Jon Jones is a Welsh film and television writer and director working primarily in the United Kingdom and the United States. He has directed numerous dramas for British and American television including the award-winning When I'm Sixty-Four (Prix Europa - Best TV Film), The Diary of Anne Frank, Blood Strangers, The Alan Clark Diaries (Director's Guild of Great Britain Best Director), A Very Social Secretary (Broadcast Press Award - Best Film), Northanger Abbey, Zen, Mr Selfridge and Going Postal.
Jon Jones | |
---|---|
Born | Carmarthen, Carmarthenshire, Wales |
Nationality | Welsh |
Occupation(s) | Director, writer |
Children | 3 |
Website | http://lastsummerfilm.com/ |
Most recent projects are Lawless for Sky, American Odyssey and Heroes Reborn for NBCUniversal, Legends for Fox21 and Hanna for Amazon Studios.
In 2019 the feature film Last Summer, directed and written by Jon Jones, won the BAFTA Cymru for best feature film.
Career
editJonathan Rhys Jones first worked in the film and television industry as a carpenter, building sets for advertisements and pop promos. From there he worked his way up the art department in a variety of roles, finishing up as an art director working on a number of BBC dramas and the feature film The Young Americans, before returning to study direction at the National Film and Television School, Beaconsfield. Upon leaving three years later, his first directing jobs were Edith's Finger, which won the BAFTA Cymru for Best Short Film, and the ITV series Cold Feet,[1] in 2000, with his three episodes receiving an average of 9 million viewers.
He went on to direct the ITV crime drama Blood Strangers. The series was nominated for a Prix Italia television award in 2002. He went on to direct The Debt, a two-part British television crime drama film starring Warren Clarke, and Martin Freeman; When I'm Sixty Four, which won the Prix Europa in 2005 for Best Television Film, and The Alan Clark Diaries. The Alan Clark Diaries led to work on A Very Social Secretary, which was the launch film of the new UK channel More4. It won the Broadcast Press Award that year.
During 2005 Jones also directed Archangel, a Soviet thriller starring Daniel Craig. In 2006, he worked on The Secret Life of Mrs Beeton followed by Northanger Abbey in 2007.[2]
His next direction job was The Diary of Anne Frank, which was the first production since 1959 to be given permission by the Anne Frank Fonds to use the words of Anne Frank's diary. It was made in collaboration with the Anne Frank House. He went on to direct Terry Pratchett's Going Postal in 2010, followed by Zen, with each episode reaching over 5 million viewers.
In 2012, he directed Julian Fellowes' Titanic, which won a BAFTA for best visual effects in 2013. That year, Jones directed Mr Selfridge, for ITV, Da Vinci's Demons, which won a Primetime Emmy Award, and Lawless - a legal drama screened as part of Sky's "Drama Matters", starring Suranne Jones and Lindsay Duncan. After directing ITV's The Great Fire, in 2014, he went on to direct American Odyssey for NBCUniversal, starring Anna Friel and Peter Facinelli; Legends for Fox21 and TNT with Sean Bean; Heroes Reborn for NBCUniversal and more recently Still Star Crossed for ABC and Shondaland; and Ransom.
Last Summer was released in 2019 and was his first independently written and directed project, a coming-of-age drama set in 1970s rural Wales, praised by critics at film festivals including the Austin Film Festival and the Vancouver International Film Festival.[3] Wales Arts Review wrote that it has "an execrable script, a confused impetus, dodgy character motivations, and a standard of cinematic conception that would get you a middling grade at a half-decent film school – it’s what #TeamWales expects. But what we cannot do is ignore the misogyny of a film that has been written, produced, developed and premiered during the most radically political era of modern filmmaking. Last Summer makes Wales look bad. It makes Welsh cinema look bad".[4] On 13 October 2019 Last Summer won Best Feature Film at the BAFTA Cymru Awards 2019.[5]
Jones directed his most recent work in 2019, Hanna, starring Mireille Enos and Joel Kinnaman for Amazon Studios.
Filmography
edit- Greek Lover (1999) - writer and director
- Edith's Finger (2000) - director
- Cold Feet (2000) - director
- Blood Strangers (2002) - director
- The Debt (2003) - director
- When I'm Sixty-Four (2004) - director
- The Alan Clark Diaries (2004) - writer and director
- Archangel (2005) - director
- A Very Social Secretary (2005) - director
- The Secret Life of Mrs Beeton (2006) - director
- Northanger Abbey (2007) - director[6]
- The Diary of Anne Frank (2009) - director
- Going Postal (2010) - director
- Zen (2011) - director
- Titanic (2012) - director
- Mr Selfridge (2013) - director
- Rogue (2013) - director
- Lawless (2013) - director
- Da Vinci's Demons (2014) - director
- The Great Fire (2014) - director
- American Odyssey (2015) - director
- Legends (2015) - director
- Heroes Reborn (2016) - director
- Ransom (2017) - director
- Still Star-Crossed (2017) - director
- Last Summer (2018) - writer, producer, director
- Hanna (2019) - director
Awards
edit- BAFTA Cymru - Best Short Film (1999) For Edith's Finger
- Director's Guild of Great Britain - Outstanding Directorial Achievement in 30-Minute Television (2004) For The Alan Clark Diaries
- Broadcasting Press Guild Award - Best Single Drama (2005) For A Very Social Secretary
- BAFTA Cymru - Best Feature Film (2019) For Last Summer
References
edit- ^ "Craft Nominations 2000". British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Archived from the original on 13 May 2008. Retrieved 27 April 2008.
- ^ Buxton, Martin (1 July 2008). "McKellen numbered in Prisoner cast". C21 Media. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 30 July 2008.
- ^ "LAST SUMMER – JON JONES INTERVIEW". Buzz. 14 June 2019. Retrieved 25 January 2024.
- ^ Raymond, Gary (13 June 2019). "Last Summer - Welsh Cinema - Jon Jones". Wales Arts Review. Retrieved 25 January 2024.
- ^ "Winners announced for 2019 British Academy Cymru Awards". BAFTA. 13 October 2019. Retrieved 25 January 2024.
Welsh film was well-represented this year with the Feature/TV Film Award going to Last Summer
- ^ Roberts, J. (2009). Encyclopedia of Television Film Directors. Scarecrow Press. p. 718. ISBN 978-0-8108-6378-1. Retrieved 25 January 2024.
External links
edit- Jon Jones at the British Film Institute
- Jon Jones at IMDb