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Intrepid Pictures is an American independent film and television production company dedicated to producing elevated commercial content for global mainstream audiences. It was founded in 2004 by Trevor Macy and Marc D. Evans, and is currently run by Trevor Macy. The company is based in Los Angeles, California.

Key Information

History

[edit]

Intrepid Pictures was founded in 2004 by founders and co-CEOs Trevor Macy and Marc D. Evans.[1][2][3]

Before Intrepid was created, both Evans and Macy worked at Revolution Studios and Propaganda Films respectively. Evans spent 4 years at Revolution Studios as CFO from 2000 to 2004,[4] while Macy spent 2 years as the COO of Propaganda Films and independently produced Auto Focus.[5]

A year after forming the company, Rogue signed a deal with Intrepid to co-produce, co-finance and distribute films in partnership with Universal Studios, Rogue's then-parent company, for five years.[6] The company then debuted with Waist Deep in 2006, which earned $21.35 million worldwide. In February 2011, Melinda Nishioka was hired as a Coordinator, and as of September 2016 became the Vice President of Development.[7]

The group broke through with The Strangers. In May 2012 FilmDistrict acquired the film rights to what would become Oculus.[8] Soon after, the film released on April 11, 2013, to commercial and critical success, earning $44 million over a $5 million budget and received positive reviews. In June 2015, Los Angeles Media Fund co-funded The Bye Bye Man, which originated from a script by Jonathan Penner[9] with STX Entertainment acquiring the film in December.[10] Intrepid's most notable recent releases are the critically acclaimed films Hush, Before I Wake, Ouija: Origin of Evil and Gerald's Game, all with Mike Flanagan, a frequent Intrepid collaborator and partner from 2019-2024.

In January 2018, Intrepid and Macy announced their involvement in Doctor Sleep, the sequel to the iconic horror film The Shining, for Warner Bros. Pictures.[11] In February 2019, it was announced that Flanagan had formally joined Intrepid as a partner, and that Intrepid had signed an overall deal with Netflix to generate television series.[2] As part of that overall deal, Netflix ordered the original series Midnight Mass in July 2019.[12] On October 6, 2021, it was announced that Flanagan would create an eight episode limited series titled The Fall of the House of Usher for Netflix that will be based on the works of Edgar Allan Poe. Flanagan and Michael Fimognari will each direct four episodes and executive produce the series.[13] On December 1, 2022, it was announced that the company had signed a TV deal with Amazon Studios. Under the deal, Macy and Flanagan will develop and produce projects under Intrepid for Amazon Prime Video, thus ending their deal with Netflix. Feature film productions were not part of the deal.[14] In 2024, Flanagan split from Intrepid and formed its own independent production company Red Room Pictures.[15]

Filmography

[edit]
Release date Title Director Distributor
June 23, 2006 Waist Deep Vondie Curtis-Hall Rogue Pictures
November 10, 2006 The Return Asif Kapadia
January 19, 2007 The Hitcher Dave Meyers
August 29, 2007 Balls of Fury Robert Ben Garant
March 14, 2008 Doomsday Neil Marshall
May 30, 2008 The Strangers Bryan Bertino
February 10, 2012 Safe House Daniel Espinosa Universal Pictures
April 27, 2012 The Raven James McTeigue Relativity Media
September 7, 2012 The Cold Light of Day Mabrouk El Mechri Summit Entertainment
April 9, 2013 Crush Sonny Mallhi FilmNation Entertainment
April 11, 2014 Oculus Mike Flanagan Relativity Media
April 8, 2016 Hush Netflix
January 13, 2017 The Bye Bye Man Stacy Title STX Entertainment
June 2, 2017 Dobaara: See Your Evil Prawaal Raman B4U Motion Pictures
September 29, 2017 Gerald's Game Mike Flanagan Netflix
January 5, 2018 Before I Wake
March 9, 2018 The Strangers: Prey at Night Johannes Roberts Aviron Pictures
October 18, 2019 Eli Ciarán Foy Netflix
November 8, 2019 Doctor Sleep Mike Flanagan Warner Bros. Pictures
July 20, 2024 Shelby Oaks Chris Stuckmann Neon
September 6, 2024 The Life of Chuck Mike Flanagan

