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Adam Goldworm
Adam Goldworm
from Wikipedia

Adam Goldworm (born April 1, 1978) is a literary and talent manager at Aperture Entertainment, a boutique management/production company that he founded in March 2009.

Biography

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Adam Goldworm is a film/TV/Theater producer.

His company Aperture Entertainment produced several films including Summit Entertainment's horror action film The Last Witch Hunter starring Vin Diesel, Michael Caine, Rose Leslie and Elijah Wood with Breck Eisner (The Crazies) directing a script written by Cory Goodman,[1] Vice written by his clients Jeremy Passmore & Andre Fabrizio and starring Bruce Willis, and The Prince also written by Passmore & Fabrizio and starring Bruce Willis, Jason Patric, John Cusack, 50 Cent and his client Jessica Lowndes. Goldworm is also producing Warner Bros.'s supernatural action film Lore written by his clients Cory Goodman & Jeremy Lott based on Ashley Wood's IDW graphic novel Lore starring Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson and directed by Men in Black's Barry Sonnenfeld, MGM's remake of David Cronenberg's body horror classic The Brood[2] and a new untitled thriller for Dimension that centers around the horrors of social networking.

Goldworm is also currently[when?] producing Nemesis: The Final Case of Elliot Ness, an 8-part miniseries written by his client Ben Brand based on the novel by William Bernhardt, Haunted at ABC with Jon Turteltaub (National Treasure) directing and the comedy series Saint James St. James Presents Delirium Cinema at IFC. Goldworm has also developed and produced several film projects including Simon Rumley's Red White & Blue, Luckytown starring Kirsten Dunst and James Caan and the low-budget zombie film Automaton Transfusion.

Goldworm reteamed with his former Masters of Horror crony Stuart Gordon to produce a horror stage play entitled Taste,[3] Written by Aperture Entertainment client Benjamin Brand, Taste is based on the true story of Armin Meiwes, aka the Rotenburg Cannibal, a German who achieved international notoriety for killing and eating a voluntary victim whom he had found via the Internet. The play premiered in Los Angeles on April 11, 2014. The initial production was nominated for numerous awards by all of LA's most prestigious critical associations. The play is currently gearing up for its Chicago premiere in Spring 2016.

Goldworm spent five years at Industry Entertainment, ultimately serving as Executive Vice President, Television[4] and playing an instrumental role in creating and overseeing the company's independent television division. Goldworm produced several high-profile television anthology series including Showtime's Masters of Horror, ABC's Masters of Science Fiction and NBC's summer series Fear Itself and developed a crime anthology with Chris McQuarrie and a 2012 miniseries with Bryan Singer and Michael Petroni for SyFy. Goldworm also oversaw the creation of the two Masters of Horror soundtracks released by Immortal Records and Downtown Records in addition to the IDW Publishing comic book line.

At the age of 31, Goldworm was one of the 35 executives under the age of 35 selected for The Hollywood Reporter's Next Generation 2008.[5]

Goldworm was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He grew up in Cherry Hill, New Jersey and graduated from Cherry Hill High School East. He graduated cum laude from UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television in 1998 and received an MBA from UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business in 2003. While at UC Berkeley, Goldworm taught Film to undergraduates. Goldworm has written several news stories for Variety and Daily Variety where he started as an intern compiling charts focusing on the use of music in the film industry and writing obituaries.

Partial filmography as producer

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Adam Goldworm is an American film and television producer and talent manager known for founding Aperture Entertainment in 2009 and producing genre anthology series including Masters of Horror for Showtime, Masters of Science Fiction for ABC, and Fear Itself for NBC. He has also produced feature films such as My Friend Dahmer, The Last Witch Hunter, and Satanic Panic. Goldworm grew up in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, and pursued his ambitions in Hollywood after attending UCLA's School of Film and Television and later earning an MBA from UC Berkeley. He joined Industry Entertainment, where he advanced to Executive Vice President of Television over five years, managing talent and overseeing the company's independent television division. In 2008, he was recognized on The Hollywood Reporter's Next Generation list of top executives under 35. Through Aperture Entertainment, he has continued to develop and produce projects across film, television, and theater, collaborating with notable talents and focusing on bold, boundary-pushing stories.

Early life and education

Early life

Adam Goldworm was born on April 1, 1978, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. He grew up in Cherry Hill, New Jersey.

Education

Adam Goldworm studied film at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television. He subsequently attended the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business, receiving his MBA in 2003.

