David Mamet
Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in) for David Mamet. If you have any corrections or additions, please email us at corrections@meninmovies.com. We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.

Movie Credits
Joan of Bark: The Dog that Saved France (2007)
The Wall (2006)
[ Jordan Bridges ][ Anson Mount ][ Robert Patrick ][ Eric Balfour ][ Dennis Haysbert ]
Exposure (2006)
[ Robert Patrick ][ Dennis Haysbert ]
Unannounced (2006)
[ Robert Patrick ][ Dennis Haysbert ]
Eating the Young (2006)
[ Robert Patrick ][ Dennis Haysbert ]
Edmond (2005)
[ William H Macy ][ Dylan Walsh ][ Bokeem Woodbine ][ William H. Macy ][ Joe Mantegna ]
Spartan (2004)
[ Clark Gregg ][ William H Macy ][ Val Kilmer ][ William H. Macy ][ Aaron Stanford ]
Heist (2001)
[ Gene Hackman ][ Sam Rockwell ][ Andrew Stevens ][ Danny DeVito ][ Delroy Lindo ]
Hannibal (2001)
[ Anthony Hopkins ][ Ray Liotta ][ Gary Oldman ][ Ridley Scott ][ Giancarlo Giannini ]
State and Main (2000)
[ Alec Baldwin ][ Clark Gregg ][ William H Macy ][ Philip Seymour Hoffman ][ William H. Macy ]
Lakeboat (2000)
[ Robert Forster ][ Andy Garcia ][ Denis Leary ][ Charles Durning ][ Joe Mantegna ]
The Winslow Boy (1999)
[ Jeremy Northam ]
Lansky (1999)
[ Anthony Lapaglia ][ Eric Roberts ][ Ryan Merriman ][ Richard Dreyfuss ][ Matthew Settle ]
Ronin (1998)
[ Sean Bean ][ Robert De Niro ][ Stellan Skarsgård ][ Jonathan Pryce ][ Jean Reno ]
The Spanish Prisoner (1997)
[ Ben Gazzara ][ Clark Gregg ][ Campbell Scott ][ Steve Martin ][ Ed O'Neill ]
The Edge (1997)
[ Alec Baldwin ][ Anthony Hopkins ][ Harold Perrineau ]
Wag the Dog (1997)
[ Woody Harrelson ][ Dustin Hoffman ][ William H Macy ][ Craig T Nelson ][ Robert De Niro ]
American Buffalo (1996)
[ Dennis Franz ][ Dustin Hoffman ]
Oleanna (1994)
[ William H Macy ][ William H. Macy ]
Texan (1994)
[ Dabney Coleman ][ William H Macy ][ Treat Williams ][ William H. Macy ][ Brian Doyle-Murray ]
Vanya on 42nd Street (1994)
[ Wallace Shawn ][ George Gaynes ]
A Life in the Theater (1993)
[ Matthew Broderick ][ Jack Lemmon ]
Hoffa (1992)
[ Kevin Anderson ][ Cliff Gorman ][ Bruno Kirby ][ Jack Nicholson ][ John C. Reilly ]
Glengarry Glen Ross (1992)
[ Alan Arkin ][ Alec Baldwin ][ Ed Harris ][ Jack Lemmon ][ Al Pacino ]
The Water Engine (1992)
[ William H Macy ][ Martin Sheen ][ Treat Williams ][ William H. Macy ][ John Mahoney ]
Homicide (1991)
[ William H Macy ][ William H. Macy ][ Ving Rhames ][ Joe Mantegna ]
Uncle Vanya (1991)
[ Ian Holm ][ David Warner ]
We're No Angels (1989)
[ Bruno Kirby ][ Sean Penn ][ James Russo ][ Robert De Niro ][ John C. Reilly ]
Things Change (1988)
[ Clark Gregg ][ William H Macy ][ William H. Macy ][ J.T. Walsh ][ Joe Mantegna ]
House of Games (1987)
[ William H Macy ][ William H. Macy ][ J.T. Walsh ][ Joe Mantegna ]
The Untouchables (1987)
[ John Barrowman ][ Sean Connery ][ Kevin Costner ][ Andy Garcia ][ Robert De Niro ]
About Last Night... (1986)
[ James Belushi ][ Rob Lowe ]
The Verdict (1982)
[ Paul Newman ][ Bruce Willis ][ James Mason ][ Jack Warden ][ Sidney Lumet ]
The Postman Always Rings Twice (1981)
[ Jack Nicholson ][ Christopher Lloyd ][ John Cho ][ Michael Lerner ][ Brion James ]
A Life in the Theater (1979)