Television

[edit]
Year Series Creator(s) Network
2018 The Haunting of Hill House Mike Flanagan Netflix
2020 The Haunting of Bly Manor
2021 Midnight Mass
2022 The Midnight Club Mike Flanagan
Leah Fong
2023 The Fall of the House of Usher Mike Flanagan
2026 Carrie Amazon Prime Video

Upcoming films

[edit]
Date Title Director Distributor Notes
March 12, 2027 The Exorcist Mike Flanagan Universal Pictures [16][17][18]
TBA The Season of Passage [19]

References

[edit]

Grokipedia

from Grokipedia
Intrepid Pictures is an American independent film and television production company founded in 2005 by Trevor Macy and Marc D. Evans.[1] Headquartered in Los Angeles, California, the company specializes in producing and co-financing commercial genre content, including horror, thrillers, and action films aimed at young adult and global mainstream audiences.[2] It has built a reputation for elevated storytelling in the horror genre through key partnerships and high-profile projects. Intrepid Pictures entered the industry with a multiyear production and co-financing deal with Universal Pictures and its genre label Rogue Pictures, which facilitated early productions such as the horror film The Strangers (2008).[2] Over the years, the company has produced and financed several notable feature films, including Oculus (2013), Hush (2016), Gerald's Game (2017), Before I Wake (2016), Doctor Sleep (2019), and The Life of Chuck (2024), the latter serving as an adaptation of Stephen King's novella.[3][4] In 2019, Intrepid Pictures formalized its partnership with acclaimed filmmaker Mike Flanagan, who joined as a partner, key creative collaborator, and executive producer.[5] This partnership produced The Haunting of Hill House (2018) and led to a multi-year overall television deal with Netflix in 2019, resulting in critically praised horror series such as The Haunting of Bly Manor (2020), Midnight Mass (2021), The Midnight Club (2022), and The Fall of the House of Usher (2023).[5] Following the conclusion of their Netflix agreement, Intrepid Pictures signed an exclusive multi-year overall series deal with Amazon Studios in 2022, expanding its scope for developing new projects across streaming platforms.[6]

History

Founding and Early Years

Intrepid Pictures was founded in 2005 by Trevor Macy and Marc D. Evans, drawing on their prior industry experiences. Macy had served as chief financial officer at Propaganda Films from 1999 until its closure in 2001, where he helped manage the company's transition away from talent management, and earlier as vice president of the Sundance Group; he also produced the 2002 film Auto Focus. Evans, meanwhile, spent four years as chief financial officer at Revolution Studios from 2000 to 2004, overseeing corporate and production finance planning and execution.[2][7] The company established its initial headquarters in Santa Monica, Los Angeles, California, positioning itself in the heart of the entertainment industry. From the outset, Intrepid Pictures focused on producing and co-financing elevated commercial content aimed at global mainstream audiences, with an early emphasis on genre films such as horror and thrillers targeted at young adults. This mission was supported by institutional investors and a credit facility from JPMorgan Chase, enabling the production of multiple films annually.[8][9][2] In 2005, Intrepid Pictures secured its first major partnership through a multiyear, first-look production and co-financing deal with Rogue Pictures, a division of Universal Pictures, committing to a minimum of eight films over five years. This collaboration facilitated Intrepid's entry into feature film development and distribution. The partnership's early output included action and thriller projects, setting the stage for the company's genre specialization.[2][1] Intrepid Pictures launched its debut project trajectory with the development of The Strangers, a psychological horror film directed by Bryan Bertino in his feature directorial debut, which was released in 2008 under the Rogue Pictures banner. Co-produced by Intrepid alongside Vertigo Entertainment and Mandate Pictures, the film starred Liv Tyler and Scott Speedman and centered on a couple terrorized by masked intruders at a remote vacation home, marking the company's initial foray into suspense-driven genre storytelling.[10][1]

