Ryan Coogler

Ryan Kyle Coogler (born May 23, 1986)[1] is an American filmmaker. He is a recipient of four NAACP Image Awards and four Black Reel Awards, and has been nominated for two Academy Awards, a Golden Globe Award, and a Grammy Award.

Ryan Coogler
Coogler at the 2017 San Diego Comic-Con
Born
Ryan Kyle Coogler

(1986-05-23) May 23, 1986 (age 37)
EducationSt. Mary's College of California
California State University, Sacramento (BA)
University of Southern California (MFA)
Occupations
  • Film director
  • screenwriter
  • producer
Years active2009–present
Spouse
Zinzi Evans
(m. 2016)

He made his feature-length debut with the independent film Fruitvale Station (2013), which won the Grand Jury Prize and the Audience Award for U.S. dramatic film at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. It also won at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival, for Best First Film.[2]

He has since co-written and directed films such as the Rocky series spinoff, Creed (2015), and the Marvel film Black Panther (2018), the latter of which broke numerous box office records and became the highest-grossing film of all time by an African American director.[3] Coogler also co-wrote and directed its sequel Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (2022).

Coogler's films have received widespread acclaim and commercial success.[4] His work has been hailed by critics for centering on often overlooked cultures and characters—most notably African Americans.[5][6] He frequently collaborates with actor Michael B. Jordan, who appeared in all four feature films directed by Coogler, as well as composer Ludwig Göransson, who has scored all of his films.[7]

In 2013, he was included on Time's list of the 30 people under 30 who are changing the world.[8] In 2018, Coogler was named the runner-up of Time's Person of the Year and he was included in the annual Time 100 list of the most influential people in the world.[9] In 2021, Coogler, his wife, Zinzi Coogler, and Sev Ohanian founded multimedia company Proximity Media to create event-driven content across various platforms.[10]

Early life

Coogler was born on May 23, 1986, in Oakland, California. His mother, Joselyn (née Thomas),[1]is a community organizer, and his father, Ira Coogler, is a juvenile hall probation counselor. Both parents graduated from California State University, Hayward. He has two brothers, Noah and Keenan.[11] His uncle, Clarence Thomas, is a third-generation Oakland longshoreman, and the former secretary treasurer of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union.[12]

Coogler lived in Oakland until age eight, when the family moved to Richmond, California.[11]During his youth, he ran track and played football.[13] He went to a private Catholic high school, Saint Mary's College High School in Berkeley, California,[14] and did well in math and science.[15][16]

Coogler attended Saint Mary's College of California in Moraga, California on a football scholarship as a redshirt wide receiver his college freshman semester, intending to major in chemistry.[11] The football players were encouraged to take acreative writing course. Coogler's teacher praised his work, noting that it was very visual, and encouraged him to learn screenwriting.[16][17] As a student athlete coming up in the Bay Area, Coogler befriended and often played against NFL running back Marshawn Lynch.[18]

After Saint Mary's canceled its football program in March 2004,[19] Coogler transferred and earned a scholarship to Sacramento State, where he had 112 receptions for 1,213 yards and 6 touchdowns during his four years playing football.[20] At Sacramento, he obtained a bachelor's degree in finance and also took as many film classes as he could fit in with the rigors of college football. Following graduation, he was accepted into the highly competitive three-year master's program at the USC School of Cinematic Arts, where he made a series of short films.[21][11]

Career

2000s: Early career

While at the USC School of Cinematic Arts, Coogler directed four short films, three of which won or were nominated for various awards. Locks (2009) screened at the Tribeca Film Festival and won the Dana and Albert Broccoli Award for Filmmaking Excellence. Fig (2011), written by Alex George Pickering, won the HBO Short Film Competition at the American Black Film Festival, the DGA Student Film Award, and was nominated for Outstanding Independent Short Film at the Black Reel Awards. Gap (2011), written by Carol S. Lashof, won the Jack Nicholson Award for Achievement in Directing.[citation needed]

2013: Breakthrough

Coogler accepts the U.S. Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic with the crew of Fruitvale Station at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival.

In 2013, Coogler wrote and directed his first feature-length film, Fruitvale Station (originally titled Fruitvale), which told the story of the last 24 hours of the life of Oscar Grant (played by Michael B. Jordan), who was shot to death by a police officer at Oakland's Fruitvale BART station on January 1, 2009. Produced by Oscar-winning actor Forest Whitaker,[22] the film premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the top Audience Award and Grand Jury Prize in the dramatic competition and was released in theatres on July 20, 2013. Made on a budget of $900,000, the film grossed over $17 million worldwide after its theatrical run.[23][24][25]

Coogler in 2013

Peter Travers of Rolling Stone called the film "a gut punch of a movie" and "an unstoppable cinematic force".[26] A. O. Scott of The New York Times wrote that Coogler's "hand-held shooting style evokes the spiritually alert naturalism of Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne".[27] Todd McCarthy of The Hollywood Reporter called it "a compelling debut" and "a powerful dramatic feature film".[28] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film received a score of 94% based on 195 reviews, with a critical consensus that reads: "Passionate and powerfully acted, Fruitvale Station serves as a celebration of life, a condemnation of death, and a triumph for star Michael B. Jordan."[29] The film appeared on several critics' top ten lists of the best films of 2013.[30]

