Sheldon Lettich was born in New York City, but moved to California at a young
age and grew up in the Los Angeles area. After graduation from high
school he spent nearly four years in the U.S. Marine Corps, serving as
a radio operator in South Vietnam with 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines, and
later with the elite 1st Force Reconnaissance Company based at Camp
Pendleton, California.
He worked his way through college as a professional photographer, and
attended at the American Film Institute's Center for Advanced Film
Studies as a Cinematography Fellow. Although his initial career goal
was to become a director of photography, at the AFI his interests
branched out to encompass writing and directing, which became the two
fields where he found eventual success in the entertainment business.
Based partly upon his experiences in Vietnam, he co-authored the
renowned play, "Tracers," with a group of Vietnam Vets who were also
aspiring actors. First performed on July 4th, 1980 at the Odyssey
Theater in Los Angeles, the play then traveled to Joseph Papp's Public
Theater in New York City, the Steppenwolf Theater in Chicago (directed
by Gary Sinise), the Royal Court Theater in London, and numerous venues
worldwide. It received both Drama Desk Awards and L.A. Drama Critics
Awards, and is still being performed throughout the world.
Around the same time, Lettich was writing numerous spec screenplays.
One of these, co-written with
Josh Becker, subsequently became the cult
classic,
Thou Shalt Not Kill... Except (1985), which starred
Bruce Campbell and
Sam Raimi.
Eventually his screenplays began attracting the attention of producers
in Hollywood. He co-authored the Cold War drama,
Russkies (1987), which was the
first starring role for a young
Joaquin Phoenix. Around the same time he wrote
the screenplay for the now-classic martial arts film,
Bloodsport (1988), which
launched the career of
Jean-Claude Van Damme. One of his Vietnam-based screenplays
caught the eye of
Sylvester Stallone, which resulted in an overall deal with
Stallone's White Eagle Productions, and led to him co-writing
Rambo III (1988)
with Stallone.
The success of Bloodsport not only turned Jean-Claude Van Damme into an
international action star, but it also forged a long and ongoing
friendship with the man who wrote it. Van Damme helped to launch
Lettich's directing career with the film,
Lionheart (1990) , which became Van
Damme's first movie to be released theatrically by a major U.S. studio.
This was followed by
Double Impact (1991), which was filmed in Hong Kong, with
Lettich directing Van Damme in a challenging double role as twin
brothers seeking revenge for their parents' murder.
Lettich next discovered
Mark Dacascos, who made his starring debut in
Only the Strong (1993), a film that introduced the Brazilian martial art of Capoeira
to international audiences. He also directed
Dolph Lundgren in
The Last Patrol (2000), and
Daniel Bernhardt in
Perfect Target (1997).
Continuing his long association with Van Damme, Lettich was a writer
and a producer on the historical French Foreign Legion film,
Legionnaire (1998),
starring Van Damme and shot on location in Morocco. And he directed
The Order (2001), an action-thriller starring Van Damme and
Charlton Heston, which was
filmed on locations in Israel and Bulgaria.
His most recent directorial effort, which he also co-wrote, is
The Hard Corps (2005),
an urban action-romance. Starring Jean-Claude Van Damme and
Vivica A. Fox,
the film was shot on locations around Vancouver, Canada, and on sound
stages in Romania, and was financed and released worldwide by Sony
Pictures Entertainment.
His latest movie is
Max (2015), which he co-wrote with his long-time friend, Boaz Yakin. The movie was directed by Boaz and produced by MGM. It was released nationwide in the USA by Warner Brothers on June 26th, 2015, and by the end of the summer had grossed $43 million. The novelization sold over 100,000 copies. A sequel has been completed.