Growth and Key Partnerships

Following its early years, Intrepid Pictures expanded significantly from 2009 to 2018, focusing on scaling operations and deepening its expertise in independent horror and thriller productions. A pivotal internal development occurred in 2016 with the hiring of Melinda Nishioka as Vice President of Development, where she took charge of overseeing project acquisition and scripting to bolster the company's pipeline.[11] This move supported the studio's growing output, exemplified by mid-period milestones such as the 2013 supernatural horror film Oculus, directed by Mike Flanagan, which marked a key step in Intrepid's specialization within the genre through its blend of psychological tension and commercial appeal.[12] By 2018, Intrepid had built a robust portfolio exceeding 10 films, emphasizing cost-effective, genre-driven content that resonated with audiences seeking elevated scares outside major studio blockbusters. Representative titles from this era included The Strangers (2008), Before I Wake (2016), and The Strangers: Prey at Night (2018), showcasing the company's ability to finance and produce mid-budget thrillers with strong narrative focus. This accumulation not only demonstrated operational maturity but also positioned Intrepid as a reliable partner for genre filmmakers. Strategic alliances further fueled this growth, particularly the multi-year production and co-financing deal signed in 2005 with Universal Pictures and its genre arm Rogue Pictures, which provided non-exclusive first-look access and distribution support for several projects.[2] As the decade progressed, Intrepid shifted toward enhancing streaming viability by collaborating with platforms like Netflix, releasing originals such as Hush (2016), a taut home-invasion thriller that leveraged the service's global reach to amplify the company's independent output.[13] These partnerships enabled broader accessibility and laid the groundwork for Intrepid's evolution in the digital landscape.

Recent Developments

In 2019, Intrepid Pictures secured a multi-year overall series deal with Netflix, allowing the company to develop and produce original television content exclusively for the streaming platform.[14] This partnership with key collaborator Mike Flanagan, who joined Intrepid in 2018, facilitated the production of acclaimed horror series such as The Haunting of Bly Manor and Midnight Mass.[15] By December 2022, Intrepid Pictures transitioned to a new exclusive multi-year overall deal with Amazon Studios, shifting its television output to Prime Video and concluding the Netflix arrangement.[16] Under this agreement, led by Trevor Macy and in collaboration with Flanagan, the company committed to developing and producing series and films tailored for Amazon's streaming service, emphasizing genre-driven narratives amid intensifying competition in the streaming landscape.[6] In 2024, Flanagan established his independent production banner, Red Room Pictures, while maintaining ongoing collaborations with Intrepid Pictures on select projects, including adaptations like The Exorcist and Carrie, with the Carrie series wrapping production in October 2025.[17][18][19] This evolution has positioned Intrepid to sustain its focus on horror and thriller genres into 2025, navigating market challenges through strategic partnerships and diversified output, though no major executive hires or financial milestones have been publicly announced in this period.

Key Personnel

Founders and Executives

Intrepid Pictures was co-founded in 2005 by Trevor Macy and Marc D. Evans, who established the company as an independent film and television production entity based in Los Angeles, California.[1] Macy, who previously worked at Propaganda Films, has served as the CEO since the company's inception, guiding its strategic direction and forging key industry partnerships. Evans, with prior experience at Revolution Studios where he spent four years as CFO from 2000 to 2004, served as co-CEO until 2013, contributing significantly to the early development of projects before departing to pursue independent ventures.[20] As of 2025, Trevor Macy remains the primary executive leader as CEO, overseeing overall operations and decision-making for partnerships and content strategy. Melinda Nishioka, who joined in 2011 as a production coordinator, was promoted to Vice President of Development in 2016 and now holds the position of Senior Vice President of Film and Television, managing script acquisition, project greenlighting, and creative oversight.[21][22] The executive structure has seen recent additions, including John Scherer, who was appointed Vice President of Development and Production in March 2025, supporting the expansion of the company's slate. Mike Flanagan, a longtime collaborator, served as a partner from 2019 to 2024 but continues to executive produce select projects under the Intrepid banner, such as Shelby Oaks (2025).[23][22]