2015: Creed, Expansion into blockbusters

In 2015, Coogler released his second film, Creed, a spin-off of the Rocky films, which Coogler directed and co-wrote with Aaron Covington. The film starred Michael B. Jordan as Apollo Creed's son Donnie, who is trained and mentored by his father's old friend and former rival Rocky Balboa, played by Sylvester Stallone.[31][32][33][34] It received critical acclaim from critics and audiences and grossed over $173 million worldwide. Among its accolades, Stallone won the National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actor, the Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Supporting Actor, and Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture, and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.[31][32]

2018: Black Panther, established career

Coogler promoting Black Panther at the 2016 San Diego Comic Con International

In 2018, Coogler co-wrote and directed the Marvel film Black Panther,[35][36] making him the first African-American Marvel Studios director.[37] The film starred Chadwick Boseman as the titular character, who is crowned king of Wakanda following his father's death, but is challenged by his cousin, Erik Killmonger (played by Michael B. Jordan), who plans to abandon the country's isolationist policies and begin a global revolution.[38][39]

Upon release, the film grossed $1.3 billion worldwide and broke numerous box office records, becoming the highest-grossing film directed by an African-American director, the ninth-highest-grossing film of all time and the second-highest-grossing film of 2018. Black Panther received critical acclaim. Rotten Tomatoes' critical consensus reads, "Black Panther elevates superhero cinema to thrilling new heights while telling one of the MCU's most absorbing stories—and introducing some of its most fully realized characters."[40] The film was also noted for its representation of African-Americans and subject matter related to Afrofuturism.[41]

The film was nominated for seven awards at the 91st Academy Awards, winning three, and received numerous other accolades. Black Panther is the first superhero film to receive an Academy Award nomination for Best Picture, and the first MCU film to win several categories (those being for Best Costume Design, Best Production Design and Best Original Score).

2020s: Continued success

In 2021, Coogler served as a co-producer alongside Charles D. King and Shaka King on the Fred Hampton biopic Judas and the Black Messiah, directed by Shaka King,[42] which focused on the betrayal of Hampton (played by Daniel Kaluuya), chairman of the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party in late-1960s Chicago, by William O'Neal (played by LaKeith Stanfield).

The film received critical acclaim and earned Coogler, Shaka King and Charles D. King an Academy Award nomination for Best Picture, the first for an African-American producing team. Judas and the Black Messiah earned five other Oscar nominations at the 93rd Academy Awards, including Best Supporting Actor for both Daniel Kaluuya and LaKeith Stanfield, and won Best Supporting Actor for Kaluuya and Best Original Song ("Fight for You"). For his performance as Hampton, Kaluuya also won Best Supporting Actor at the Golden Globes, Critics' Choice Awards, Screen Actors Guild Awards, and BAFTA Awards.

That same year, Coogler served as co-producer on the Space Jam sequel Space Jam: A New Legacy, starring LeBron James.[43] The film received generally mixed-to-negative reviews and was a financial failure, grossing $163.7 million worldwide on a budget of $150 million.

Coogler served as co-writer and director on the Black Panther sequel, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, which was released in the United States on November 11, 2022. It was a critical and commercial success, being nominated for five Academy Awards, winning one. [44][45]

Other works and future projects

Coogler served as an executive producer on the ESPN 30 for 30 film The Day the Series Stopped, about Game Three of the 1989 World Series between the San Francisco Giants and the Oakland Athletics, when an earthquake shook the Bay Area to its core.[46]

In January 2013, Coogler said he was working on a graphic novel and young adult novel about an undisclosed subject matter.[47]

Coogler will work with Jordan in the upcoming film Wrong Answer, based on the Atlanta Public Schools cheating scandal.[48]

Coogler served as an executive producer on Creed II, and wrote the story outline for Creed III.[49]

In February 2021, Coogler's production company Proximity Media signed an exclusive five-year deal with Disney to produce content for them, which includes a Disney+ television series based in Black Panther's home country of Wakanda.[50] Proximity will also co-produce the Marvel series Ironheart for the streaming service; star Dominique Thorne will debut as the titular character in Wakanda Forever.[51] More recently, former HBO executive Kalia Booker had joined the television arm of Proximity Media.[52]

In January 2024, it was announced Coogler will work with Jordan for a fifth time on an untitled period genre film based on his original script. The film will be released in theatres on March 7, 2025, by Warner Bros. Pictures.[53]

Personal life

Coogler has worked since age 21 as a counselor with incarcerated youth at San Francisco's Juvenile Hall, following in the footsteps of his father, who has long shared the same occupation.[54] Coogler is also a founding member[55] and supporter of the Blackout For Human Rights campaign, which is committed to addressing racial and human rights violations happening throughout the United States.[56]

Coogler married Zinzi Evans in 2016, with whom he has two children.[57]

