Greg Strause grew up in the suburbs of Chicago. Greg and his brother
Colin Strause began experimenting with
visual effects in their early teens. In 1995, Greg moved to Los Angeles
and started working on the special effects for
The X-Files (1993). From there he
moved on to big-budget hits such as
The Nutty Professor (1996),
Volcano (1997), and the iceberg sequence
of the Academy Award-winning
Titanic (1997). He then broke into the
music video and commercial arena, handling the special effects for
artists such as
U2,
Britney Spears, and
Aerosmith as well as spots for Nike, Jeep, and
Pepsi. In 2000, Colin won a MTV Video Music Award for Best Art
Direction for the
Red Hot Chili Peppers' video,
"Californication." This led the brothers to start directing under the
moniker "The Brothers Strause," and their Linkin Park clip "Crawling"
was nominated for Best Direction and Best Rock Video at the 2001 VMAs.
Other artists they have directed for include
A Perfect Circle,
Nickelback,
Disturbed, and
Staind.
Their visual effects company [Hydraulx] is at the forefront of the
Industry delivering ground-breaking work on the blockbusters
Fantastic Four (2005),
Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003),
and
The Day After Tomorrow (2004),
for which Greg won a British Academy Award (BAFTA).
The Brothers have recently directed spots for Coca Cola, Ford, The
United States Marine Corps, Toyota, Universal Studios and Sony
PlayStation's "God of War." Their latest music video for A Perfect
Circle's "Passive" marked their second collaboration with the band. The
video was shot almost entirely with thermal cameras and featured on the
Constantine soundtrack and DVD.