John Fucile is the co-founder of SmackDabMedia - a traditional and new
media production company. In December 2003, Carmichael Films optioned
the screenplay to Fucile's debut feature film "Loaded", co-written with
Simon Fraser, to be directed by Fucile with Seth Carmichael and Chris
Pizzo producing. Fucile's short film "Beat the Blue" was awarded the
Global Vision Award at the 2002 World Population Film & Video Festival,
and was an Official Selection at The Ashland Independent Film Festival,
The Big Bear Lake International Film Festival, Ocularis, The
Independents Film Festival and honored as part of Anthology Film
Archives' NewFilmmakers Series in New York City. His latest short film
"Zero" received its premiere release in the now infamous DVD
compilation for which Fucile was arrested in September 2003. Both
motion pictures demonstrate the power and ability of digital video to
stand alone, separate from film as a narrative tool. Fucile was a
Departmental Fellow and Scholar at New School University in the
Graduate Media Studies program where he developed the digital video
narrative production model, Circadian Cinema - The Art of Making Motion
Pictures a Biological Activity.
In 2001, International Film Seminars ( IFS) awarded Fucile a Robert
Flaherty Emerging Filmmaker grant. Fucile has lived in Toronto, New
York City and Los Angeles where he co-wrote The Second Coming for
director Ash. He also attended Canada's pre-eminent film school,
Ryerson University, quickly making a name for himself as a
much-sought-after music video director. He was nominated four times and
won one MuchMusic Video Award (Hard Rock Video of the Year), producing
and directing through his own company such acts as 13 Engines, Glueleg,
I Mother Earth and Academy Award-winner Buffy Sainte-Marie.
John worked as a professional standup comedian as well as writer and
performer with the hugely popular sketch troupe The Komic-Kazes. From
the early- to mid-90s, they performed hundreds of shows across Canada
and were nominated for Comedy Act of the Year in 1995 by the Canadian
Organization of Campus Activities (COCA). He was also the lead actor in
the television series "Denim Blues" and appeared in the motion pictures
"Princes in Exile" and "The Pianist".