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Greg DeLiso
Greg DeLiso
from Wikipedia

Greg DeLiso (born October 25, 1986) is an American filmmaker, film editor, and director of photography. He was born in Detroit, Michigan.

Key Information

Early life

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After graduating high school in 2004 at the age of 17, DeLiso relocated to New York City to attend the New York Film Academy’s one-year directing program, graduating in 2005.

Film career

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2000s

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In the Spring of 2008, DeLiso was tapped by legendary noise artist PBK to create a video for his song "Tout Va Bien". DeLiso enlisted the help of actor Jakob Hawkins (a consistent collaborator) and Sharon McPeek, and the three conceptualized and shot the video with DeLiso serving as editor and director.

Later in 2008, DeLiso began working with Nick Prueher and Joe Pickett of The Found Footage Festival, a touring comedy show featuring edited montages of unintentionally funny found VHS tapes. DeLiso joined the Found Footage Festival as a tape collector and editor. Through Prueher and Pickett, DeLiso was introduced to Jeff Krulik, and in 2010 served as editor and co-producer on Heavy Metal Picnic—Krulik's feature length follow up to Heavy Metal Parking Lot (1986), a legendary cult documentary about fans in the parking lot of a Judas Priest concert in Washington DC.[1] Picnic was released on August 6, 2010, to rave reviews.[2]

In 2009, DeLiso, again with Jakob Hawkins, released a video series called "Fun With Henrik Zetterberg." The videos center around a bumbling Henrik Zetterberg look-alike (played by Hawkins) and were positioned as spec commercial spots for the NHL and their affiliates. Although the spots were never picked up, the videos themselves went viral, garnering over 50,000 views in two days.[3] The success of the videos spawned "Fake Henrik Zettererg," a twelve-episode web series authored by DeLiso and Hawkins. The series was launched on October 26, 2011, and has been featured on Yahoo Sports[4] and The Huffington Post. The series featured Kevin Brown and Austin Pendleton.

Also in 2009, DeLiso shot, edited and directed the short documentary Store Front New York. The film is about photographers James and Karla Murray, and serves as a companion piece to their photo book, Store Front, which features shot of various neighborhood store fronts in New York City. A described in a review via The New Yorker,[5] "These unfussy, elegant, and richly colored photographs of butcher shops, bakeries, fabric wholesalers, cuchifritos stands, stationery and sporting-goods stores, laundromats, groceries, and dive bars give connoisseurs of signage, folk typography, and ambient erosion much to pore over." The film screened at the Red Hook Film Festival in Brooklyn in October 2009.[6]

2010s

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In 2011, DeLiso completed Canada’s Best Kept Secret, his first feature-length documentary as director, editor, cinematographer and producer.[7] The film chronicles the life of RD Lawrence, a Canadian author/naturalist integral in the green movement of the 20th century. The original score was composed by actor and musician Peter Litvin, who DeLiso met in high school,[8] and featured music by Ewan Dobson.

In January 2013, DeLiso co-founded the movie blog Smug Film with fellow filmmaker Cody Clarke, where DeLiso contributed movie reviews, essays, lists, and interviews, and appeared several times on its podcast.

DeLiso's first feature, Hectic Knife, was released on July 28, 2016.[9][10] Hectic Knife is a super-hero comedy about a knife-wielding vigilante who fights against drug dealers, murderers and other "baddies," including Piggly Doctor, a villain bent on world domination.[11] The idea for the film gestated as Litvin, who later co-wrote, starred in and produced the film, and DeLiso were working on a series titled "Short Films for Nobody". Filming began in 2010 and wrapped in 2015. Shortly after the film was finished, DeLiso and Litvin secured distribution via Troma Entertainment.[12]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Greg DeLiso is an American filmmaker, director, editor, and cinematographer known for his independent, low-budget productions that embrace parody, comedy, and genre tropes. He gained recognition with his debut narrative feature Hectic Knife (2016), a self-financed superhero spoof co-written with and starring Peter Litvin, which Troma Entertainment distributed after DeLiso reached out directly to Lloyd Kaufman. Development spanned several years starting from casual shorts around 2010, reflecting his DIY approach to filmmaking influenced by 1980s and 1990s comedies and his early exposure to Lloyd Kaufman's independent film philosophy. DeLiso has also worked extensively as a cinematographer and editor on cult projects, including Psycho Ape! (2020), a low-budget slasher homage, and co-directed its sequel Psycho Ape: Part II - The Wrath of Kong (2024), continuing his involvement in absurd, reference-heavy comedy-horror. Earlier in his career, he edited and co-produced the documentary Heavy Metal Picnic (2010), a follow-up to the cult classic Heavy Metal Parking Lot, and directed the feature-length documentary Canada's Best Kept Secret (2011) about Canadian naturalist R.D. Lawrence. After attending the New York Film Academy immediately following high school and freelancing in New York City, DeLiso returned to his native Michigan, where he continues to produce and direct projects, often in collaboration with longtime friends and with a focus on creative, resource-limited storytelling.

