Sylvain White
White at WonderCon 2010
Born (1971-12-21) 21 December 1971[1]
Alma materPomona College
Occupations
  • Film director
  • screenwriter
Years active1998present
WebsiteWhiteFilmLab.com

Sylvain White (born 21 December 1971)[1] is a French film director and screenwriter.

Life and career

White attended Pomona College, graduating in 1998.[2]

He debuted his feature film, Stomp the Yard, at number one in the US. He went on to direct the action comedy The Losers, starring Chris Evans, Idris Elba and Zoe Saldana. He wrote and directed the French murder mystery film The Mark of the Angels, starring Gérard Depardieu.

White has also directed episodes on television series such as The Americans, CSI, Hawaii Five-0, The Following, Person of Interest, Major Crimes and Sleepy Hollow.

Filmography

Short films

Year Title Director Writer
2002 Quiet Yes No
2013 Bring the Love Back Yes Yes

Films

Year Title Director Writer Notes
2004 Trois 3: The Escort Yes No Credited as "Skav One"
2006 I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summer Yes No Direct-to-video
2007 Stomp the Yard Yes No
2009 Walled In No Yes
2010 The Losers Yes No
2013 The Mark of the Angels – Miserere Yes Yes
2018 Slender Man Yes No

Television

YearTitleNotes
2012 CSI: Miami 1 episode
2012–2016 Hawaii Five-0 8 episodes
2013 Covert Affairs 1 episode
2013–2014 Person of Interest 2 episodes
2014 The Mentalist 1 episode
2014–2015 The Originals 2 episodes
2015 The Following 1 episode
2015–2017 Major Crimes 3 episodes
2015 Scorpion 1 episode
Empire
2016 Sleepy Hollow
Rush Hour
2017 Lethal Weapon
MacGyver
2017–2018 The Americans 2 episodes
2018 Magnum P.I. 1 episode
Station 19
2019–2021 The Rookie 6 episodes
2019 Strange Angel 1 episode
2020 Amazing Stories
Fargo 2 episodes
2020–2022 The Umbrella Academy 3 episodes
2022 Billions 1 episode
Bel-Air
The Terminal List 2 episodes
Reasonable Doubt 1 episode
2023 All American: Homecoming
Justified: City Primeval
For All Mankind
2023–24 Fargo 2 episodes

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Sylvain White". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  2. "1998". Pomona College Timeline. 7 November 2014. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
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