Notable Collaborators

One of the most prominent collaborators with Intrepid Pictures was filmmaker Mike Flanagan, who served as a partner from 2019 to 2024 and directed several key projects, including the feature film Doctor Sleep (2019) and television series such as The Haunting of Hill House (2018) and Midnight Mass (2021).[6] Flanagan's involvement began with an exclusive multi-year overall series deal between Intrepid Pictures and Netflix in 2019, formalizing a seven-year creative partnership that produced multiple horror titles. In 2022, the partnership shifted to Amazon Studios under a new multi-year overall deal, enabling further developments like adaptations of Stephen King's works.[6] Flanagan departed Intrepid in 2024 to launch his own production company, Red Room Pictures, pursuing independent ventures while maintaining ties to genre projects.[24] Other recurring directors have included Bryan Bertino, who helmed The Strangers (2008), an early Intrepid production that established the company's focus on tense, atmospheric thrillers.[25] Kate Siegel, a frequent collaborator with Flanagan and his spouse, has appeared in leading roles across multiple Intrepid-backed projects, including Hush (2016), Gerald's Game (2017), and various episodes of The Haunting anthology series, contributing to nuanced portrayals of vulnerability in horror narratives.[26] Intrepid Pictures has maintained ongoing production alliances with executives at Netflix and Amazon Studios, influencing content selection toward prestige horror and limited series formats since the respective deals in 2019 and 2022.[6] These collaborations have profoundly shaped Intrepid's style, emphasizing psychological horror that explores emotional and supernatural dread, as seen in Flanagan's introspective storytelling and Bertino's grounded suspense, setting the company apart in the genre landscape.[27]

