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Scott Waugh
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Scott Waugh (born August 22, 1970)[1] is an American film director, producer, editor and former stunt performer.[2] [3] He won the "10 Directors to Watch" award at the 2012 Palm Springs International Film Festival.[4]
Key Information
He is the son of stuntman Fred Waugh (1932-2012) and younger brother of Ric Roman Waugh.
Filmography
[edit]| Year | Title | Director | Producer | Editor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Navy SWCC | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 2012 | Act of Valor | Yes[a] | Yes | Yes |
| 2014 | Need for Speed | Yes | Executive | Yes |
| 2017 | 6 Below: Miracle on the Mountain | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 2023 | Hidden Strike | Yes | No | No |
| Expend4bles | Yes | No | No | |
| TBA | Runner | Yes | No | No |
- ^ Co-directed with Mike McCoy
References
[edit]- ^ "Scott Waugh". Elcinema. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
- ^ Williams, Owen (June 25, 2012). "Scott Waugh Takes Need For Speed". Empire. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
- ^ "Variety to honor Charlize Theron and "10 Directors to watch" at 2012 Palm Springs International Film Festival". Palm Springs International Film Festival. December 29, 2011. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
External links
[edit]Scott Waugh
View on Grokipediafrom Grokipedia
Early life
Family background
Scott Waugh was born on August 22, 1970, in Los Angeles, California.[8] He is the son of the renowned stuntman Fred Waugh (1932–2012),[9] who doubled for the lead in the 1970s television series The Amazing Spider-Man and began his career as a circus performer.[1] Waugh's older brother, Ric Roman Waugh, is a film director recognized for action thrillers including Snitch (2013).[5] At age 12, Waugh performed his first stunt, riding a bicycle off a garage roof for a television pilot directed by Ron Howard.[1] Waugh grew up immersed in the world of stunts and filmmaking, with the family home in Sylmar, California, equipped with a trapeze and high-fall pads for his father's practice sessions.[1] Surrounded by stunt performers and their families, which he described as "the ultimate playground," Waugh observed his father's work firsthand and absorbed practical insights into film production techniques through everyday family interactions in this high-adrenaline environment.[1] The family's later move to Agua Dulce further reinforced this exposure, where Waugh learned skills like horseback riding and dirt biking amid ongoing stunt activities.[1]Education
Scott Waugh earned a fine arts degree from the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), where he enrolled in the university's film program.[1] This formal education emphasized film production and editing, equipping him with essential technical skills for his future work in stunt coordination and directing.[1] Building on his family's longstanding involvement in the stunt industry, Waugh's studies at UCSB allowed him to channel his practical experiences into structured academic training.[1] The program's curriculum provided foundational knowledge in visual effects, cinematography, and post-production techniques, fostering his interest in action-oriented filmmaking.Career
Stunt performing
Scott Waugh entered the stunt performing industry in the late 1980s, capitalizing on his family's longstanding connections in Hollywood's action sequences. His father, Fred Waugh, was a veteran stuntman and coordinator renowned for doubling as the original Spider-Man in the 1970s television series The Amazing Spider-Man, while his older brother, Ric Roman Waugh, also pursued a career in stunts before transitioning to writing and directing. Growing up immersed in this environment, Scott Waugh joined Stunts Unlimited, the professional organization his father helped found, and quickly established himself through hands-on involvement in high-stakes productions.[1][10][11] Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, Waugh specialized in demanding action sequences involving vehicle maneuvers, combat choreography, and aerial falls across a range of films and television projects. He performed as a stunt double for Andy Garcia in Desperate Measures (1998), executing motorcycle and fight scenes, and contributed to vehicular stunts in blockbusters like Speed (1994), where he participated in bus chases and explosions, and Spider-Man (2002), handling web-slinging and building falls. Other notable credits included stunt work on Batman Forever (1995) for fight and driving sequences. In smaller productions, such as the independent film 12 Bucks (1998), Waugh doubled as a stunt performer, actor, and second unit director, overseeing action logistics. Similarly, in the documentary Step into Liquid (2003), he served as assistant stunt coordinator, managing water-based and surfing-related risks. These roles demanded precision and resilience, often under tight schedules with minimal margin for error.[12][1][13] Waugh's tenure exposed him to the profession's inherent challenges, including frequent injuries from the physical toll of repeated impacts and high-velocity work. He sustained breaks to bones, strains to his back and neck, and other trauma common to stunt performers, which accumulated over nearly two decades and underscored the relentless demands of the job. These experiences emphasized the critical need for rigorous safety measures, such as pre-stunt rehearsals and equipment checks, shaping Waugh's appreciation for protocols that protect performers while delivering authentic action. By 2005, after approximately 25 years in the field—including a stint as president of Stunts Unlimited—Waugh retired from active stunt performing to pursue other creative endeavors.[14][15][14]Transition to directing
