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Jamie Travis
Jamie Travis
from Wikipedia

Jamie Travis (born August 13, 1979) is a Toronto-based filmmaker who has written and directed award-winning short films, music videos and television commercials.[1] He received international recognition for his two short film trilogies, The Patterns and The Saddest Children in the World.

Key Information

His six short films all premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, and his work has had numerous retrospective screenings at festivals and art galleries.

Life and career

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Travis’ graduating short film, Why the Anderson Children Didn't Come to Dinner (2003), is a surrealist portrayal of three young siblings forced to endure their mother's bizarre culinary abuses. The film earned numerous awards, including Best Production Design at the Leo Awards, Best Script at the Golden Sheaf Awards and Best Canadian Film at Montreal's Prends ça court! Film Series.

With Patterns (2005) – a playful avant-garde send-up of the suspense genre in which a woman waits anxiously for a phone call – Travis was awarded the Vancouver International Film Festival's prize for Best Western Canadian Director of a Short Film. Patterns was followed by two sequels, Patterns 2 (2006) and Patterns 3 (2006), which transformed the austere formalism of the first installment into a boy-meets-girl romp, complete with song, dance and documentary interludes. Other festival highlights include the BFI's London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival and the Hamptons International Film Festival, where Patterns 3 took home the award for Best Short Film.

A dark comedy about a nine-year-old who plans to close his birthday party with a suicide, The Saddest Boy in the World (2006) firmly planted Travis on the international map. The film was met with favorable press, with upwards of 150 festival screenings and multiple awards, including Best Canadian Short at the Calgary International Film Festival, Best Short Film at the Victoria Film Festival in British Columbia, and Audience Favorite at the NexT International Short Film Festival in Bucharest.

Travis concluded his Saddest Children in the World trilogy with The Armoire (2009), in which a game of hide and seek goes awry.[2] Upon its premiere, the film received an honourable mention for Best Canadian Short Film at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival, and a coveted spot on TIFF's year-end Canada's Top Ten list.[3] It has also gone on to win Best Live-Action Short at the 2010 Nashville Film Festival and Best Short Film at the 53rd San Francisco International Film Festival.

Travis has also directed music videos for renowned Canadian indie artists Tegan and Sara and crafted television commercials for prominent brands and organizations. He is currently developing his feature film debut.

Travis lived in Vancouver for over 25 years. He is Jewish on his father's side.[4] He is out as gay.[5]

Filmography

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Short and feature films

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Television series

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Music videos

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DVD

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Kimstim is releasing The Patterns Trilogy along with Why the Anderson Children Didn't Come to Dinner and The Saddest Boy in the World in one comprehensive package on August 3.

The Armoire will be included in issue no. 12 of Wholphin, a quarterly DVD magazine created by Dave Eggers and Brent Hoff of McSweeney's publishing house.

References

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from Grokipedia
Jamie Travis (born August 13, 1979) is a Canadian director known for his award-winning short films, his feature debut ''For a Good Time, Call...'' (2012), and his prolific work directing episodes of acclaimed television series including ''The Bold Type'', ''Yellowjackets'', ''Dare Me'', ''Claws'', and ''Scream: The TV Series''. Born in Vancouver, British Columbia, Travis is based in Toronto, where he began his career writing and directing short films that gained international recognition, notably through two trilogies: ''The Patterns'' and ''The Saddest Children in the World''. All six of these shorts premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, and his early work has since been featured in retrospective screenings at festivals and art galleries. He also directed music videos, television commercials, and contributed to projects such as ''The National Parks Project'' and ''Seven Sins: Greed''. Travis made his transition to feature filmmaking with the comedy ''For a Good Time, Call...'', which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and marked his entry into larger-scale production. He has since established himself as a prominent television director, helming episodes and pilots across genres for series that have earned critical and audience attention. His work often explores themes of human behavior and emotion, reflecting his interest in observational storytelling.

Early life

Birth and background

Jamie Travis was born on August 13, 1979, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. He is now based in Toronto, where he established his professional career as a filmmaker. Public information about his early family life or childhood remains limited.

Education

Jamie Travis studied film at the University of British Columbia. While in film school there, he directed and shot his first short film, Why the Anderson Children Didn't Come to Dinner, over 16 days as a self-described novice who "didn’t know anything about filmmaking." Why the Anderson Children Didn't Come to Dinner (2003) marked the beginning of his hands-on experience in directing before he moved into professional filmmaking.

Career

Short films

Jamie Travis established his reputation as a filmmaker through a series of distinctive short films that blended meticulous production design, dark irony, and psychological depth, earning international recognition and festival acclaim. His two notable early trilogies and standalone works highlighted an anthropological stance toward human behavior and personal preoccupations with obsession, suspense, and suburban malaise. The Patterns trilogy—comprising Patterns, Patterns 2, and Patterns 3—emerged as a deliberate exercise in purging recurring stylistic obsessions such as pipes, unattended appliances, hand-washing, wallpaper, and self-conscious suspense. Produced on a low budget with small crews and self-funding, the films prioritized visual activity over conventional narrative action, resulting in a gorgeously styled, fabulously poppy triptych described as a singular epic musical-thriller and anti-romance chronicling the dreamlike non-romance between neighbors Pauline and Michael. The trilogy drew influences from Jan Švankmajer, Japanese horror, Kubrick, Hitchcock, and Cassavetes, and represented one mode of Travis's experimental approach. In contrast, The Saddest Boy in the World (2006) adopted a more accessible narrative structure, supported by arts council funding and a larger crew, while still exploring psychological intensity. The dark comedy follows a lonely nine-year-old boy who plans to end his birthday party with suicide, critiquing suburban life through warped childhood traumas, deliberate color palettes conveying false hope and infantilization, and a droll yet poignant tone. It screened as part of the Short Cuts Canada program at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2006 alongside Patterns 2 and Patterns 3, receiving strong audience responses. Subsequent notable shorts included The Armoire (2009), which earned critical praise and festival awards, and Kouchibouguac (2011), created as part of The National Parks Project in collaboration with musicians to produce a short film inspired by the national park. These works, often produced under intense psychological strain as Travis himself noted, garnered international screenings and contributed to a DVD collection of his early shorts. They solidified his distinctive cinematic vision before he transitioned to feature films and television directing.

