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Douglas TrumbullApril 16, 1994
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Stanley TucciMarch 10, 2000
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Tony WaltonMarch 14, 1999
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Sam MendesJuly 8, 2002
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Todd HaynesNovember 3, 2002
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Ang Lee + James SchamusJune 7, 2003
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David CronenbergSeptember 13, 2005
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Sidney LumetOctober 5, 2005
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Neil JordanMarch 7, 2003
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David CronenbergFebruary 10, 2003
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Thelma SchoonmakerNovember 24, 2002
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Mike LeighSeptember 25, 2002
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George A. RomeroJanuary 11, 2000
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Kimberly PeirceJune 9, 2002
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Tim BurtonNovember 19, 2003
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Tim RobbinsMay 19, 2003
Sam Mendes July 8, 2002
Sam Mendes was an acclaimed British theater director before making an astonishing screen debut with American Beauty (1999), a satirical, compassionate, highly theatrical dark comedy set in contemporary American suburbia. The film, starring Kevin Spacey and Annette Bening, won five Academy Awards, including Best Director and Best Picture. For his second film, Road to Perdition, Mendes ventured into a mythological American landscape to create a 1930s period film about gangsters, fathers and sons, violence, and redemption. Exquisitely crafted and deeply felt, Road to Perdition further establishes Mendes as a distinctive cinematic stylist, and as a remarkable collaborator. He talks about working with two screen icons—Tom Hanks and Paul Newman—and about his creative partnership with the great cinematographer Conrad Hall, who received a posthumous Academy Award for Road to Perdition.