Career

Early career

Adam Goldworm began his professional involvement in the entertainment industry after attending UCLA, producing the independent feature film Luckytown (2000) as an executive producer. The project starred Kirsten Dunst and James Caan and was a commercial failure. Following this experience, Goldworm pursued an MBA at the UC Berkeley Haas School of Business and supported himself by writing articles for Variety and Daily Variety. These early roles in independent film production and trade publication writing established his foundational knowledge of the industry before transitioning to executive positions.

Industry Entertainment

Adam Goldworm spent five years at Industry Entertainment, starting in an entry-level role answering phones before rising to Executive Vice President of Television. In this capacity, he oversaw television development and production while managing relationships with writers, directors, and actors. Key productions under his leadership included executive producing the horror anthology series Masters of Horror on Showtime (2005–2006), Masters of Science Fiction on ABC (2007), and Fear Itself on NBC (2008). Fear Itself represented the inaugural project from Industry Entertainment's independent television division. He also produced the low-budget zombie film Automaton Transfusion in 2006.

Aperture Entertainment

Aperture Entertainment is a boutique management and production company founded by Adam Goldworm in March 2009. The company specializes in literary and talent representation, story development, and production, with a particular emphasis on representing filmmakers and novelists while excelling in transmedia genre storytelling and adaptations of genre books and graphic novels. Goldworm serves as the company's principal and literary/talent manager, guiding its operations with a focus on cultivating stories from fearless voices and pursuing boundary-pushing narratives. In recent years, the company has continued to build its roster and development pipeline. In 2024, the company signed the Missouri-based filmmaking duo Kyle McConaghy and Joe DeBoer, known for their work in horror and thriller genres. Among its ongoing development projects are the feature adaptation of Grady Hendrix's short story "The Blanks" at Netflix, produced in partnership with 21 Laps Entertainment, and the film adaptation of Hendrix's novella BadAsstronauts at Paramount. These efforts reflect the company's ongoing commitment to innovative genre-driven content through its dual role in management and production.

Notable productions

Television productions

Adam Goldworm was a producer on several horror and science fiction anthology television series during the mid-2000s as part of his role at Industry Entertainment. He served as producer on Masters of Horror, an anthology series that aired on Showtime from 2005 to 2006. The show featured standalone episodes directed by renowned horror directors including John Carpenter, Dario Argento, and Tobe Hooper. Goldworm also produced Masters of Science Fiction, which broadcast on ABC in 2007. The series presented adaptations of classic science fiction stories and included narration by Stephen Hawking. In 2008, he produced Fear Itself, another horror anthology series that aired on NBC. The program featured episodes from directors such as Stuart Gordon, Brad Anderson, and John Landis. These projects represented Goldworm's primary contributions to television, centered on genre anthology formats. His television work largely concluded around this period as he shifted focus to feature film production after establishing Aperture Entertainment in 2009.

Feature films

Adam Goldworm has produced and executive produced a variety of independent feature films, particularly in horror, thriller, and genre categories, many through his company Aperture Entertainment. His early credits include executive producing the drama Luckytown (2001), the horror film Automaton Transfusion (2006), the thriller Red White & Blue (2010), and the holiday horror remake Silent Night (2012). During the mid-2010s, Goldworm served as producer or executive producer on several action-oriented features, including The Prince (2014), Vice (2015), The Last Witch Hunter (2015) starring Vin Diesel, Heist (2015), and Extraction (2015). His later work features more critically noted projects, such as the biographical drama My Friend Dahmer (2017), the horror-comedy Satanic Panic (2019), the dramedy Best Sellers (2021) starring Michael Caine and Aubrey Plaza, the horror film Monstrous (2022) with Christina Ricci, and the thriller Dead Mail (2024), which holds a 93% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Goldworm has additional feature films in development or upcoming, including The Swallow, Pandemonium, and The Blanks.

Recognition

Awards and honors

Adam Goldworm was included in The Hollywood Reporter's "Next Generation" list in 2008, which recognized 35 emerging entertainment executives under the age of 35 across the industry. This honor specifically highlighted his work in television development and production during his tenure at Industry Entertainment, where he contributed to various projects as an executive. The annual list celebrates promising young leaders poised to shape the future of Hollywood, and Goldworm's selection reflected his early career momentum in the field. No other major personal industry awards or honors have been documented for Goldworm beyond this recognition.
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