- Born
- Place
Sidney J. Furie
Toronto-born Sidney J. Furie has enjoyed a distinguished career that has spanned over six decades. Having worked in every genre, Furie has directed films starring Marlon Brando, Frank Sinatra, Robert Redford, Diana Ross, Michael Caine, Peter O'Toole, Rodney Dangerfield, Barbara Hershey, Gene Hackman, Donald Sutherland, Laurence Olivier, and countless others. He is most known for the espionage classic The Ipcress File (1965), the landmark biopic Lady Sings the Blues (1972), the franchise-generating Iron Eagle (1986), the Scorsese-beloved horror saga The Entity (1982), and the Vietnam combat chronicle The Boys in Company C (1978), which later partly inspired Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket. His first two films, A Dangerous Age (1957) and A Cool Sound from Hell (1959), both independently financed, were two of the first English Canadian features ever made, produced before he emigrated to London in 1960. He became an important figure in the British New Wave, especially with The Boys (1962) and his realist drama The Leather Boys (1964), a critical darling that became a popular cult film.
As director
Finding Hannah
Drive Me to Vegas and Mars
The Dependables
Conduct Unbecoming
The Four Horsemen
The Veteran
American Soldiers
Direct Action
Detention
Global Heresy
The Fraternity
Partners in Action
Under Heavy Fire
Hide and Seek
My 5 Wives
Road Rage
The Collectors
In Her Defense
Top of the World
The Rage
Married to a Stranger
Hollow Point
Iron Eagle on the Attack
Ladybugs
The Taking of Beverly Hills
Iron Eagle II
Superman IV: The Quest for Peace
Iron Eagle
Purple Hearts
The Entity