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Jason Mann
Jason Mann
from Wikipedia

Jason Mann is an American film director and screenwriter. In November 2014 it was announced that Mann had won Project Greenlight's season 4 contest and would direct The Leisure Class for HBO.[1][2]

Personal life

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Jason Mann grew up in San Mateo County, and attended Burlingame High School in Burlingame, California. Mann received an MFA in Film Directing from Columbia University School of the Arts and a BA in Film Production from Loyola Marymount University.[1][3]

Career

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Mann's short film Delicacy premiered at the Austin, Telluride, and Tribeca film festivals in 2012 and 2013.[1] Another short film, The Leisure Class, premiered at the Raindance Film Festival in 2013.[1][2]

In November 2014, it was announced that Mann had won, with his short film Delicacy, Project Greenlight's season 4 contest to direct a film for HBO.[1][2] At the time, Mann was in his fourth-year at the Columbia University School of the Arts.[3] Originally the contest winner was going to direct Not A Pretty Woman, a broad comedy screenplay.[4] However, after Mann shared the script for a full-length version of a short film he had written, it was decided he would instead direct that script, The Leisure Class, which was released on HBO in 2015.[5][6]

References

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from Grokipedia
Jason Mann is an American filmmaker, best known for directing and co-writing the HBO feature film The Leisure Class (2015), which was produced by Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, and the Farrelly brothers through Miramax and Pearl Street Films. A winner of HBO's Project Greenlight reality series revival—an eight-episode docuseries documenting the making of his debut feature—Mann's victory propelled him into the spotlight as an emerging talent in independent cinema. His short film Delicacy (2012) premiered at prestigious festivals including Telluride and Tribeca, earning critical attention for its storytelling. Born and raised in , in the , Mann developed an early interest in the arts through involvement in the local punk and music scenes during his high school years. He served as a vocalist in the punk band What Life Makes Us and drummer in the band , experiences that influenced his dynamic approach to performance and audience engagement in filmmaking. Mann holds a in Film Production from (2007) and a in Film Directing from . In addition to directing, Mann is an accomplished cinematographer and editor; he contributed to the 2023 Netflix Radical Wolfe, based on a article, which explores the life and work of author . Honored in Francis Ford Coppola's Zoetrope: All-Story Screenplay Competition, Mann has also worked on other projects blending narrative and documentary styles, solidifying his reputation for innovative visual storytelling.

Early life and education

Upbringing

Jason Mann was born and raised in Burlingame, California, a suburb in the San Mateo County area south of San Francisco, where he grew up as a Bay Area native. As of 2015, his parents resided in Burlingame, providing a stable and supportive family environment that encouraged his creative pursuits. Mann has credited this upbringing in Burlingame for nurturing his early creativity, describing it as a grounded setting in a middle-class community. He attended local public schools in the area, including Crocker Middle School in nearby Hillsborough and Burlingame High School, which offered a typical suburban educational experience. During his teenage years, Mann became deeply involved in the Bay Area's punk music scene, serving as a vocalist in the hardcore punk band What Life Makes Us and as a drummer in the ska-influenced group Optimus Prime, both of which performed locally and toured the region, including shows in San Francisco and Redwood City. He also participated in The Burmese Crowd, releasing a self-titled album in 2005 that captured his early creative energy through raw, interactive performances typical of the punk ethos. These music activities sparked Mann's initial interest in creative expression, with the close-knit, high-energy punk environment fostering his passion for performance and collaboration. Around the time of and into his high school years, he began transitioning from music to , drawn by the similarities between recording music and crafting visual stories. This shift marked the evolution of his punk roots into a broader artistic curiosity, laying the groundwork for his later pursuits in film.

Education

Jason Mann earned a in from (LMU) in 2007. Growing up in motivated his pursuit of near the industry's epicenter. At LMU's School of Film and Television, he participated in hands-on production classes emphasizing practical , including access to state-of-the-art facilities and real-world shooting experiences that built foundational skills in directing, , and . A notable student project from this period was his On the Revolutions of Heavenly Spheres (2007), which premiered at film festivals including the Palm Springs International Festival of Short Films, the Boston Film Festival, and the , showcasing early experimentation with storytelling. After completing his undergraduate degree, Mann pursued a Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) in Film Directing at Columbia University School of the Arts in New York. The program's rigorous coursework, including core classes in storytelling, directing actors, and thesis workshops, refined his techniques through frame-by-frame feedback and instruction from working professionals. Columbia's emphasis on one-on-one mentorship and industry connections facilitated networking with alumni and festival opportunities, enhancing his professional development in independent and Hollywood filmmaking. Mann earned an M.F.A. in Film Directing from Columbia University School of the Arts, with student projects contributing to his portfolio of early shorts that explored dramatic narratives.

