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Ilya Naishuller

Ilya Naishuller
Naishuller at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2015
Born (1983-11-19) November 19, 1983 (age 41)
Occupations
  • Filmmaker
  • Musician
Years active2008–present
Notable work
Spouse
Darya Charusha
(m. 2010)
Musical career
GenresRock
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • Guitar

Ilya Viktorovich Naishuller (Russian: Илья Викторович Найшуллер; born November 19, 1983)[1] is a Russian film director and musician. He is known for directing the action films Hardcore Henry (2015) and Nobody (2021). He is also the founder of the film production company Versus Pictures and the indie rock band Biting Elbows.

Life

Naishuller was born in Moscow, the son of a surgeon mother and a businessman father of Jewish background.[2] From the ages of seven to fourteen he lived in London and attended a private school.[3][4]

He studied at the New York University Tisch School of the Arts and met several filmmakers that he would collaborate with later. Naishuller left school to pursue music. In 2008, he founded the rock band Biting Elbows as lead singer and guitarist. In 2011, he released the EP Dope Fiend Massacre and the debut album Biting Elbows.

In 2011, he directed and edited the music video for The Stampede, a song featured in Dope Fiend Massacre EP. The music video was shot entirely in POV, it also serves as inspiration and build-up for Bad Motherfucker, another music video for the hit single. It was released in 2013, quickly becoming a viral online hit, accumulating over 150 million views.[5] The video caught the attention of Hollywood agents and talents, notably by filmmaker Darren Aronofsky.[4]

In 2015 Naishuller directed the independent feature film Hardcore, later renamed Hardcore Henry. It stars Sharlto Copley, Danila Kozlovsky, Haley Bennett, and Tim Roth. It was produced by Timur Bekmambetov, Inga Vainshtein Smith, and Ekaterina Kononenko. It was filmed entirely in POV as well. Naishuller is credited as screenwriter, director, producer and acted as one of the people playing the titular character. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2015 and won the festival's People's Choice Award. It was released theatrically by STXfilms on April 8, 2016. It went on to gross $14.3 million USD, in the US.[6][7] Simultaneously, a comic book was released titled "Hardcore Akan #1", written by Naishuller, Brian Phillipson, and Will Stewart. It is a prequel to the film and provides the backstory for Akan, a villain in the film.[8]

In 2016, he directed the music video for False Alarm by The Weeknd, it stars Kristine Froseth and Damion Poitier, In 2017, he directed the music video for Kolshchik by Russian rock band Leningrad, it won the Berlin Music Video Awards in 2017, while taking the first place for the "Best Concept" category.[9] He has also directed 3 other music videos for the band, that being Voyage, Ju-Ju, and Tsoi.

In 2021, Naishuller directed Nobody, an American action film written by Derek Kolstad. It stars Bob Odenkirk, Connie Nielsen, Aleksei Serebryakov, RZA and Christopher Lloyd. It premiered as theaters in the United States were starting to reopen, following the initial COVID-19 outbreak. Nobody debuted at #1 at the US Box Office in its opening weekend.[10]

He directed Heads of State, written by Josh Applebaum, André Nemec, and Harrison Query. It stars Idris Elba, John Cena, and Priyanka Chopra. Heads of State is currently in the post-production process, it is set to release on an unknown date.

Filmography

Film

Year Title Director Writer Producer Notes
2015 Hardcore Henry Yes Yes Yes Also cinematographer and actor
2021 Nobody Yes No No Also actor
2025 Heads of State Yes No No Post-production

Other works

Year Title Notes
2016 The Medic A piece from Saatchi & Saatchi's 25x25 - a collection of 1 minute shorts directed by
the participants of the last 25 years of the New Director's Showcase
2018 I Am Losing Weight Producer
2020 The Marathon of Desires Producer and co-writer
2022 Young Man Producer
2023 Centaur

Music video

Year Artist Title Director Producer Ref.
2010 Biting Elbows Dope Fiend Massacre Yes No [11]
2011 The Stampede Yes No [12]
2012 Toothpick Yes No [13]
2013 Bad Motherfucker Yes No [14]
2016 The Weeknd False Alarm Yes No [15]
2017 Leningrad "Кольщик" (Kolshchik) Yes No [16]
"Вояж" (Voyage) Yes No
2018 "Жу-Жу" (Ju-Ju) Yes No
"Цой" (Tsoi) Yes No
"Золото" (Gold) No Yes
2019 Biting Elbows Heartache Yes Yes
Control Yes Yes
2021 Serj Tankian Elasticity No Yes
Biting Elbows Boy is Dead Yes Yes

References

  1. ^ Ilja Naischuller at kp.ru
  2. ^ Reddit: Ilya Naishuller Ask Me Anything www.reddit.com Published 2015. Accessed 2018.
  3. ^ Ilja Naischuller at kino-teatr.ua
  4. ^ a b Ilya Naishuller: Young Russian is the Next Quentin Tarantino at bigthink.com
  5. ^ Biting Elbows – ‘Bad Motherfucker’ Official Music Video at vimeo.com
  6. ^ Rapid Round: 'Hardcore Henry' Director Ilya Naishuller on First-Person Filmmaking, His Favorite Video Game at hollywoodreporter.com
  7. ^ "Hardcore Henry 2 Updates: Why The Sequel Hasn't Happened". ScreenRant. 2020-08-01. Retrieved 2021-09-13.
  8. ^ Phillipson, Brian; Naishuller, Ilya; Stewart, Will (2016-04-08). Hardcore Akan #1. Bliss On Tap Publishing. ISBN 978-1-68124-466-2.
  9. ^ "Berlin Music Video Awards Winners 2017". 23 May 2017.
  10. ^ "Bob Odenkirk's Action Flick 'Nobody' Debuts Atop Domestic Box Office With $6.7 Million As 'Godzilla vs. Kong' Roars Overseas With A $122 Million Bow". 28 March 2021.
  11. ^ bitingelbows (2010-12-05). "Biting Elbows - 'Dope Fiend Massacre' Official Music Video". YouTube. Retrieved 2019-01-13.
  12. ^ bitingelbows (2011-09-20). "Biting Elbows - The Stampede (Official Music Video)". YouTube. Retrieved 2019-01-13.
  13. ^ bitingelbows (2012-04-26). "Biting Elbows - "Toothpick" Official Music Video". YouTube. Retrieved 2019-01-13.
  14. ^ bitingelbows (2013-03-18). "Biting Elbows - 'Bad Motherfucker' Official Music Video". YouTube. Retrieved 2019-01-13.
  15. ^ The Weeknd (2016-10-13). "The Weeknd - False Alarm". YouTube. Retrieved 2019-01-13.
  16. ^ Leningrad (2017-02-14). "Ленинград — Кольщик". YouTube. Retrieved 2021-04-16.