Phil Lord and Christopher Miller facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Phil Lord and Christopher Miller
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Lord (left) and Miller (right) at the 2018 San Diego Comic-Con
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Born |
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Alma mater | Dartmouth College |
Occupation | |
Years active | 1998–present |
Spouse(s) | Robyn Murgio (Miller) |
Children | 2 (Miller) |
Awards | Academy Award for Best Animated Feature Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018) |
Philip Anderson Lord (born July 12, 1975) and Christopher Robert Miller (born September 23, 1975) are American filmmakers. They are the creators and co-stars of the adult animated sitcom Clone High (2002–2003, 2023–2024), and the writers and directors of the animated films Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs (2009) and The Lego Movie (2014), as well as the directors of the live-action comedy film 21 Jump Street (2012) and its sequel, 22 Jump Street (2014).
Lord and Miller are best known for working on the film series for Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, The Lego Movie and Spider-Verse, which won them the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature for Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018) and a nomination for the aforementioned award for producing the sequel, Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (2023). They have also worked on the television series The Last Man on Earth (2015–2018) for Fox, Unikitty! (2017–2020) for Cartoon Network, and most recently The Afterparty (2022–2023) for Apple TV+.
Contents
Early life
Lord is from Miami; his mother is a Cuban-born psychologist, and his father retired from the aviation business and before that directed a dance company, Fusion, for 10 years. Miller is from the Seattle area, where his father runs a lumber mill.
Lord and Miller both grew up making short films with an affinity for animation. They both attended Dartmouth College, where they first met, and had separate comics in the school newspaper, The Dartmouth. Lord was a member of Amarna, a co-ed undergraduate society while Miller was a brother at Alpha Chi Alpha. During his time in college, Miller met his girlfriend, now wife.
During their time at Dartmouth, the school paper published a profile on Miller, which caught the attention of Michael Eisner, then chairman of Disney. According to Lord, Eisner brought the profile to the attention of his fellow Disney executives who offered to set up a meeting with Miller. Miller agreed to the meeting as long as he could bring Lord. After three months, the two moved to Los Angeles and after one meeting were offered a two-year development deal at Walt Disney Television Animation.
Career
2000s
Though nothing they pitched made it to air, they produced the pilot to Clone High, which was subsequently dropped by Fox. After they wrote and produced on a series of sitcoms, MTV informed the duo that they were interested in purchasing a 13-episode season of Clone High. Although the show was met with acclaim, MTV canceled the series after hunger strike protests occurred in India over the show's portrayal of Gandhi as a motor-mouthed partier.
In 2003, the two were tapped to write a screenplay for what would become their first feature film, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs. After a year working on the script, they were fired for story issues and replaced with new writers, who after a year were also fired. Lord and Miller were then re-hired in 2006. The two completely redid the script, this time with the creative input of their crew. The new draft had the protagonist as a failed inventor who wanted to prove himself to his town. The two were almost fired again after Amy Pascal, the head of Sony Pictures at the time, criticized the film for a lack of story. Although the film succeeded on the comedic front in the animatic stage, Pascal cited the lack of an anchoring relationship in the film as a failure in the story telling. Unable to create new characters and environments to suit the new story demands, the two elevated the character of the tackle shop extra to be the protagonist's father, thereby creating the relationship Pascal had requested. The pair's experience on Cloudy taught them two valuable lessons: the power of creative collaboration and the importance of emotion in a story.
Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs was released in 2009 to positive reviews.
2010s
After Cloudy was released, the two sought to try to make something different and pitched themselves as possible directors for the 21 Jump Street script that Michael Bacall and Jonah Hill had written. The studio agreed and the two directed their first live-action R-rated film, released to critical and popular acclaim, which led to the production of a sequel titled 22 Jump Street.
In an interview with Robert K. Elder for his book The Best Film You've Never Seen, Lord stated that "in an animated feature, you remake the movie three or four times, and it's really easy to get bummed out that the way you did it before didn't get greenlit, didn't get paid, and you're making a totally different version of that movie."
During the production of 21 Jump Street, they pitched a take on a possible Lego film to Dan Lin. Lin and Warner Bros. loved the take, so Lord and Miller wrote and eventually directed their third feature film together, The Lego Movie. The duo were picked by Warner Bros. to write the script for the upcoming superhero film The Flash. The duo were also picked by Sony Pictures Animation in 2015 to create an animated Spider-Man film, with the option to direct. The film was eventually made as Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018), which the duo produced and which Lord co-wrote.
