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Benjamin Dickinson
Benjamin Dickinson
from Wikipedia

Benjamin Gerrish Dickinson is an American film director, screenwriter, and actor.

Key Information

Career

[edit]

Dickinson started as a music video director, a member of Waverly Films collective. He was shooting for LCD Soundsystem, Q-Tip, Reggie Watts, Killer Mike, and Yoko Ono.[1][2] His debut feature, First Winter, was released in 2012.[3][4]

In 2015 he directed a VR short Waves, screened at Sundance to a positive response from audience.[5][6][7]

His second feature, brought him a Special Jury Prize at the 2015 SXSW Film Festival. The sci-fi movie shot in BW was praised by critics for strong visuals.[1][8][9][10]

Filmography

[edit]
  • 2021 – White devil (short);
  • 2015 – Creative Control;[11]
  • 2014 – Super Sleuths (short);[12]
  • 2012 – First winter;
  • 2008 – The Scariest Show on Television (TV movie).

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Benjamin Dickinson is an American film director, screenwriter, and actor known for his independent features First Winter (2012) and Creative Control (2015), the latter a science fiction film exploring themes of technology, relationships, and society. He has also directed acclaimed music videos for artists including LCD Soundsystem, The Rapture, and Reggie Watts, establishing an early reputation for inventive visual storytelling. Born in Santa Monica, California, and raised in Wheaton, Illinois, Dickinson attended New York University before building his career in New York City. He co-founded the production company Waverly Films with fellow filmmakers and initially focused on music videos for labels such as DFA Records and artists like Fatboy Slim and Juan MacLean. His feature debut First Winter (2012) and follow-up Creative Control (2015) marked his transition to narrative filmmaking, with the latter incorporating augmented reality and speculative elements to examine modern life. Dickinson's work often reflects influences from science fiction authors like Ursula K. Le Guin and addresses contemporary issues through low-budget, limitation-driven production approaches. More recent projects include the short White Devil (2021), co-directed with Mariama Diallo.

Early life

Early years

Benjamin Dickinson was born Benjamin Gerrish Dickinson on November 13, 1981, in Santa Monica, California, USA. He was raised in Wheaton, Illinois. He has occasionally been credited as Ben Dickinson, particularly in his early professional work. He later moved to New York to attend New York University.

Career

Early shorts and music videos

Benjamin Dickinson began his filmmaking career in the mid-2000s with short films and music videos, initially establishing himself through student and independent projects. His debut short film, Tenderfoot (2004), marked his entry as a director and writer, for which he also wrote the screenplay. He soon pursued music videos as a parallel creative track, directing for artists affiliated with DFA Records. In 2007, Dickinson directed the music video for LCD Soundsystem's "North American Scum," blending sci-fi imagery with the band's aesthetic. In 2008, he directed the music video for Q-Tip's "Gettin' Up" and the TV movie The Scariest Show on Television. That same year, he appeared as an actor in the role of Richards in I Can See You. By 2010, Dickinson wrote, directed, and starred as Michael in the short film We're Glad You're Here. These early efforts highlighted his versatility across directing, writing, and acting while building experience in the music video format with influential artists. This foundational period of shorts and music videos laid the groundwork for his eventual shift to feature directing with First Winter in 2012.

First Winter

Benjamin Dickinson made his feature directorial debut with First Winter in 2012, serving as the film's writer, director, producer, and lead actor in the role of Thomas. This project marked his transition from creating short films and music videos to longer-form narrative filmmaking, allowing him to exercise creative control across multiple key positions on an independent production. The film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2012, where it was showcased as part of the festival's lineup of emerging independent works. Dickinson's multifaceted involvement in First Winter highlighted his approach to low-budget, character-driven storytelling in the indie space, building on his prior experience while establishing his voice as an auteur capable of self-contained production. He later followed this debut with his second feature, Creative Control, in 2015.

Creative Control

Creative Control is a 2015 American science fiction drama film directed and co-written by Benjamin Dickinson, who also stars in the lead role as David. The film premiered in competition at the South by Southwest Film Festival in March 2015, marking Dickinson's second feature following his 2012 debut First Winter. Set in a near-future New York, the story follows David, an overworked advertising executive tasked with promoting a new augmented reality glasses system. Dissatisfied in his relationship with yoga instructor Juliette, he becomes fixated on his best friend's girlfriend Sophie and uses the technology to create a lifelike avatar of her, initiating a virtual affair that increasingly blurs the lines between fantasy and reality. The narrative explores themes of technological alienation, the anxiety of hyper-connectivity, and the seductive yet destructive influence of augmented reality on personal relationships and identity. Shot in high-contrast black-and-white cinematography with occasional color accents for tech elements, the film adopts a contemplative tone with a zigzagging structure, dry humor, and stylistic nods to directors like Michelangelo Antonioni. Variety praised it as "coolly impressive" and "genuinely fresh," noting its moody, offbeat indie sensibility and potential to find an audience with critical support. IndieWire described it as "a fresh and exciting sci-fi cautionary tale" that sharply illustrates the power and extremes of groundbreaking technology.

Later projects

Following the release of his second feature film Creative Control in 2015, Benjamin Dickinson's directing work shifted toward shorter formats, including music and performance pieces, virtual reality shorts, advertising projects, and comedy specials, with no subsequent feature-length narratives. In 2016, he directed the virtual reality short Waves, a subversive comedy featuring Reggie Watts in a dream-within-a-dream meta-narrative that drew positive audience response at Sundance's New Frontier program. That same year, Dickinson contributed directing to segments of 10 Crosby, a series of interconnected short films produced for Derek Lam's fragrance campaign, exploring lives on New York City's Crosby Street. He also directed the Netflix comedy special Reggie Watts: Spatial (2016), a 61-minute improvised performance blending beatboxing, singing, sketches, and monologues on topics such as grits, guns, and flights, filmed live on a Los Angeles soundstage. After several years with limited visible output, Dickinson co-directed the 15-minute horror short White Devil (2021) with Mariama Diallo. The film portrays a Black woman's disturbing quarantine experience during the COVID-19 pandemic, as external events intensify racial tensions within her interracial relationship. This project marked his most recent directing credit, underscoring a pattern of selective engagement with short-form and collaborative work in experimental, performance, and socially charged narratives.

Personal life

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