Productions

Feature Films

Intrepid Pictures began its feature film output in the mid-2000s with a mix of action, thriller, and comedy projects, often in partnership with Rogue Pictures, a genre-focused imprint of Universal Pictures. Early efforts emphasized high-concept commercial fare aimed at young adult audiences, with budgets typically in the $10-20 million range. As the company evolved, it pivoted toward horror, particularly through long-term collaborations with director Mike Flanagan starting in 2011, producing intimate, psychologically driven narratives distributed by studios like Relativity Media, Blumhouse Productions, Warner Bros., and Netflix. This shift marked Intrepid's transition from broad thrillers to elevated genre storytelling, yielding both critical acclaim and commercial viability in the indie horror space.[2] The company's complete released feature film slate as of November 2025, drawn from production credits, spans 19 titles in chronological order:
YearTitleDirectorKey Cast
2007Balls of FuryRobert Ben GarantDan Fogler, Christopher Walken, George Lopez
2007The HitcherDave MeyersSean Bean, Sophia Bush, Zachary Knighton
2008DoomsdayNeil MarshallRhona Mitra, Bob Hoskins, Malcolm McDowell, Alexander Siddig
2008The StrangersBryan BertinoLiv Tyler, Scott Speedman, Gemma Ward
2012The RavenJames McTeigueJohn Cusack, Alice Eve, Luke Evans
2012The Cold Light of DayMabrouk El MechriHenry Cavill, Bruce Willis, Sigourney Weaver
2012Safe HouseDaniel EspinosaDenzel Washington, Ryan Reynolds, Vera Farmiga
2013OculusMike FlanaganKaren Gillan, Brenton Thwaites, Katee Sackhoff
2013CrushMalik BaderLucas Till, Sarah Bolger, Crystal Reed
2016Before I WakeMike FlanaganKate Bosworth, Thomas Jane, Jacob Tremblay
2016HushMike FlanaganKate Siegel, John Gallagher Jr., Michael Trucco
2016Ouija: Origin of EvilMike FlanaganElizabeth Reaser, Lulu Wilson, Annalise Basso
2017The Bye Bye ManStacy TitleDouglas Smith, Lucien Laviscount, Cressida Bonas
2017Gerald's GameMike FlanaganCarla Gugino, Bruce Greenwood, Henry Thomas
2019EliCiarán FoyCharlie Shotwell, Kelly Reilly, Max Martini
2019Doctor SleepMike FlanaganEwan McGregor, Rebecca Ferguson, Kyliegh Curran
2024The Strangers: Chapter 1Renny HarlinMadelaine Petsch, Froy Gutierrez, Gabriel Basso
2024The Life of ChuckMike FlanaganTom Hiddleston, Mark Hamill, Chiwetel Ejiofor
2025Shelby OaksChris StuckmannCamille Sullivan, Sarah Durn, Michael Beach
Intrepid's initial foray into features highlighted thriller and action elements, as seen in the remake The Hitcher (2007), a tense road pursuit film distributed by Rogue Pictures that built on the company's genre expertise. This was followed by Doomsday (2008), a post-apocalyptic actioner with influences from Mad Max, co-produced with Universal and emphasizing visceral survival themes. The breakout in horror came with The Strangers (2008), a low-budget home invasion thriller that captured real-life inspirations for its masked intruders, grossing $52.6 million domestically and $83.1 million worldwide against a $9 million budget, establishing Intrepid's knack for profitable genre fare.[28] By the early 2010s, amid a wave of indie horror successes, Intrepid refined its approach with psychological depth, exemplified by Oculus (2013), Flanagan's directorial debut for the company. This mirror-centric tale of familial trauma and supernatural manipulation earned praise as one of the scariest American horrors in years for its nonlinear structure and emotional resonance, achieving $27.7 million domestically and $44.1 million worldwide on a $5 million budget, solidifying Intrepid's reputation for elevated indie hits.[29][30] Distribution shifted to partnerships like Blumhouse, enabling micro-budget efficiencies while amplifying reach. The mid-2010s saw Intrepid deepen its horror focus through Flanagan collaborations, evolving from visceral invasions to introspective terror. Hush (2016), a Netflix original, innovated the home invasion trope by featuring a deaf-mute writer as the protagonist, relying on visual tension and silence for suspense rather than traditional scares, with co-writer and star Kate Siegel drawing from personal experiences to heighten authenticity. This marked a thematic progression toward character-driven psychological horror, echoed in Ouija: Origin of Evil (2016), a prequel that transformed a franchise into a poignant family ghost story. Theatrical efforts like The Bye Bye Man (2017) maintained commercial thriller roots but underperformed, prompting a lean toward streaming platforms.[13] Later releases reinforced this evolution, with Netflix's Gerald's Game (2017) adapting Stephen King's claustrophobic survival tale into a meditation on isolation and abuse, praised for its raw intensity. The company's highest-profile theatrical horror, Doctor Sleep (2019), served as a sequel to The Shining, blending psychic dread with emotional redemption arcs; despite pandemic delays, it grossed $31.6 million domestically and $72.4 million worldwide on a $45 million budget, distributed by Warner Bros. Recent output, including the The Strangers franchise revival in 2024 and Flanagan's The Life of Chuck (2024)—a Stephen King adaptation exploring mortality through nonlinear vignettes—continues this emphasis on psychological layers over jump scares. Shelby Oaks (2025), a found-footage mystery, further highlights Intrepid's adaptability in blending analog horror with narrative innovation, often on budgets under $10 million. Overall, these films underscore Intrepid's role in advancing horror's intellectual edge, with Flanagan's influence key to its critical legacy.[31][32]