The duo have recently developed a live-action/animated series, Son of Zorn, for Fox, with Jason Sudeikis voicing the lead role of animated character Zorn, and Johnny Pemberton and Cheryl Hines playing the live-action roles. They are also producing a cable-TV drama based on the popular NPR/This American Life spinoff podcast Serial.
Also, they produced an R-rated animated Netflix original film called America: The Motion Picture alongside Will Allegra, Matt Thompson, Adam Reed, Channing Tatum, Reid Carolin and Peter Kiernan from a screenplay by David Callaham and directed by Thompson.
In January 2017, Lord and Miller began directing the then-untitled film Solo: A Star Wars Story, a standalone Star Wars movie based on the Han Solo character. On June 20, 2017 it was reported that they had been fired from the project by Lucasfilm, after over four-and-a-half months of filming, about three-quarters through principal photography. Lucasfilm announced that "creative differences" were the reason, with Entertainment Weekly reporting that Lord and Miller were going off-script and trying to make the film into more of a comedy. They were unwilling to compromise with Lucasfilm and writer Lawrence Kasdan on the direction of the film, preferring their vision. Two days later, Ron Howard was announced as the replacement, to complete the film and reshoots. Lord and Miller received executive-producer credits on Solo: A Star Wars Story.
In November 2017, Lord and Miller commented on their departure from Solo: A Star Wars Story. Lord stated "The experience of shooting the movie was wonderful. We had the most incredible cast and crew and collaborators. [...] We're really proud of the work we did on the movie and we wish everybody the best." Miller added "As Phil said, we had such a great relationship with cast and crew, we were really rooting for them. After we took a much-needed vacation, we got back into it and now we're writing and producing a sequel to The Lego Movie and producing a Miles Morales animated Spider-Man."
2020s–present
In 2021, Lord and Miller produced two animated films that were distributed through Netflix. The first was The Mitchells vs. the Machines for Sony Pictures Animation. They also produced an R-rated animated Netflix original film called America: The Motion Picture alongside Will Allegra, Matt Thompson, Adam Reed, Channing Tatum, Reid Carolin and Peter Kiernan from a screenplay by David Callaham and directed by Thompson.
In June 2020, it was reported that Lord and Miller would be developing an eight-episode television series titled The Afterparty for Apple TV+. The series is a murder mystery comedy set at a high school reunion where each episode features a retelling of the same night told through a different character's point of view. Miller created and directed the series, while serving as an executive producer alongside Lord. The series premiered on January 28, 2022, to critical acclaim.
On November 1, 2019, it was announced that Lord and Miller would be returning as producers and writers for Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, which was released on June 2, 2023. In December 2021, Lord and Miller revealed that Across the Spider-Verse was being split into two parts after they had written down the story they wanted to tell for the sequel and realized that it was too much for a single film. Work on both parts was taking place simultaneously, or at least believed to be until June 2023 when animators claimed they were overworked to complete Part One, with Part Two since renamed to Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse. A release date has yet to be announced, as the film was removed from the release schedule on July 28, 2023, reportedly due to the then-ongoing 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike. Its original release date of March 29, 2024, was taken by Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire. Recording of voice lines were set to resume on November 9, 2023, following the resolution of the SAG-AFTRA strike, and production was confirmed by Miller to have resumed the following month.
On July 2, 2020, it was announced that MTV Entertainment Studios was developing a revival of Clone High, and that original series creators, Lord, Miller, and Bill Lawrence would be involved with the project. In February 2021, HBO Max ordered two seasons of the revival, the first of which premiered on May 23, 2023.
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Future projects
On May 15, 2020, Variety reported that Lord and Miller are attached to direct a film adaptation of Andy Weir's next novel Project Hail Mary for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, with Ryan Gosling attached to star in the leading role and Amy Pascal producing. Filming began in June 2024 in the United Kingdom. The film is scheduled to be released on March 20, 2026.
In May 2021, they made a five-year deal with Sony Pictures Television to develop an animated Marvel series, including a possible Into the Spider-Verse series.
In October 2023, writer Dennis E. Taylor, author of the Bobiverse series, announced that a potential adaptation had been optioned to Lord Miller Productions for distribution through Universal Pictures.
Other projects
Lord co-wrote the comic Spider-Man Annual #1, marking his first involvement on a comic book; he and Miller also co-wrote a Marvel comic celebrating the company's 80th anniversary, marking Miller's first time writing a comic book.
In September 2020, it was announced that a live-action television series based on the character Silk was in development, with both Lord and Miller serving as executive producers alongside Amy Pascal. The series, which is part of Sony's Spider-Man Universe, would be ordered by MGM+ and Amazon Prime Video under the title Silk: Spider Society, with Angela Kang serving as the showrunner. However, in February 2024, the series was redeveloped for a more "male-skewing" audience with the writers' room paused, and in May the same year, Amazon dropped the series, with Sony shopping it to other potential buyers.
