James Glickenhaus
- Writer
- Director
- Producer
Writer/director/producer James Glickenhaus was born on July 24, 1950 in
New York City. He grew up in affluent New Rochelle. James first fell in
love with movies at age eight. Glickenhaus attended Fieldston School in
Riverdale, New York, the University of California, Antioch College in
Yellow Springs, Ohio, and Sarah Lawrence College in New York. James
began his film career making educational and industrial pictures. He
made his theatrical feature debut in the mid 70's with the obscure
horror entry "Suicide Cult." Glickenhaus achieved his biggest
commercial success with the brutal and controversial urban vigilante
opus "The Exterminator." James subsequently directed the violent action
item "The Soldier," the fun Jackie Chan vehicle "The Protector," the
exciting "Shakedown," the so-so "McBain," the creepy thriller
"Slaughter of the Innocents," and the enjoyable sci-fi romp
"Timemaster." Glickenhaus served as the chairman for the film company
SGE Entertainment from 1987 to 1995; this company specialized in both
making and distributing low-budget independent straight-to-video fare.
James was the executive producer for the movies "Maniac Cop,"
"Frankenhooker," both "Basket Case" sequels, "Ring of Steel," and
"Tough and Deadly." He quit the film business in the mid 90's and went
on to become a Wall Street fund manager as well as a limited partner in
the Wall Street firm Glickenhaus and Company. Moreover, James is an
avid collector of rare expensive former racing cars. His son Jesse
Cameron-Glickenhaus appears in three of his movies: "The Protector,"
"Slaughter of the Innocents," and "Timemaster." More recently James
Glickenhaus popped up in a small role in Frank Henenlotter's typically
outrageous "Bad Biology."