Scooter McCrae is an American director known for Shatter Dead and Sixteen Tongues.
Scooter McCrae | |
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Born | |
Occupation(s) | film director, film editor |
Years active | 1994–present |
Known for | No budget films |
Notable work | Shatter Dead, Sixteen Tongues |
McCrae was born in Brooklyn, New York and spent most of his formative years in Middletown, New York. As a kid, he made Super 8 films and was a fan of science fiction. He attended SUNY Purchase after being turned down for NYU, which he said was fortuitous. With the money saved from his tuition at a state college, he was able to finance his early films.[1]
McCrae says that he enjoys working with low-budget films, as the details in which he is interested are more suitable for those kinds of films.[2] His first work was with Frank Henenlotter, whom he cited as a mentor. McCrae worked as a production assistant on Frankenhooker and Basket Case 2.[3] McCrae's directorial debut was Shatter Dead, a zombie film. He was inspired to make his own film after watching low-budget films with his friends, after which he thought to himself that he could make a better film than the ones he was renting from the video store.[4] The film received a positive review by Joe Bob Briggs.[5] His second feature was Sixteen Tongues, a film that writer Mike Watt described as "Blade Runner meets Salo".[6] Watt wrote that a major studio would never make the film, as it explores themes that are totally alien outside of independent filmmaking.[6] He later worked again with Henenlotter as an editor on Bad Biology.[3]