LB
Lawrence Bender

Lawrence Bender

Introduced to Tarantino by a mutual friend, Bender was impressed with the future director's writing and soon the two began working together on "Reservoir Dogs," their first feature. Through one of his acting coaches, Bender was able to get Harvey Keitel involved in the project. The esteemed actor's name gave them the clout to raise the budget to $1.5 million and bring in some fairly accomplished thespians. The film, about a bank robbery that goes awry, was criticized by some for its realistic usage of violence, but overall it was lauded as an impressive debut and established the careers of both Tarantino and Bender. The year 1994 proved a banner one for Bender. Besides producing Boaz Yakin's critically lauded "Fresh," about a ghetto youngster's struggle with his environment, and Roger Avary's gory and nihilistic "Killing Zoe," about a Paris bank heist, he re-teamed with Tarantino to make "Pulp Fiction," praised as the year's most innovative new film and winner of the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. A comic and sometimes violent drama inspired by the lurid crime fiction of the 1930s and 40s, the film featured an all-star ensemble cast and opened the 1994 New York Film Festival to rave reviews. The film revived John Travolta's status as a movie star, earned blockbuster receipts and copped a Best Original Screenplay Oscar for Tarantino and Avary. Bender was no less busy the following year as 1995 saw him producing "Four Rooms," a comedy-drama anthology showcasing segments helmed by Tarantino, Robert Rodriguez, Alison Anders and Alexandre Rockwell; "From Dusk Till Dawn" (1996), a Tarantino-scripted, Rodriguez-directed vampire actioner that starred George Clooney, Tarantino and Harvey Keitel and spawned two lesser, barely related sequals; and "White Man's Burden." The latter was a risky, uneven and (perhaps too) subtly satirical drama starring Travolta as a disenfranchised white working stiff at odds with a society dominated by African-Americans. The film marked the return of Harry Belafonte to screen acting after a two decades-plus hiatus. Bender reteamed with Tarantino for "Jackie Brown," adapted from an Elmore Leonard novel, and also produced "Good Will Hunting" (both 1997), about an underachieving working-class janitor with a photographic memory and a gift for mathematics. Bender would continue to develop his own A-list features--including writer-director Boaz Yakin's "A Price Above Rubies" (1998), "Anna and the King" (1999) and the underwhelming Brad Pitt-Julia Roberts vehicle "The Mexican," among others--and await the next flash of brillaince from Tarantino, which finally came when they co-produced the long-awaited "Kill Bill, Vol. 1" (2003) and "Kill Bill, Vol. 2" (2004).
WIKIPEDIA

Producer

Movies