James Routh is a director and producer, known for Formula 1: Drive to Survive (2019), Endurance (2020) and Cutting Edge (1990).
James Rowe first walked onto a film set at 18, as a British Red Coat in the epic adaptation of The Last of the Mohicans (1992), shooting outside his hometown of Asheville, NC. That fall he entered UNC-Chapel Hill where he would write and direct the jazz-inspired short film Sax Man. The short was purchased by PBS for their Southern Visions series and James was invited to join the American Film Institute as a Directing fellow. While at AFI, he set up his first feature screenplay. The resulting film, Blue Ridge Fall (1999) - starring Peter Facinelli, Chris Isaak and Academy Award nominee Amy Irving - was directed by James and released by HBO. It played the Los Angeles Film Festival, Austin Film Festival and Cine de Mar del Plata, Argentina, among others, and was given prominent placement on the Blockbuster Entertainment Awards show (which, yes, was a thing). "A taut drama," proclaimed Film Threat, "extolling the bonds of friendship as well as the fragility and vulnerability of futures we wrongly assume are set in stone." He later wrote the screenplay (writing as Samuel Tilsen) for the internationally acclaimed film Ijé: The Journey (2010), starring African movie icon Genevieve Nnaji. Ijé won the Melvin van Peebles Award for best feature at the San Francisco Black Film Festival. After teaching directing and screenwriting at the Colorado Film School, CU Denver and the New York Film Academy, and leading workshops for filmmakers around the world, James is stepping back behind the camera in 2021 to direct the thriller Breakwater (2023) from his own script.
James Rowlands is an actor, known for Off-Piste (2016).
James Russell was born September 3, 1983 in Aberdeen Scotland. He is an American-Irish actor best known for his role of Brahms Heelshire in The Boy (2016). James studied acting at The University of North Carolina School of the Arts and is a Graduate of Rutgers Acting Conservatory. He lives in Brooklyn New York.
Elijah James Russell was born in San Jose, Costa Rica and spent his childhood in Potlatch, Idaho. During his teens he relocated to Denver, Colorado where he graduated from the Colorado Film School with an Associate's in Acting for the Screen. Over the years he's built up a solid resume and skill set. Most recently he's completed filming of the feature film, "476 A.D." and been cast in, "Red," with more roles to follow.
A Manhattan-born "tough guy" character lead and support, James (Vincent) Russo was born in New York City on April 23, 1953, to an Italian father and German mother. Raised in Flushing, New York, he graduated from the High School of Art and Design. He attended New York University where he wrote and starred in a prize-winning short film, "The Candy Store." Developing an interest in acting, he drove a cab and worked as a construction worker and gravedigger while pursuing acting jobs. Making his on-camera debut in the TV movie Chicago Story (1981), James' first film was in the thriller A Stranger Is Watching (1982). His first break came as a convenience store robber in Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982). It helped to give him the lead role in the highly obscure, low-budgeted noir-ish thriller Vortex (1982). Possessed with a stare that could easily bring shivers down one's back, Russo would become an accessible villain over the years, memorably portraying a number of secondary psychopaths and gangsters, among other urban lowlifes, in such 80's films as Once Upon a Time in America (1984), The Cotton Club (1984), Beverly Hills Cop (1984) and The Blue Iguana (1988). Surprisingly, Russo is not a name or commodity, yet an intense and dependable "tough guy" performer he has proven to be. One only needs to be reminded of his sadistic sexual animal role in "Extremities" on stage (in which he won a 1983 Theatre World) and in the film version Extremities (1986) (in which he terrorized poor Farrah Fawcett), to recall how chillingly effective he could be. Other potent roles in films include We're No Angels (1989), My Own Private Idaho (1991), Illicit Behavior (1992), Da Vinci's War (1993), Condition Red (1995), Kevin Costner's The Postman (1997), No Way Home (1996), Donnie Brasco (1997) and Open Range (2003). Russo appeared opposite Johnny Depp in Roman Polanski's The Ninth Gate (1999). On stage, James has to his credit, powerful roles in "Welcome to Andromeda," "Deathwatch" and "Marat/Sade." On TV he appeared as a guest on such crime series as "The Equalizer," "Miami Vice," "Crime Story," "Gabriel's Fire" and "Dellaventura." His looks hardening into the millennium, the veteran "bad guy" offered a penetrating cameo as Frank Sinatra in Stealing Sinatra (2003) and Rocky Graziano in The Bronx Bull (2016), plus rare-anti-hero parts in The Box (2003), which he also wrote, and Dreams and Shadows (2009). Back in "bad guy" form, Russo offered manly malice and menace in such low-budget indies as Pendulum (2001), Kings of the Evening (2008), The House Next Door (2002), The Hit (2007), Dark World (2008), Django Unchained (2012), Samuel Bleak (2013) and Badland (2019). He is divorced and has two children.
James Rutledge is an actor, known for Fair Game (2010), Month to Month (2011) and Gotham (2014).
James Ryan originally burst onto the movie scene as a sinewy and lean martial arts hero via two low budget South African financed martial arts movies titled Kill or Be Killed (1976), and the sequel Kill and Kill Again (1981). Both films were rather shoddy, mechanical productions...however, the acrobatic Ryan had a certain appeal and the movies were loaded with plenty of kicks and punches, plus they featured 8th Dan Shotokan karate expert Stan Schmidt and fellow South African 8th Dan Judo / karate exponent Norman Robinson .....both members of the South African Martial Arts Hall of Fame.
James Ryan, ACE, is a Film Editor known for Puss in Boots The Last Wish (2022) and The Croods: A New Age (2020). Originally from Chicago, James attended the University of Southern California School of Cinema-Television. He is a member of American Cinema Editors, The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, Motion Picture Editors Guild, Screen Actors Guild, and Directors Guild of America.
James Ryan Babson, Born in Upstate New York, started his acting career when he moved to Europe in 2013. Since then he has been a main actor in 1 feature length film, multiple music videos and a Techno vocalist and lyricist, with 4 produced songs and more projects to come. An aspiring actor, musician and writer; James Ryan is an all around talent that can be expected to make his presence known.