JAMES MORRISON
(Producer) grew up with a great interest in movies, attending local film schools in his home state of Arkansas as early as 12 years old.  He later attended Brooks Institute of Photography and Film in Ventura, CA before moving to New York, where he spent a year working with Vox 3 Films, an independent Manhattan-based production company headed by Andrew Fierberg and Steven Shainberg (Secretary).  He most recently helmed a behind the scenes documentary about the production of director Sally Potter's (Orlando, Yes) new film, and his latest directorial project STAY TRUE, DARLING is currently in pre-production.


JOSHUA GOOLSBY (Producer) is originally from Memphis, Tennessee, and he has been involved as a producer on Mark Thiedeman's prior short film "Swimsuit," as well as James Morrison's "In the Company of Strangers" and the upcoming STAY TRUE, DARLING.  His experiences in the film industry have led him to work with a variety of creative types, ranging from Craig Brewer (Hustle & Flow) to the local eccentrics at Troma Films.



ON SET PRODUCTION PHOTOS COMING SOON

THE SCOUNDREL is the result of a long awaited collaboration between Brooklyn filmmakers MARK THIEDEMAN and DAVID BONHOMME, and it was lovingly produced by JAMES MORRISON and JOSHUA GOOLSBY :


MARK THIEDEMAN (Writer / Director) was born in New Orleans and headed north to study film and television at a certain Name Brand University.  His most recent short film, "Swimsuit," screened in New York as part of NewFest 2008, and his writing has been published in the anthology "You Are Here, This Is Now: The Best Young Writers and Artists in America" (Scholastic).  THE SCOUNDREL is  his first feature film.


DAVID BONHOMME (Director of Photography) was raised in Tennessee and now resides in Brooklyn, NY.  He is the creative force behind two feature length films, MOUNTEBANK and REV TO BRAKE, both dealing with his own personal impressions, excavation, and representation.  In his words, he "seeks the root through technology, clutching the ragged dreams of an imagined persona and letting go.  Tally ho, wayward spirit," he says, "finding strength in remembrance shuttered and forgotten."