Joe Dante is a graduate of the Philadelphia College of Art. After a stint as a film reviewer, he began his filmmaking apprenticeship in
1974 as trailer editor for
Roger Corman's New World Pictures. He made his directorial debut in 1976 with
Hollywood Boulevard (1976) (co-directed with
Allan Arkush), a thinly disguised spoof of New World exploitation pictures, shot in ten days for $60,000.
In 1977 Dante made his solo debut as a film director with
Piranha (1978), which went on to become one of the company's biggest hits and was distributed throughout the rest of the world by United Artists. During his tenure at New World, Dante edited
Ron Howard's directorial debut
Grand Theft Auto (1977) and co-wrote the original story for
Rock 'n' Roll High School (1979).
For Avco-Embassy Dante next directed the highly praised werewolf thriller
The Howling (1981), followed by the It's a Good Life segment of the episodic
Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983).
Having worked with
Steven Spielberg on Twilight Zone, Dante was chosen to helm one of the first Amblin Productions for Warner Bros.
Gremlins (1984) became a runaway hit and grossed more than $200 million worldwide.
Dante followed up with
Explorers (1985) for Paramount, a sci-fi fantasy about three kids who build their own spaceship, and then
Innerspace (1987) for Guber/Peters, Amblin and Warner Bros., an action comedy in which miniaturized test pilot
Dennis Quaid is injected into the body of supermarket clerk
Martin Short.
Tom Hanks starred in Dante's next film for Imagine/Universal,
The 'Burbs (1989), which was followed by
Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990) for Warner Bros. in 1990.
Matinee (1993) featuring
John Goodman as a huckster showman premiering his new horror film during the Cuban Missile Crisis, was a production of Dante and partner
Michael Finnell's Renfield Productions for Universal in 1993.
Dreamworks/Universal's Small Soldiers was released in 1998, followed in 2003 by Warner Bros.
Looney Tunes: Back in Action (2003) featuring one of Dante's favorite actors, Bugs Bunny.
Dante's
Homecoming (2005), debuted in December 2005 to rave reviews from critics and audiences alike and was named to numerous "Top 10" critics lists. The Sitges and Brussels International Film Festivals both honored Homecoming with Special Jury Recognition Awards, and the New Yorker called it the best political film of 2005. More recent work includes
The Screwfly Solution (2006), and
Boo (2007). His new 3D thriller,
The Hole (2009), for Bold Films recently premiered at the Venice Film Festival where it garnered the first-ever award for Best 3D Feature.
Dante also produces the critically-acclaimed webisode/mobile phone series, Trailers from Hell.
Along the way Dante contributed several comedy segments to the multi-part
Amazon Women on the Moon (1987) spoof produced by
John Landis, and directed various episodes of the tv series
Amazing Stories (1985),
The Twilight Zone (1985),
Police Squad! (1982),
Night Visions (2001) and
Picture Windows (1994). He also directed the network pilots for
The Osiris Chronicles (1998) and the NBC series
Eerie, Indiana (1991), on which he was creative consultant throughout its run.
Dante received Cable Ace nominations for his direction of Showtime's
Runaway Daughters (1994) and HBO's
The Second Civil War (1997).