Scott Waugh began transitioning from stunt performing to editing and producing in the early 2000s, fully retiring from stunts in 2005 to focus on these roles, leveraging his extensive on-set experience to contribute to narrative-driven projects.[1][14] This transition allowed him to move from physical execution of action sequences to shaping their storytelling through post-production techniques.[16] Waugh's early editing work included the 2003 surfing documentary Step into Liquid, where he served as editor and co-producer, refining his ability to pace high-energy action footage into compelling narratives.[8][17] The film, directed by Dana Brown, featured dynamic sequences of extreme surfing that demanded precise cuts to maintain momentum and emotional depth, skills Waugh applied to action-oriented content.[18] In 2007, Waugh made his directorial debut with the short film Navy SWCC, a self-produced tribute to U.S. Navy Special Warfare Combatant-craft Crewmen that incorporated real training footage from SEAL teams.[19] Co-directed with Mike McCoy, the project marked Waugh's first foray into helming a film, blending documentary-style realism with structured action to highlight military precision and heroism.[20] This work was commissioned by the Navy Recruiting Command and showcased Waugh's growing emphasis on using genuine performers and environments for authenticity.[21] Building on this momentum, Waugh co-founded Bandito Brothers Productions around 2007 with longtime collaborator Mike McCoy, aiming to specialize in authentic action films that draw from real-world expertise. The company focused on projects integrating practical effects and insider knowledge of high-stakes scenarios, setting the stage for Waugh's evolution into feature directing.[5]Major films and projects
Scott Waugh's directorial breakthrough came with the 2012 war film Act of Valor, co-directed with Mike McCoy, which featured active-duty Navy SEALs in lead roles to achieve unparalleled authenticity in its action sequences.[22] The production emphasized real military tactics, with the SEALs serving as both performers and advisors to ensure tactical accuracy, drawing from Waugh's prior experience in military-themed commercials.[23] Made on a $12 million budget, the film grossed over $82 million worldwide, demonstrating the appeal of its grounded approach to military storytelling.[4] In 2014, Waugh adapted the popular video game franchise into Need for Speed, prioritizing practical stunts over digital effects to capture the thrill of high-speed racing. The film was shot on location across multiple U.S. states, including California, Georgia, and Utah, allowing for authentic car chases involving real vehicles and drivers.[24] Waugh's stunt background informed the sequence design, minimizing CGI to focus on tangible vehicular action, such as a climactic multi-car pursuit that highlighted mechanical realism.[1] Waugh explored survival themes in the 2017 drama 6 Below: Miracle on the Mountain, starring Josh Hartnett as a snowboarder lost in a Sierra Nevada blizzard, based on the true story of Eric LeMarque's ordeal.[25] The film marked Waugh's pivot toward inspirational narratives within action frameworks, emphasizing human endurance and personal redemption amid harsh natural elements, with principal photography conducted during actual winter conditions for visual verisimilitude.[26] Waugh's recent projects include the 2023 action-adventure Hidden Strike, where he directed Jackie Chan and John Cena in a story of ex-special forces escorting civilians through Iraq's perilous "Highway of Death," blending high-octane combat with comedic elements.[27] That same year, he helmed Expend4bles, the fourth installment in the Expendables series, assembling an ensemble cast including Jason Statham and Dolph Lundgren to revive the franchise's over-the-top ensemble action style.[28] As of November 2025, Waugh's completed projects include Runner (2025), an action drama starring Alan Ritchson as a high-stakes courier transporting a vital organ (a liver) between two Australian cities while evading a crime syndicate, alongside Owen Wilson, Leila George, Rodrigo Santoro, and Adriana Barraza; production wrapped in Queensland, Australia, in May 2025.[6][29] He is also attached to direct the upcoming action thriller Breakout (2026) featuring Arnold Schwarzenegger.[30] Throughout his filmography, Waugh's work recurs on themes of realism in action sequences, rooted in his decades as a stunt performer, which allows for visceral, practical execution over reliance on visual effects.[1] His collaborations with military advisors, particularly in Act of Valor, extend this commitment to authenticity, influencing tactical precision in combat depictions across projects.[23]Filmography
