Jason Reitman is a Actor, Director, Scriptwriter and Producer Canadien born on 19 october 1977 at Montreal (Canada)
Jason Reitman
Jason Reitman participated to
25 films (as actor, director or script writer).
Among those,
4 have good markets following the box office.
Here are the best films classified by number of entries :
Producer
, 2h25
Directed by Michael Patrick KingOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Comedy,
Romantic comedy,
Romance,
Sex comedyThemes Feminist films,
La mode,
Films about sexuality,
Erotic films,
LGBT-related films,
Political films,
Buddy films,
LGBT-related films,
LGBT-related filmActors Kim Cattrall,
Kristin Davis,
Cynthia Nixon,
Sarah Jessica Parker,
Penélope Cruz,
Chris NothRoles Producer
Rating45%
The film begins with Carrie, Samantha, Charlotte, and Miranda meeting up with each other which turns into a flashback to how Carrie arrived in New York City in 1986, then met Charlotte one year later, Miranda in 1989. She also met Samantha, when she was bartender at a bar but she doesn't tell a year.Director
, 1h36
Directed by Jason ReitmanOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Comedy,
Comedy-drama,
RomanceThemes L'adolescence,
Films about adoption,
Films about children,
Films about families,
Pregnancy films,
Films about sexuality,
La sexualité des mineurs,
Children's filmsActors Ellen Page,
Michael Cera,
Jennifer Garner,
Jason Bateman,
Allison Janney,
J. K. SimmonsRating73%
Sixteen-year-old Minnesota high-schooler Juno MacGuff (Ellen Page) discovers she is pregnant with a child fathered by her friend and longtime admirer, Paulie Bleeker (Michael Cera). She initially considers an abortion. Going to a local clinic run by a women's group, she encounters outside a schoolmate who is holding a rather pathetic one-person pro-life vigil. Once inside, however, Juno is alienated by the clinic staff's authoritarian and bureaucratic attitudes. She is particularly offended by their calling her "sexually active", a term which she feels demeans the highly emotional event by which she became pregnant. All of this decides her against abortion, and she decides to give the baby up for adoption. With the help of her friend Leah (Olivia Thirlby), Juno searches the ads in the Pennysaver and finds a couple she feels will provide a suitable home. She tells her parents, Mac (J.K. Simmons) and stepmother, Bren (Allison Janney), who offer their support. With Mac, Juno meets the couple, Mark and Vanessa Loring (Jason Bateman and Jennifer Garner), in their expensive home and agrees to a closed adoption., 1h49
Directed by Jason ReitmanOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Comedy,
Comedy-drama,
RomanceThemes Transport films,
Films about the labor movement,
Aviation filmsActors George Clooney,
Vera Farmiga,
Anna Kendrick,
Jason Bateman,
Amy Morton,
Melanie LynskeyRating73%
Ryan Bingham (George Clooney) makes his living traveling to workplaces around the United States and breaking the news to workers that they have been let go for employers unwilling to do it themselves. Ryan also delivers motivational speeches, using the analogy "What's In Your Backpack?" to extoll the virtues of a life free of burdensome relationships with people as well as things. Ryan relishes his perpetual travels. His personal ambition is to become only the seventh person to earn ten million frequent flyer miles with American Airlines. While traveling, he meets another frequent flyer named Alex (Vera Farmiga) and they begin a casual relationship.Producer
, 1h46
Directed by Damien ChazelleOrigin USAGenres Drama,
MusicalThemes Films about education,
Films about music and musicians,
Jazz films,
Musical filmsActors Miles Teller,
Melissa Benoist Wood,
J. K. Simmons,
Austin Stowell,
Jayson Blair,
Kofi SiriboeRoles Executive Producer
Rating83%
Andrew Neiman is a first-year jazz student at the prestigious Shaffer Conservatory in New York. He has been playing drums from a young age and aspires to become one of the greats like Buddy Rich. Famed conductor Terence Fletcher discovers Andrew practicing in the music room late one night and eventually invites him into his studio band as the alternative for core drummer Carl Tanner. Fletcher is abusive toward his students, mocking and insulting them; when the band rehearses the Hank Levy piece "Whiplash" and Andrew struggles to keep his tempo, Fletcher hurls a chair at him, slaps him, and berates him in front of the class.