Dan Mintz is a Director, Executive Producer, Editor and Cinematography American born on 1 april 1981 at Anchorage (USA)
Dan Mintz
Dan Mintz participated to
6 films (as actor, director or script writer).
Among those,
2 have good markets following the box office.
Here are the best films classified by number of entries :
Producer
, 2h10
Directed by Shane BlackOrigin USAGenres Science fiction,
Thriller,
Fantastic,
Action,
AdventureThemes Christmas films,
Films about terrorism,
Superhero films,
Political films,
Super-héros inspiré de comics,
Children's filmsActors Robert Downey Jr.,
Gwyneth Paltrow,
Don Cheadle,
Guy Pearce,
Rebecca Hall,
Stephanie SzostakRoles Executive Producer
Rating70%
Tony Stark recalls a New Years Eve party in 1999 where he meets scientist Maya Hansen, the inventor of Extremis, an experimental regenerative treatment intended to allow recovery from crippling injuries. Disabled scientist Aldrich Killian offers them a place in his company Advanced Idea Mechanics, but Stark rejects the offer, humiliating Killian. , 1h58
Directed by Rian JohnsonOrigin USAGenres Science fiction,
Thriller,
ActionThemes Films about suicide,
Time travel films,
Films set in the future,
Political films,
Dystopian filmsActors Joseph Gordon-Levitt,
Bruce Willis,
Emily Blunt,
Paul Dano,
Noah Segan,
Piper PeraboRoles Executive Producer
Rating73%
In 2044, 25-year-old Joe works for a Kansas City crime syndicate as a "looper." Since technology in the future has made it almost impossible to successfully dispose of murdered bodies, the syndicates use time travel which was invented in 2074 and subsequently outlawed. Managed by a man sent from the future named Abe, loopers kill and dispose of victims sent back in time whose faces are hidden by a bag. They are paid with bars of silver strapped to the target. To prevent connections to the use of illegal time travel, when a looper is retired, his future self is sent back to 2044 as a target for his younger self, but with gold bars as a payment. This event is referred to as "closing the loop" and signals the end of a looper's contract. Failing to close the loop is punishable by execution.