Early life

Childhood in Michigan

Greg DeLiso was born on October 25, 1986, in Detroit, Michigan. He is the only child of Michael and Sharon DeLiso and nearly died at birth after a complication with the umbilical cord necessitated an emergency C-section. DeLiso grew up in the northern suburbs of Detroit, where his family moved twice before he reached the age of six before finally settling in Shelby Township in the summer of 1993. From ages six to fifteen he played ice hockey as a goalie and harbored aspirations of reaching the NHL, though he later abandoned those ambitions after honestly evaluating his abilities. He has remained a dedicated fan of the Detroit Red Wings, citing Pavel Datsyuk as his all-time favorite player. DeLiso graduated from Eisenhower High School in 2004 at the age of seventeen. His early fascination with movies began around age five.

Introduction to filmmaking

Greg DeLiso's interest in filmmaking ignited at age five when he saw Jurassic Park in theaters during its 1993 release, instantly becoming obsessed with movies and identifying as a "Spielberg-kid" captivated by the concept of authorship and directing. This experience, reinforced by a "making-of" documentary hosted by James Earl Jones that aired later that year, convinced him that creating films was an exciting pursuit he wanted to follow. As a child and teenager, DeLiso was shaped by unconventional and low-budget cinema, including Troma films, Cannibal! The Musical, Eraserhead, Bad Taste, and Lloyd Kaufman's Make Your Own Damn Movie book, which fueled his belief in DIY filmmaking possibilities. He played hockey as a goalie from ages six to 15 and once aspired to a professional career in the NHL but shifted away from those athletic ambitions around age 15 after recognizing his limitations in that field. At the same age, viewing Kevin Smith's Clerks proved transformative, mirroring Smith's own epiphany and revealing that independent films could be produced affordably with credit cards, friends, and minimal resources rather than Hollywood infrastructure, prompting DeLiso to commit seriously to filmmaking. This realization crystallized his path forward following high school graduation.

Education and move to New York

Film school training

After graduating from high school in 2004 at the age of 17, Greg DeLiso moved alone to New York City to enroll in the New York Film Academy's one-year directing program. He described the program as low-key and non-accredited at the time, but it provided his first formal training in filmmaking. He completed the program at age 18. Following graduation, DeLiso started interning and working as a production assistant while freelancing and making music videos to support himself in the industry. He remained in New York for approximately seven years total, during which he built his early professional foundation in the city.

Freelance beginnings

After relocating to New York City to attend the New York Film Academy, Greg DeLiso remained in the city for approximately seven years, working as a freelance editor, videographer, and director. His early freelance positions encompassed a wide range of projects, including editing acting reels, wedding videos, soft-core pornography, and independent productions. During this period, he edited Found Footage Festival Volume 5: Live in Milwaukee (2010) and served as editor, post-production supervisor, and co-producer on Jeff Krulik's Heavy Metal Picnic (2010), a feature-length semi-follow-up to Heavy Metal Parking Lot. DeLiso directed, shot, and edited shorts and documentaries such as Store Front New York (2009) and Canada's Best Kept Secret (2011), along with various music videos. He also directed, shot, and edited the 12-episode web series Fake Henrik Zetterberg (2011–2012). Through these projects, DeLiso established long-term professional collaborations with Jakob Hawkins, Mark Breese, Jeff Krulik, Nick Prueher, and Joe Pickett.

Independent feature films

Hectic Knife development and release

Hectic Knife originated in 2010 as a series of goofy short films made for fun by Greg DeLiso and his collaborator Peter Litvin, with one early short featuring Litvin in the Hectic Knife costume performing knife moves on a Brooklyn rooftop in black and white. The duo continued the character by responding to Craigslist ads to recruit actors for villain roles and began shooting scenes every Monday, leading DeLiso to decide after just a few sessions that the material should become a full feature film. The project evolved gradually over six years of intermittent production, with principal photography beginning in 2010 and the film completed in 2016 when DeLiso was 29. Produced guerrilla-style on an approximately $20,000 budget funded entirely out-of-pocket by DeLiso and Litvin, the film relied on DIY methods including extensive reshoots conducted over multiple years, which resulted in visible continuity discrepancies—such as a character's five o'clock shadow disappearing between shots filmed two years apart—that were acknowledged as artifacts of the drawn-out process. DeLiso directed the project, co-wrote the script with Litvin, served as cinematographer, and handled editing and visual post-production, while Litvin co-directed, starred as the titular knife-wielding vigilante, composed and performed the score, and managed sound mixing and all ADR recording. DeLiso secured distribution with Troma Entertainment shortly after completion by emailing company co-founder Lloyd Kaufman directly, having obtained Kaufman's email address through New York film contacts and pitching the film with a reference to Kaufman's book Make Your Own Damn Movie and a tagline emphasizing "Blood, Babes, and Bagels." Kaufman responded within minutes and expressed enthusiasm, leading to contract negotiations and Troma's acquisition of the film, which became DeLiso's first feature released by the company. A comedy that spoofs superhero and comic book tropes through a sarcastic structure mimicking big-budget blockbusters but substituting jokes for effects, the film draws primary influence from Wet Hot American Summer and has been independently described as blending the styles of Airplane! and Eraserhead. Its deliberately absurd humor appeals to fans of similar irreverent comedy traditions.