Television Series

Intrepid Pictures expanded into television production through a multi-year overall deal with Netflix signed in February 2019, following the success of its initial Netflix collaboration on The Haunting of Hill House. This partnership, between company partners Mike Flanagan and Trevor Macy, facilitated the creation of limited and anthology series that emphasized serialized horror narratives, often adapting or inspired by classic literary works in the genre. The deal marked a strategic shift for Intrepid from feature films to television, enabling deeper explorations of psychological and supernatural themes over multiple episodes, with Flanagan serving as writer, director, and executive producer on each entry. By 2025, Intrepid had produced five such series for Netflix, all within the horror anthology format. The inaugural series, The Haunting of Hill House (2018), loosely adapts Shirley Jackson's 1959 novel of the same name, following a family haunted by their past experiences in a malevolent mansion. Spanning 10 episodes with runtimes ranging from 41 to 74 minutes, the series intertwines nonlinear storytelling with emotional family drama and supernatural elements, earning critical acclaim for its innovative structure and performances. It holds a 93% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 103 reviews, praised for elevating horror through character-driven terror. Although overlooked by the Primetime Emmys, it received multiple nominations from the Saturn Awards, including for Best Streaming Horror Television Series. Subsequent projects built on this foundation, with The Haunting of Bly Manor (2020) reimagining Henry James' The Turn of the Screw as a gothic romance involving a governess and ghostly children in an English estate. The 9-episode season, with episodes averaging 45 to 60 minutes, shifts focus toward themes of love, loss, and memory, achieving an 88% Rotten Tomatoes score from 104 critics for its atmospheric tension and emotional depth. Midnight Mass (2021), an original story drawing from vampire mythology and religious allegory, centers on a remote island community disrupted by a charismatic priest and mysterious events. Comprising 7 episodes of 60 to 71 minutes each, it explores faith, addiction, and apocalypse, garnering an 87% Rotten Tomatoes rating from 103 reviews for its philosophical undertones and strong ensemble, including standout performances by Zach Gilford and Hamish Linklater. The Midnight Club (2022), adapted from Christopher Pike's novel, depicts terminally ill teens at a hospice sharing scary stories at midnight while confronting their fates. The 10-episode series, with runtimes around 50 to 60 minutes, blends anthology tales with overarching mystery, receiving an 85% Rotten Tomatoes approval from 59 critics, noted for its youthful ensemble and emotional resonance despite mixed views on pacing. The most recent Netflix entry, The Fall of the House of Usher (2023), draws from Edgar Allan Poe's short story and incorporates elements from several of his works, chronicling the downfall of a corrupt pharmaceutical dynasty amid supernatural retribution. Featuring 8 episodes of approximately 50 to 65 minutes, it satirizes corporate greed and family legacy, earning a 91% Rotten Tomatoes score from 116 reviews for its sharp writing, lavish production, and Bruce Greenwood's commanding portrayal of patriarch Roderick Usher.

Upcoming Projects

Intrepid Pictures has a number of announced projects in various stages of development and production as of November 2025, primarily in the horror genre, building on the company's multiyear overall series deal with Amazon MGM Studios signed in December 2022.[16] The most advanced upcoming production is the untitled Carrie limited series for Amazon MGM Studios, adapting Stephen King's 1974 novel about a telekinetic teenager tormented by bullies and her fanatical mother. Written and executive produced by Mike Flanagan, with Trevor Macy also executive producing under Intrepid Pictures, the eight-episode series features Summer H. Howell in the lead role of Carrie White and Samantha Sloyan as her domineering mother, Margaret White. Additional cast includes Michael Trucco, Katee Sackhoff, Rahul Kohli, Tim Bagley, and Heather Graham. Principal photography took place in Vancouver, British Columbia, from early 2025 and wrapped in October 2025, placing the project in post-production with no release date confirmed as of November 2025.[33][34][35][36] In film, an untitled Exorcist project remains in development for Blumhouse Productions and Universal Pictures, directed by Mike Flanagan from his original screenplay. Described as a "radical new take" set within the Exorcist universe but independent of recent sequels, the movie is being produced by Trevor Macy for Intrepid Pictures alongside Jason Blum. Initially slated for theatrical release on March 13, 2026, production has been postponed indefinitely due to Flanagan's commitments to other endeavors, including the Carrie series, though the project continues to progress in pre-production without a revised schedule. As of November 2025, Flanagan has expressed interest in reuniting with Rebecca Ferguson, who starred in his Doctor Sleep, for a role in the film.[37][38][39][40] Other in-development efforts include the action-thriller White Knuckle, an original screenplay by Mark Hosack centered on a high-stakes bank heist gone wrong, with Intrepid Pictures attached as the lead production entity and no director or cast announced to date.[41]

References

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