In January 2022, Coogler was mistaken as a bank robber and detained by police in Atlanta, Georgia after he tried to withdraw cash by passing a withdrawal slip to a teller in a Bank of America branch. Once his identity was verified with both his California state ID card and his Bank of America card, Coogler was released and the bank issued a statement of apology. According to a number of sources, the teller did not check Coogler's ID to verify if he was the owner of the bank account before notifying a supervisor of a potential robbery in progress.[58][59][60][61]

Filmography

Short films

YearTitleDirectorWriterNotes
2009LocksYesYesAlso actor and sound editor
2011FigYesNo
The SculptorYesYes

Feature films

YearTitleDirectorWriter
2013Fruitvale StationYesYes
2015CreedYesYes
2018Black PantherYesYes
2022Black Panther: Wakanda ForeverYesYes
2025Untitled filmYesYes

Executive producer

Producer

Television

YearTitleDeveloperExecutive
producer
Notes
2014The Day the Series Stopped[46]NoYesTV movie
2021What If...?[63]NoNoEpisode: "What If... T'Challa Became a Star-Lord?"; creative consultant
2024Eyes of Wakanda[50][64]YesYes
TBAIronheart[51]NoYes
TBAX-Files[65]

Other credits

YearTitleRoleNotes
2009On the GrindCamera operatorDocumentary short
2010Get SomeBoom operator, sound editor and sound mixerShort film
2012It's Just Art, BabyCamera operator and grip
2020SoulSpecial thanks[66]

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryNominated workResult
2013Austin Film Critics AssociationBest First FilmFruitvale StationWon
Boston Online Film Critics AssociationBest New FilmmakerWon
Cannes Film FestivalPrix de l'Avenir d'Un Certain RegardWon
Grand Prix d'Un Certain RegardNominated
Caméra d'OrNominated
Chicago Film Critics AssociationMost Promising FilmmakerNominated
Detroit Film Critics SocietyBest BreakthroughNominated
Gotham AwardsBingham Ray Breakthrough Director AwardWon
Las Vegas Film Critics SocietyBreakout Filmmaker of the YearWon
Nantucket Film FestivalVimeo Award for Best Writer/DirectorWon
National Board of ReviewBest Directorial DebutWon
New York Film Critics OnlineBest Debut DirectorWon
Phoenix Film Critics SocietyBreakthrough Performance Behind the CameraNominated
San Francisco Film Critics CircleMarlon Riggs AwardWon
Sundance Film FestivalAudience Award: U.S. DramaticWon
Grand Jury Prize: U.S. DramaticWon
2014Black Reel AwardsOutstanding DirectorNominated
Outstanding Screenplay, Adapted or OriginalNominated
Central Ohio Film CriticsBreakthrough Film ArtistNominated
Independent Spirit AwardsBest First FeatureWon
NAACP Image AwardsOutstanding Directing in a Motion PictureNominated
Satellite AwardsHonorary Satellite AwardWon
2015African-American Film Critics AssociationBest DirectorCreedNominated
Indiana Film Journalists AssociationBest DirectorNominated
Las Vegas Film Critics SocietyBest DirectorNominated
Los Angeles Film Critics AssociationNew Generation AwardWon
NAACP Image AwardOutstanding Directing in a Motion PictureWon
Outstanding Writing in a Motion PictureWon
New York Film Critics OnlineBest DirectorNominated
2016Empire AwardsBest DirectorNominated
2018Saturn AwardsBest DirectorBlack PantherWon
Best Writing (with Joe Robert Cole)Nominated
African-American Film Critics AssociationBest DirectorWon
Alliance of Women Film JournalistsBest Screenplay, Adapted (with Joe Robert Cole)Nominated
San Francisco Film Critics CircleBest Adapted Screenplay (with Joe Robert Cole)Nominated
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics AssociationBest DirectorNominated
Best Adapted Screenplay (with Joe Robert Cole)Nominated
2019Critics' Choice Movie AwardsBest Adapted Screenplay (with Joe Robert Cole)Nominated
Satellite AwardsAuteur AwardWon
Georgia Film Critics AssociationBest Adapted Screenplay (with Joe Robert Cole)Nominated
USC Scripter AwardBest Adapted Screenplay (with Joe Robert Cole)Nominated
Writers Guild of America AwardBest Adapted Screenplay (with Joe Robert Cole)Nominated
Black Reel AwardsOutstanding DirectorWon
Outstanding Screenplay (with Joe Robert Cole)Nominated
2021Academy AwardsBest PictureJudas and the Black MessiahNominated
2022Golden Raspberry AwardsWorst PictureSpace Jam: A New LegacyNominated
Hollywood Music in Media Awards[67]Best Original Song in a Feature Film"Lift Me Up" (from Black Panther: Wakanda Forever)Won
2023Golden Globe Awards[68]Best Original SongNominated
Critics' Choice Movie Awards[69]Best SongNominated
Academy Awards[70]Best Original SongNominated
2024Grammy Awards[71]Best Song Written for Visual MediaNominated

References

External links