Harrison's first two features,
Groove (2000) and
November (2005), both premiered at the
Sundance Film Festival and were released by Sony Pictures Classics.
Groove, a comedy chronicling one night in the San Francisco rave scene,
garnered an Independent Spirit Award nomination for best feature.
November, an experimental drama starring
Courteney Cox,
James Le Gros and
Michael Ealy won the cinematography award
at Sundance, and Harrison was named one of 10 Directors To Watch by
Variety.
Harrison has also collaborated with acclaimed Italian video artist
Francesco Vezzoli, first on a fake
movie trailer for would-be Hollywood remake of Caligula, featuring
Gore Vidal,
Helen Mirren,
Milla Jovovich and
Courtney Love, among others. It premiered
at the Venice Biennale in 2005, played the 2006 Whitney Biennial, and
is part of the Guggenheim's permanent collection. The second was a
satirical documentary Harrison wrote and directed about the life and
death of Vezzoli in the art world, done in the style of an E! True
Hollywood Story. It premiered at London's Tate Modern in 2006 and
continues to be shown at museums and galleries internationally.
In 2005, Harrison formed Map Point Pictures with producing partner
Danielle Renfrew Behrens. In addition to
Harrison's films, the company has produced a number of other
documentaries and features, including
Double Dare (2004), Daldry Calhoun
(2005) and American Son (2009).
Harrison has been a guest lecturer at UCLA, MSU, CCCSA, and Film Arts
Foundation, and has taught the director labs at Film Independent. He
has also served on numerous film festival juries, including The
Sundance Film Festival. He lives in Los Angeles.