Music videos and commercials

Jamie Travis has directed music videos for the Canadian indie band Tegan and Sara, including "Back In Your Head" in 2007 and "Hell" in 2009. The "Back In Your Head" video, produced by Revolver Films, accompanied the track from their album The Con, while "Hell" served as the lead single from the album Sainthood. These videos are among his notable early credits in promotional content, demonstrating his visual style in the music video format. In addition to music videos, Travis has directed television commercials, creating characteristically stylish spots for prominent brands, primarily in the Canadian market. His commercial work contributed to establishing his reputation as a filmmaker capable of distinctive and polished visual storytelling in advertising. This area of his career developed alongside his short films, forming an important part of his portfolio before transitioning to feature films and episodic television directing.

Feature films

Jamie Travis made his feature directorial debut with the independent comedy For a Good Time, Call... (2012). The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2012, where it was acquired by Focus Features for distribution. It received a limited theatrical release on September 2, 2012. Written by Lauren Miller Rogen and Katie Anne Naylon based on their own experiences, the story centers on two estranged former college roommates—played by Ari Graynor as Katie and Miller Rogen as Lauren—who reluctantly share a New York apartment and start a phone sex line to pay the rent, ultimately forging an unexpected friendship amid the raunchy venture. The cast also includes Justin Long in a supporting role, with cameo appearances by Seth Rogen, Kevin Smith, and others. The production was shot in just sixteen days on an estimated budget of $850,000. The film earned $1,251,749 at the domestic box office from a widest release in 107 theaters, with an opening weekend of $143,935 across 23 theaters. It received mixed critical reception, holding a 57% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 106 reviews, with consensus praising its brisk, sweetly raunchy tone as a contribution to R-rated female-led comedies.

Television directing

Jamie Travis has established himself as a prolific director in episodic television and TV movies, beginning with his television directing debut on Faking It (2014–2016, 13 episodes) and building to helm episodes across a range of dramatic and genre series including Scream: The TV Series (4 episodes, 2015–2016), Claws (5 episodes, 2017–2019), and Dare Me (2 episodes, 2020). In 2017, he directed the television movie Angry Angel for Freeform, a romantic comedy-drama about a young angel attempting to earn her wings while dealing with complications from a love triangle. Travis has directed multiple episodes of The Bold Type between 2017 and 2019, contributing to the series' narrative about young women navigating careers and personal lives at a magazine. His television credits include directing an episode of the Charmed reboot in 2018, specifically "Out of Scythe." He directed two episodes of Panic in 2021 and one episode of Yellowjackets in 2021, including "F Sharp." Travis also directed episodes of the Scream television series. More recently, he directed episodes of A Friend of the Family in 2022. He is set to direct an episode of the upcoming HBO series IT: Welcome to Derry in 2025.

Recognition

Awards and nominations

Jamie Travis has received several awards and nominations, primarily for his short films, which have been celebrated at film festivals and Canadian award ceremonies. His short film ''Patterns'' (2005) won the prize for Best Young Western Canadian Director of a Short Film at the Vancouver International Film Festival. ''The Saddest Boy in the World'' (2006) earned an Honorable Mention for Best Short Film at the Atlantic Film Festival in 2006 and was nominated for Best Direction in a Short Drama at the Leo Awards in 2007. ''The Armoire'' (2009), concluding his Saddest Children in the World trilogy, received an Honorable Mention in the Short Cuts category for Best Canadian Film at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2009. It also won Best SHOUT Short at the Sidewalk Film Festival in 2010. For his television directing, Travis has earned nominations from major industry awards. He was nominated for Outstanding Drama Series at the Primetime Emmy Awards in 2022 for ''Yellowjackets''.

Influence and style

Jamie Travis is known for a directorial style characterized by exquisite formalism, restrained cinematography, and meticulous production design that often functions as an active element in the narrative. His films frequently employ long takes, limited camera movement, masterful compositions, and slow, precise camera adjustments in place of rapid editing to create immaculate pacing and rhythm within psychologically intense scenarios. This mannerist approach reinforces themes of control and complements carefully constructed, often suffocatingly ideal settings, while incorporating retro kitschy elements such as paisley and plaid to enhance the visual texture. Travis has described his filmmaking as reflecting an anthropological stance rooted in childhood, where he remained an isolated observer who analyzed the people around him. He has explained that his films are not autobiographical but reveal his preoccupations, including a particular interest in playing with sadness and exploring isolated or melancholy characters. This observational perspective informs recurring themes of detachment, adolescent darkness, and the search for hope amid emotional isolation, as seen across his short films. Influences on his work include Peter Greenaway's cheeky formalism and bold use of color, which profoundly impacted him, as well as the strong visual voice of Wes Anderson, though he did not attempt direct emulation. In his early short films, Travis's directorial voice often imposed formal devices on the characters, while his approach in later projects sought to balance a tongue-in-cheek formalism with narratives that allow characters to breathe and let style serve the story.

References

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