Feature films
Scott Waugh has directed several feature films, emphasizing practical stunts and authentic action sequences drawn from his background as a stunt performer. His directorial work often integrates innovative stunt coordination to heighten realism and tension in high-stakes scenarios.[31]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | Act of Valor | Director, Producer, Editor | Budget: $12 million; worldwide gross: $82.5 million. Waugh's direction featured real active-duty Navy SEALs performing their own stunts for unprecedented authenticity in combat sequences, blending documentary-style realism with narrative fiction.[32][33][34] |
| 2014 | Need for Speed | Director, Executive Producer, Editor | Budget: $66 million; worldwide gross: $203.3 million. The film was shot on location across the U.S. and Europe using practical effects for car chases, with Waugh overseeing over 300 real vehicles in stunts to capture high-speed authenticity without heavy reliance on CGI.[35][36][1] |
| 2017 | 6 Below: Miracle on the Mountain | Director, Producer, Editor | Worldwide gross: $641,499. Waugh directed survival sequences in extreme Sierra Nevada conditions, integrating on-location stunts to convey isolation and peril in the protagonist's ordeal.[37][25][38] |
| 2023 | Hidden Strike | Director | Budget: $80 million; worldwide gross: $2.2 million. Waugh coordinated elaborate action set pieces in desert environments, leveraging his stunt expertise for seamless integration of fight choreography between leads Jackie Chan and John Cena.[27][39] |
| 2023 | Expend4bles | Director | Budget: $100 million; worldwide gross: $51 million. The film showcased Waugh's direction of ensemble action, with practical explosions and hand-to-hand combat stunts emphasizing the franchise's over-the-top style.[40][28] |
| 2026 | Breakout | Director | Upcoming action thriller starring Arnold Schwarzenegger as a man attempting to break his stepson out of a foreign prison.[41][42] |
| TBA | Runner | Director | Upcoming action thriller starring Alan Ritchson and Owen Wilson; production focuses on high-tension courier missions with anticipated stunt-driven sequences in urban and remote settings. Production wrapped in May 2025.[43][44] |
Other credits
Scott Waugh's early career in stunts and post-production roles laid the foundation for his transition into directing, honing his skills in capturing high-adrenaline action sequences through practical effects and dynamic editing. As a stunt performer from 1982 to 2005, he contributed to numerous action films, often uncredited, which provided hands-on experience in choreographing and executing dangerous sequences that later informed his authentic approach to filmmaking.[45] His work editing documentaries on extreme sports, such as surfing and off-road racing, refined his techniques for pacing intense visuals and building narrative tension, building a portfolio that attracted collaborators like Mike McCoy for joint projects.[46][47]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1991 | Hook | Stunt Double (Rufio) | Doubled for Dante Basco in Steven Spielberg's fantasy adventure.[5] |
| 1993 | Last Action Hero | Stunt Performer | Contributed to action sequences in Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle.[48][5] |
| 1997 | U-Turn | Stunt Double | Uncredited stunt work on Oliver Stone's thriller.[49] |
| 1998 | Desperate Measures | Stunt Double | Supporting stunt role in action thriller.[49] |
| 1998 | 12 Bucks | Actor (Johnny), Producer, Assistant Director | Low-budget drama; also served as second unit director.[50][51] |
| 2002 | xXx | Assistant Stunt Coordinator | Contributed to action sequences in Vin Diesel vehicle.[49][50] |
| 2002 | Spider-Man | Stunt Performer | Uncredited stunts in Sam Raimi's superhero film.[52] |
| 2003 | Step Into Liquid | Editor, Co-Producer, Second Unit Director | Surfing documentary; editing focused on high-energy wave sequences.[53][54] |
| 2004 | Torque | Assistant Stunt Coordinator | Motorcycle action film.[49] |
| 2004 | Spartan | Stunt Double | Political thriller directed by David Mamet.[49] |
| 2005 | Mr. & Mrs. Smith | Utility Stunts | Action-comedy with Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie.[49][50] |
| 2005 | Dust to Glory | Editor, Producer, Second Unit Director | Documentary on Baja 1000 off-road race; emphasized fast-paced editing of vehicular action.[55][56] |
| 2007 | Navy SWCC | Director, Producer, Editor | Short documentary film on Navy Special Warfare Combatant-craft Crewmen.[57] |
Awards and honors
| Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | Palm Springs International Film Festival | 10 Directors to Watch | Act of Valor | Won[58] |
| 2024 | Golden Raspberry Awards | Worst Director | Expend4bles | Nominated[59] |