Film career

Early pursuits

Following his involvement in the Bay Area's punk music scene during high school and early adulthood, where he served as vocalist for the band What Life Makes Us and drummer for the ska-influenced , as well as a member of The Burmese Crowd—which released a self-titled album in 2005—Jason Mann shifted his creative focus to filmmaking. A native of , Mann pursued formal training at (LMU), earning a BA in in 2007. This transition was marked by informal video experiments that bridged his music roots with visual storytelling, allowing him to explore narrative techniques outside traditional punk performance. Mann directed his first short film, On the Revolutions of Heavenly Spheres, in 2007 while completing his undergraduate studies at LMU. The 16-minute drama, starring Randolph Mantooth and Peggy Dunne, centered on interpersonal dynamics amid cosmic themes, serving as a student project that honed his directorial voice. Shortly after graduation, Mann took on entry-level roles in independent projects to build technical proficiency, working as a cinematographer and editor on shorts like Bad Dads (2011), a series of comedic vignettes, and contributing to documentary efforts that emphasized practical skills in low-budget environments. These positions, often in collaborative indie circles, provided hands-on experience in lighting, framing, and post-production, essential for his evolving craft. After earning an MFA in Film Directing from , Mann co-wrote and directed the short in 2012 as a first-year program exercise. Developed with collaborator Frieda Luk, the script underwent six months of workshopping, including a test shoot with New York actors to calibrate humor and visual composition. Production occurred over two summers in an English forest, scouted during a prior feature trip, with Michel Dierickx employing a restrained style inspired by historical dramas like Queen Margot. Shot on the Arriflex Alexa digital camera due to financial constraints—despite Mann's preference for —the 11-minute film featured a largely unpaid crew, supported by co-producer Tina Shand, highlighting the resourcefulness required in student-led endeavors. Delicacy premiered at the in 2012, followed by screenings at the Film Festival in 2013 (New York Premiere) and the in 2013. Throughout his early pursuits, Mann faced significant hurdles in and distribution for short films, relying on resources, personal networks, and deferred payments, which limited scope and reach—exemplified by the modest expectations for of works like his 2007 short. These obstacles underscored the precarious nature of independent shorts, where securing even basic production support often demanded creative compromises.

Project Greenlight breakthrough

In November 2014, Jason Mann was announced as the winner of Season 4, selected from hundreds of submissions based on his "Delicacy." The contest, revived by and executive produced by and , chose Mann through a process involving online voting on and evaluations by a panel that included filmmakers Peter and , producer , and producer Effie Brown. This victory provided Mann with the opportunity to direct his first , fully funded at a budget of $3 million. Mann co-wrote and directed (2015), a that explores themes of class disparity, family expectations, and through the story of a charming Englishman seeking to marry into an affluent American , only for his eccentric brother to disrupt the plans. Co-written with Pete Jones, a previous winner, the script drew from Mann's earlier short film of the same name and underwent revisions during pre-production to refine its comedic tone and character dynamics. Produced by Damon and Affleck for , the film marked Mann's directorial debut as a feature-length project. The production process was extensively documented in the HBO docu-series revival of , which aired from September to November 2015 and highlighted challenges such as script revisions to address pacing and diversity concerns, casting decisions amid budget constraints, and on-set tensions between Mann's perfectionist approach and producer Effie Brown's push for practical adjustments. Mann's insistence on authentic techniques, including avoiding digital effects, led to clashes but also underscored his commitment to visual . premiered on HBO on October 29, 2015, serving as the culmination of the season and Mann's entry into professional feature filmmaking. The mentorship from Damon, Affleck, and industry executives like the significantly influenced Mann's directing style, encouraging him to balance artistic vision with collaborative realities while reinforcing his focus on character-driven and precise shot composition. Affleck, in particular, praised Mann's potential early on, noting his ability to craft compelling narratives under pressure. This guidance helped shape Mann's debut, emphasizing thematic depth in exploring social facades without compromising the film's lighthearted essence.

Later projects

Following his breakthrough with , Jason Mann expanded his career into , producing, and collaborative roles across and independent features. In 2023, Mann served as an editor and graphics contributor on Radical Wolfe, a tribute to author directed by Richard Dewey and based on Michael Lewis's Vanity Fair article "How Became... ." The film features interviews with Lewis and other figures who knew , along with narration by , and was named one of Variety's best of the year before streaming on . Mann is currently directing and producing the feature documentary The Price of Love, which remains in production through his company In Theory Films. He now heads creative development for Steak & Rosé Films, a focused on narrative features, and holds producer credits on several upcoming projects including ROXY, The Lookout, and Wallpaper. Post-2015, Mann broadened his involvement in independent films by taking on and editing roles, such as , director of , and editor for branding videos like NHCP and campaigns including Our Island Home and Aging on an Island, as well as co-directing and editing Meet Your Farmer. This shift reflects Mann's evolution toward producing and multifaceted collaborations in documentaries and features, emphasizing creative oversight in smaller-scale productions. In April 2025, Mann participated in industry events by leading "The Art of Film" masterclass in Cyprus, sharing insights on independent filmmaking, scriptwriting, and production.

References

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