," Depp, 62, continued. "If I don't try to represent the truth it will be like I've actually committed the acts I am accused of. And my kids will have to live with it. Their kids. Kids that I've met in hospitals. So the night before the trial in Virginia I didn't feel nervous. If you don't have to memories lines, if you're just speaking the truth? Roll the dice." Heard won $2 million in damages from her countersuit over Depp's lawyer calling her claims a hoax. In December 2022, the former couple agreed to a settlement in the defamation case, with Heard paying Depp $1 million that he pledged to charity. The "Pirates of the Caribbean" alum also reflected on the professional fallout from the trial, including testimony from his former agent Tracey Jacobs. According to The Hollywood Reporter and Variety, Jacobs testified that Depp's industry status was being increasingly undermined by his "unprofessional" on-set behavior, which allegedly included frequent tardiness. "There are people, and I'm thinking of three, who did me dirty. Those people were at my kids' parties. Throwing them in the air," Depp said. "And, look, I understand people who could not stand up (for me) because the most frightening thing to them was making the right choice. I was pre-MeToo. I was like a crash test dummy for MeToo. It was before Harvey Weinstein." 10 bingeable memoirs to check out: Celebrities tell all about aging, marriage and Beyoncé The legal troubles of disgraced movie mogul Harvey Weinstein, who was indicted in May 2018 on charges of five sex crimes, are widely regarded as the tipping point for the #MeToo movement's impact on Hollywood. Weinstein was convicted on June 11 of a first-degree criminal sexual act in the retrial of his 2020 conviction on sexual assault and rape charges. Following the conclusion of his trial with Heard, Depp resumed his entertainment career with a starring role in 2023's "Jeanne du Barry," and directed the 2024 period drama "Modi: Three Days on the Wing of Madness." "Honestly? I didn't go anywhere," said Depp of his showbiz reemergence. "If I actually had the chance to split, I would never come back." Contributing: KiMi Robinson, USA TODAY

Sky Zone opening in Bergen Beach in Brooklyn
Sky Zone opening in Bergen Beach in Brooklyn

New York Post

time6 hours ago

  • New York Post

Sky Zone opening in Bergen Beach in Brooklyn

We've reported some happy-times leases, but this might be our favorite. Sky Zone, a national chain of indoor active-entertainment facilities aimed at children, will soon bring its brand of 'fantastic spots for young explorers' to an industrial warehouse in Brooklyn. Sky Zone signed a lease for a 52,100 square-foot 'trampoline park' at 2350 East 69th Street in Bergen Beach, on East Mill Basin across the waterway from the Mill Basin neighborhood. It will replace Match Point NYC when its lease imminently expires. Sky Zone will soon open a location at an industrial warehouse in Brooklyn. Sky Zone In addition to trampolines and jumping facilities, Sky Zone offers attractions such as Ultimate Dodgeball, SkySlam, and Warrior courses, with a different mix of features at each location. Ryan Nelson, managing principal of landlord Turnbridge Equities, said, 'We continue to see tremendous demand from traditional warehouse and distribution users as well as from different sectors of New York City's diversified economy that require warehouse use.' The new Sky Zone will occupy two attached, low-slung warehouse buildings. Other nearby Sky Zones are in Queens, Yonkers, and New Rochelle. 2350 E. 69th St. in Bergen Beach section of Brooklyn. Turnbridge Equities 'Sky Zone will offer top-notch children's entertainment for thousands of Brooklyn families and for non-Brooklyn visitors,' Nelson said. Turnbridge owns eight industrial properties in the metro area.

This TikTok-famous retro pink toothpaste is 15% off ahead of Prime Day
This TikTok-famous retro pink toothpaste is 15% off ahead of Prime Day

Indianapolis Star

time18 hours ago

  • Indianapolis Star

This TikTok-famous retro pink toothpaste is 15% off ahead of Prime Day

If you've ever scrolled through TikTok lately, chances are you've seen the iconic pink tube of Euthymol Whitening Toothpaste. With its vintage-inspired packaging, bold minty flavor and cult following, this British-born toothpaste is making waves stateside. Right now, you can grab the Euthymol Pink Whitening Toothpaste for up to 15% off on Amazon as part of the retailer's early Prime Day deals. Whether you're restocking your bathroom cabinet or want to try a new whitening toothpaste for summer 2025, this is the perfect opportunity to upgrade your oral care routine on a budget. Euthymol isn't your average toothpaste. With a unique pink shade, it is immediately a more playful and fun toothpaste. But, it is backed by very serious results like offering visibly brighter teeth and fresher breath. Here are some highlights: Plus, it comes in a recyclable aluminum tube that is a great perk for eco-conscious shoppers. With over 120 years of oral care heritage, Euthymol has earned a loyal fanbase for its no-nonsense formula and retro charm. It's especially loved by those with sensitive gums, thanks to its gentle yet effective ingredients. Save up to 15% at Amazon

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store