Randall MillerΒ (born July 24, 1962)Β is an American film director, producer, screenwriter, editor, and occasional actor. At theΒ American Film InstituteΒ (AFI), Miller received acclaim for his 1990 short filmΒ Marilyn Hotchkiss Ballroom Dancing & Charm School. This led to a career directing films in Hollywood in the 1990s, including the comediesΒ Class ActΒ (1992),Β HouseguestΒ (1995), andΒ The 6th ManΒ (1997).
In his 40s, he ventured intoΒ independent film, taking money out of his house to direct and produceΒ Marilyn Hotchkiss' Ballroom Dancing and Charm SchoolΒ (2005), an expansion of his 1990 short into a full-length feature. He followed this with the indie filmsΒ Nobel SonΒ (2007),Β Bottle ShockΒ (2008), andΒ CBGBΒ (2013), all starringΒ Alan RickmanΒ in the lead role. He self-distributed and raised the money forΒ Bottle Shock, his greatest critical success.
He closely collaborated with his wife Jody Savin on many of his projects, writing and producing multiple films together.
In 2015, he pled guilty in the train crash death of film crew member Sarah Jones in a plea deal so that his wife, also charged, could go home to their two school-aged children.Β The film wasΒ Midnight Rider, which he was directing and producing. He served one year in jail and is completing nine years of probation. He is the first filmmaker to be imprisoned for a film-related death.
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