Psycho Ape series and recent work

In recent years, Greg DeLiso has focused on the Psycho Ape series, a pair of low-budget cult comedy-horror films made in collaboration with director Addison Binek. He served as co-writer and cinematographer on Psycho Ape! (2020), a deliberately over-the-top project centered on a murderous gorilla escape that cultivated an underground following for its absurd humor and trash-cinema aesthetic. DeLiso expanded his involvement in the sequel, co-directing, co-writing, shooting, and editing Psycho Ape: Part II – The Wrath of Kong (2024) alongside Binek. This follow-up leans further into meta-filmmaking and intentional "badness," featuring fourth-wall breaks, visible production flaws, on-set references, and self-aware elements that celebrate experimental low-budget horror-comedy. Parallel to these genre efforts, DeLiso has continued work on the long-gestating documentary What Kind of Music Do You Listen To?, which he began around 2006 as a young filmmaker. He conducted over 100 interviews with musicians across North America between 2007 and 2010, amassing hundreds of hours of footage featuring artists such as Bela Fleck, Daniel Johnston, Victor Wooten, the Dandy Warhols, and others. The resulting 2.5-hour film, structured with an intermission, remains in post-production. DeLiso's recent output also encompasses additional shorts, music videos, and production roles, with credits extending through 2025.

Filmmaking style and collaborations

Influences and creative approach

DeLiso's filmmaking draws heavily from a blend of blockbuster spectacles and offbeat comedies that shaped his early sensibilities. He has described himself as a "Spielberg kid," citing Jurassic Park and Back to the Future among the films he grew up on and still holds close. He considers Back to the Future superior to The Godfather both as entertainment and as high art. Other key influences include Clerks, which demonstrated that iconic characters and quotable lines could emerge from minimal resources, the Troma catalog and Lloyd Kaufman's Make Your Own Damn Movie, Eraserhead, Airplane!, and Wet Hot American Summer, the last of which he has named as a primary touchstone for his own work. His creative approach centers on low-budget DIY production, extended timelines spanning years of intermittent shooting and post-production, and a commitment to seeing projects through despite imperfections. DeLiso has stressed perseverance as essential, viewing filmmaking as the alternative to personal failure and emphasizing the need to endure pain and frustration to finish. He directs self-criticism from past efforts toward improvement in future projects rather than revising or reworking completed ones. His humor is often sarcastic, targeting Hollywood conventions and tropes, as in the parody structure of Hectic Knife, which mocks superhero film formulas while prioritizing jokes over spectacle. Recurring elements across his films include frequent casting of musician Victor Wooten, repeated use of the names Dirk and Ted, bizarre character names such as Jambly Tanner and Kip Feldermouse, and characters wearing NHL jerseys. He frequently borrows and repurposes lines from favorite movies and television shows, integrating them invisibly into his scripts.

Recurring elements and key partners

Greg DeLiso has maintained several long-term collaborations that span his independent features, web series, and related projects. Actor Jakob Hawkins has been a frequent collaborator since early work on a Jersey Shore documentary feature, later starring as the title character in DeLiso's web series Fake Henrik Zetterberg. Mark Breese, a classmate from New York Film Academy, contributed to early efforts including internships and features like Brooklyn Bound. Peter Litvin stands as one of DeLiso's closest creative partners, co-writing, starring as the lead, composing, and handling sound duties on Hectic Knife after the two reconnected as longtime friends from suburban Detroit. DeLiso has also collaborated with documentary filmmaker Jeff Krulik, re-editing the Heavy Metal Parking Lot sequel in 2010 after meeting through shared connections. DeLiso's ties to the Found Footage Festival date to 2008, when he began editing web content and live touring show material for founders Nick Prueher and Joe Pickett, contributing through at least Volume 5. His work has additionally intersected with Troma Entertainment, which distributed Hectic Knife on Blu-ray and streaming platforms. DeLiso frequently casts bassist Victor Wooten across his projects. Recurring motifs appear throughout DeLiso's films, including bizarre character names, frequent use of the names Dirk and Ted, characters wearing NHL jerseys, and repurposed movie lines.

Personal life

Family and marriage

DeLiso married Chelsea Fleetham in 2014. They met earlier that year through the dating site OKCupid, fell in love quickly, and shared a close bond marked by mutual understanding and humor. Fleetham lived with severe neuropathy that left her joints locked, resulting in significant disability. The marriage lasted until Fleetham's death from sepsis on January 3, 2019, when both were 32 years old. DeLiso has described her as his best friend and a bright, intelligent person whose loss affected him deeply, eventually prompting him to take up drawing as therapy.

Interests and residence

DeLiso is a longtime enthusiast of the Detroit Red Wings ice hockey team. His fandom has led to creative projects such as the web series Fake Henrik Zetterberg, which featured a comedian impersonating the Red Wings player Henrik Zetterberg. DeLiso has also discussed the team's history and eras on podcasts and social media. DeLiso has publicly stated that Back to the Future is superior to The Godfather both as entertainment and as high art. He currently lives and works in Detroit, Michigan, following an earlier period in New York City.
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