John McKay

Personal Info

Known For

Directing

Known Credits

25

Gender

Male

Birthday

1965-01-15 (60 years old)

Place of Birth

Scotland, UK

John McKay

Biography

John McKay (born 1965) is a Scottish film and television director. His initial career was as a playwright, before he began his film career by directing the short films Doom and Gloom (1996) and Wet and Dry (1997).

McKay's short films brought him some notable early acclaim: Wet and Dry was nominated in the "Best Short Fiction" category at the Molodist International Film Festival in Kyiv in 1997, Doom and Gloom won a "Special Mention" in the "Youth on Youth Award" category at the 1998 Locarno International Film Festival, and the "Best European Short Film" prize at the 1999 Brussels International Film Festival.

After working on the television series Psychos for Kudos and Channel 4 in 1999, he directed his first full-length feature film, Crush, starring Andie MacDowell, Imelda Staunton, Anna Chancellor, and Kenny Doughty for which he also wrote the screenplay. Released in 2001, the film was originally to have been titled The Sad Fuckers Club, but this was changed after resistance from the producers and distributors and uneasiness on the part of test audiences. Crush met with a generally negative critical reaction, and a second feature that McKay had written and was planning to direct, the World War II-set Knickers, never saw production.

Following Crush McKay returned to television, in 2003 directing "The Miller's Tale" and "The Sea Captain's Tale" for BBC One's updated versions of Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, where the events of the stories were transposed to contemporary settings. "The Miller's Tale", which opened the series, proved to be a particular success, with an audience of 7.6 million viewers and a mixed but generally favourable critical reaction. In 2004 McKay returned to the cinema with his second full-length feature, directing Academy Award-winning screenwriter Julian Fellowes's adaptation of P. G. Wodehouse's novel Piccadilly Jim.

He continued to direct for television, in 2006 helming the third and fourth instalments of the time travel/police drama series Life on Mars. Life on Mars gained particular critical and popular acclaim, with reviewer Nancy Banks-Smith of The Guardian describing McKay's second episode, the series' fourth, as "an inspired take on the usual formula of Gruff Copper of the old school." Later that same year he directed the opening two episodes of the channel's new Robin Hood series.

In 2007 McKay directed Reichenbach Falls, a 75-minute one-off drama for digital television channel BBC Four, adapted by James Mavor from a short story by Ian Rankin. Another one-off drama for BBC Four, We'll Take Manhattan, about the relationship between model Jean Shrimpton and photographer David Bailey, was broadcast in January 2012. McKay both wrote and directed We'll Take Manhattan. His third full-length feature film, Not Another Happy Ending, from a script by David Solomons, was released in 2013.

Known For

Life on Mars
7.8%

Life on Mars

Jan 9, 2006

Shetland
7.5%

Shetland

Mar 10, 2013

Hustle
7.6%

Hustle

Feb 24, 2004

Not Another Happy Ending
5.9%

Not Another Happy Ending

Oct 11, 2013

Robin Hood
6.9%

Robin Hood

Oct 7, 2006

Crush
5.7%

Crush

Jun 7, 2002

Crush
5.7%

Crush

Jun 7, 2002

Lip Service
6.5%

Lip Service

Oct 12, 2010

We'll Take Manhattan
5.7%

We'll Take Manhattan

Jan 26, 2012

We'll Take Manhattan
5.7%

We'll Take Manhattan

Jan 26, 2012

We'll Take Manhattan
5.7%

We'll Take Manhattan

Jan 26, 2012

Piccadilly Jim
6.3%

Piccadilly Jim

Nov 1, 2004

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Directing

2019
The Demon Headmaster as Director
2017
Tina & Bobby as Director
2013
Not Another Happy Ending as Director
2013
Shetland as Director
2012
We'll Take Manhattan as Director
2010
Lip Service as Director
2007
Reichenbach Falls as Director
2006
Robin Hood as Director
2006
Life on Mars as Director
2005
A Waste of Shame: The Mystery of Shakespeare and His Sonnets as Director
2005
ShakespeaRe-Told as Director
2004
Piccadilly Jim as Director
2004
Hustle as Director
2003
Canterbury Tales as Director
2002
Crush as Director
1999
Psychos as Director
1997
Wet and Dry as Director
1983
The Lost Tribe as Assistant Director

Production

2024
The Primrose Railway Children as Producer
2023
Falling into Place as Co-Producer
2021
My Mum Tracy Beaker as Producer
2017
1745 as Producer
2012
We'll Take Manhattan as Executive Producer

Writing

2012
We'll Take Manhattan as Writer
2002
Crush as Writer
Movies
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John McKay