 

Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright David Mamet is one of a handful of American playwrights whose work has found almost as much success on the screen as it has on the stage. Noted for his spare, gritty work that reflects the hardened attitudes of his native Chicago and often revolves around domineering male characters and their macho posturing, Mamet has time and again spurred both discussion and controversy, inciting particularly angry reactions from feminists.Born in Chicago on November 30, 1947, Mamet studied at Vermont's Goddard College and the Neighborhood Playhouse School of Theatre in New York. He returned to his hometown to found the St. Nicholas Theatre Company and also worked for a time as the artistic director of the famed Goodman Theatre. Mamet first earned acclaim in 1976 for a trio of Off-Off Broadway plays, The Duck Variations, Sexual Perversity in Chicago, and America Buffalo. The latter two works were later adapted for the screen, the first becoming About Last Night (1986, it was not adapted by Mamet), and the latter released in 1996 with a script by the playwright himself. Mamet began writing for the screen in 1981 with a re-make of The Postman Always Rings Twice, his script emphasizing the base sexuality and brutal violence of the material in a way that the original 1947 film could not. After winning a Pulitzer for his play Glengarry Glen Ross in 1984 (a damning indictment of American business practices, it was made into a film in 1992 with Mamet's own script), Mamet had his first true screen success as a screenwriter with Brian De Palma's The Untouchables in 1987. That same year, he earned further critical acclaim for his directorial debut, House of Games, a crime thriller starring Mamet's then-wife Lindsay Crouse as a psychologist caught up in an elaborate con game.After directing two more celebrated features, the (uncharacteristic) comedy Things Change (1988) and Homicide (1991), Mamet turned primarily to screenwriting (stepping back behind the camera to direct an adaptation of his controversial play Oleanna in 1994), giving voice to such films as Hoffa (1992), Malcolm X (1992), and Vanya on 42nd Street (1994). In 1997, his screenplay for Barry Levinson's political satire Wag the Dog earned Mamet both Oscar and Golden Globe nominations for Best Screenplay. That same year, he returned to directing with The Spanish Prisoner, a twisting, inventive thriller that had the added attraction of Steve Martin in an uncharacteristically dark performance.After writing the fairly unsuccessful The Edge (1997), an adventure drama starring Anthony Hopkins and Alec Baldwin, Mamet returned to the screen in 1999 with The Winslow Boy. Despite a radical change in material for Mamet — an Edwardian courtroom drama originally written by Terence Rattigan, it was worlds apart from the raw, foul-mouthed work to which Mamet owed his fame — it was widely embraced by the critics, and stood as a sizable testament to the playwright's versatility. If the subsequent State and Main didn't quite live up to expectations, Mamet could at least his screenplay for the popular Silence of the Lambs sequel Hannibal yielded a box office hit. The following year Mamet once again stepped behind the camera for the incisive crime drama Heist to moderate success. Embraced by crime buffs but largely ignored by the rest of the moviegoing public, Heist nevertheless offered memorable performances by such notable actors as Gene Hackman, Danny De Vito and Sam Rockwell. As the prolific writer/director became increasingly comfortable pulling duble duty, audiences eagerly anticipated the release of the political thriller Spartan in 2004.


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