Filmography
Films
Year | Title | Director(s) | Writer(s) | Producer(s) |
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2008 | Extreme Movie | No | Yes | Executive (uncredited) |
2009 | Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs | Yes | Yes | Executive (uncredited) |
2012 | 21 Jump Street | Yes | No | No |
2013 | Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2 | No | Story | Executive |
2014 | The Lego Movie | Yes | Yes | Executive (uncredited) |
22 Jump Street | Yes | No | Executive | |
2016 | Storks | No | No | Executive |
2017 | Brigsby Bear | No | No | Yes |
The Lego Batman Movie | No | No | Yes | |
The Lego Ninjago Movie | No | No | Yes | |
2018 | Solo: A Star Wars Story | Uncredited | No | Executive |
Smallfoot | No | No | Executive | |
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse | No | Phil Lord | Yes | |
2019 | The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part | No | Yes | Yes |
2021 | The Mitchells vs. the Machines | No | No | Yes |
America: The Motion Picture | No | No | Yes | |
2023 | ... Bear | No | No | Yes |
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse | No | Yes | Yes | |
Strays | No | No | Yes | |
2024 | Los Frikis | No | No | Yes |
2026 | Project Hail Mary | Yes | No | Yes |
TBA | Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse | No | TBA | Yes |
Other credits
Year | Title | Notes |
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2006 | Open Season | Special Thanks |
2007 | Surf's Up | |
2008 | Igor | |
2014 | Annie | Directors: MoonQuake Lake scenes |
2016 | Sausage Party | Special Thanks |
2016 | Rogue One: A Star Wars Story | |
2017 | Baby Driver | |
2024 | The Spider Within: A Spider-Verse Story | Special Thanks Credited as Lord Miller Productions |
Television
Year | Title | Creators / Showrunners | Directors | Writers | Producers | Notes |
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1999–2000 | Zoe, Duncan, Jack and Jane | No | No | Yes | No | Episode: "Crossing the Line" |
2001 | Go Fish | No | No | Yes | No | Episode: "Go Wrestling" |
2002–03, 2023–24 |
Clone High | Yes | Supervising | Yes | Executive | 33 episodes |
2003 | Luis | No | No | No | Supervising | 5 episodes |
2004 | Method & Red | No | No | Yes | Consulting | 9 episodes Episodes: "Well Well Well", "Da Shootout" and "A House Apart" |
Cracking Up | No | No | No | Consulting | 6 episodes | |
2005–06 | How I Met Your Mother | No | No | Yes | Executive | 17 episodes Episodes: "Sweet Taste of Liberty" & "Belly Full of Turkey" |
2013 | Brooklyn Nine-Nine | No | Yes | No | Executive | Episode: "Pilot" |
2015–18 | The Last Man on Earth | No | Yes | No | Executive | 67 episodes Episodes: "Alive in Tucson" & "The Elephant in the Room" |
2016–17 | Son of Zorn | No | No | No | Executive | 13 episodes |
2017 | Making History | No | No | No | Executive | 9 episodes |
2017–18 | Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs | No | No | No | Consulting | 104 episodes |
2017–20 | Unikitty! | No | No | No | Executive | 104 episodes |
2019–21 | Bless the Harts | No | No | No | Executive | 34 episodes |
2020 | Hoops | No | No | No | Executive | 10 episodes |
2022–23 | The Afterparty | Christopher Miller | Christopher Miller | Yes | Executive | Miller: Showrunner, directed 10 episodes and wrote 6 episodes Lord: wrote "Zoe" |
TBA | Spider-Noir | No | No | No | Executive |
Acting credits
Year | Title | Role as | Notes | |
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Phil Lord | Christopher Miller | |||
1997 | The Empire Strikes Back | N/A | Stormtrooper | Special Edition re-release |
1998–99 | Caroline in the City | Bill | Cliff | 3 episodes |
2002–03, 2023–2024 |
Clone High | Principal Dr. Cinnamon J. Scudworth / Genghis Khan |
JFK / Vice Principal Mr. Butlertron | Voice roles, 33 episodes |
2007 | How I Met Your Mother | Too Much Tongue Guy | N/A | Episode: "How I Met Everyone Else" |
2020 | Lego Masters | Himself | Himself | Episode: "Movie Genres" |
2024 | Shrek 2 Retold | TBA | TBA | Voice roles |
Accolades
Year | Award | Nominated work | Result |
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2009 | Satellite Award for Best Animated or Mixed Media Feature | Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs | Nominated |
2010 | Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film | Nominated | |
Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Animated Feature | Nominated | ||
Annie Award for Best Animated Feature | Nominated | ||
Annie Award for Directing in a Feature Production | Nominated | ||
Annie Award for Writing in a Feature Production | Nominated | ||
2012 | Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie: Comedy | 21 Jump Street | Won |
2013 | People's Choice Award for Favorite Comedy Movie | Nominated | |
Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Comedy | Nominated | ||
Empire Award for Best Comedy | Nominated | ||
2014 | Teen Choice Award for Choice Summer Movie | 22 Jump Street | Won |
National Board of Review: Top Ten Films | The Lego Movie | Won | |
National Board of Review Award for Best Original Screenplay | Won | ||
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Award for Best Animated Feature | Won | ||
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Award for Best Original Screenplay | Nominated | ||
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Animated Film | Won | ||
New York Film Critics Online Award for Best Animated Film | Won | ||
San Diego Film Critics Society Award for Best Animated Film | Nominated | ||
Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Picture | Nominated | ||
Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Animated Film | Won | ||
Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Animated Film | Won | ||
Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Association Award for Best Animated Film | Won | ||
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Animated Film | Won | ||
San Francisco Film Critics Circle Award for Best Animated Feature | Won | ||
St. Louis Gateway Film Critics Association Award for Best Animated Film | Won | ||
2015 | People's Choice Award for Favorite Movie | 22 Jump Street | Nominated |
People's Choice Award for Favorite Comedic Movie | Won | ||
People's Choice Award for Favorite Family Movie | The Lego Movie | Nominated | |
Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film | Nominated | ||
Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Animated Feature | Won | ||
Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Comedy | 22 Jump Street | Nominated | |
Annie Award for Best Animated Feature | The Lego Movie | Nominated | |
Annie Award for Directing in an Animated Feature Production | Nominated | ||
Annie Award for Writing in an Animated Feature Production | Won | ||
Satellite Award for Best Animated or Mixed Media Feature | Nominated | ||
Satellite Award for Best Original Screenplay | Nominated | ||
BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film | Won | ||
Saturn Award for Best Animated Film | Won | ||
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series | The Last Man on Earth | Nominated | |
Monmouth Award for Communication Excellence (MACE) | Lifetime contributions in the field of communications | Won | |
2018 | Producers Guild of America Award for Best Animated Motion Picture (With Dan Lin) | The Lego Batman Movie | Nominated |
2019 | Annie Award for Best Animated Feature | Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse | Won |
Producers Guild of America Award for Best Animated Motion Picture (With Avi Arad, Amy Pascal and Christina Steinberg) | Won | ||
Annie Award for Writing in a Feature Production (Only Phil Lord) (With Rodney Rothman) | Won | ||
BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film (Only Phil Lord) | Won | ||
Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film | Won | ||
Academy Award for Best Animated Feature (With Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey and Rodney Rothman) |
Won | ||
2020 | Chicago Indie Critics for Best Animated Film (With Dan Lin, Roy Lee and Jinko Gotoh) | The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part | Nominated |
2021 | SCAD Savannah Film Festival Outstanding Achievement in Animation | The Mitchells vs. the Machines | Won |
Academy Award for Best Animated Feature (With Mike Rianda and Kurt Albrecht) | Nominated | ||
BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film (With Mike Rianda and Kurt Albrecht) | Nominated | ||
Producers Guild of America Award for Best Animated Motion Picture (With Kurt Albrecht) | Nominated | ||
2022 | Hollywood Critics Association TV Award for Best Directing in a Streaming Comedy Series (Only Christopher Miller) | The Afterparty ("Yasper") | Nominated |
Hollywood Critics Association TV Award for Best Writing in a Streaming Comedy Series (Only Christopher Miller) | The Afterparty ("Maggie") | Nominated | |
2023 | Honorary Degree, Doctor of Arts (Christopher Miller) | Dartmouth College | Won |
Honorary Degree, Doctor of Arts (Phil Lord) | Won | ||
2024 | Annie Award for Best Animated Feature | Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse | Won |
Producers Guild of America Award for Best Animated Motion Picture (With Avi Arad, Amy Pascal and Christina Steinberg) | Won | ||
BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film | Nominated | ||
Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film | Nominated | ||
Academy Award for Best Animated Feature (With Kemp Powers, Justin K. Thompson, and Amy Pascal) | Nominated |
See also
- Phil Lord and Christopher Miller's unrealized projects