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Frank Miller

Frank Miller (born January 27, 1957)[1][2] is an American comic book artist, comic book writer, and screenwriter known for his comic book stories and graphic novels such as his run on Daredevil, for which he created the character Elektra, and subsequent Daredevil: Born Again, The Dark Knight Returns, Batman: Year One, Sin City, and 300.

For other people named Frank Miller, see Frank Miller (disambiguation).

Frank Miller

(1957-01-27) January 27, 1957
Olney, Maryland, U.S.

Writer, penciller, inker, film director

Miller is noted for combining film noir and manga influences in his comic art creations. He said: "I realized when I started Sin City that I found American and English comics be too wordy, too constipated, and Japanese comics to be too empty. So I was attempting to do a hybrid."[3] Miller has received every major comic book industry award, and in 2015 he was inducted into the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame.


Miller's feature film work includes writing the scripts for the 1990s science fiction films RoboCop 2 and RoboCop 3, sharing directing duties with Robert Rodriguez on Sin City and Sin City: A Dame to Kill For, producing the film 300, and directing the big screen adaptation of The Spirit. Sin City earned a Palme d'Or nomination.

Early life[edit]

Miller was born in Olney, Maryland, on January 27, 1957,[4][5] and raised in Montpelier, Vermont,[4] the fifth of seven children of a nurse mother and a carpenter/electrician father.[6] His family was Irish Catholic.[7]

Legal issues[edit]

In October 2012, Joanna Gallardo-Mills, who began working for Miller as an executive coordinator in November 2008, filed suit against Miller in Manhattan for discrimination and "mental anguish", stating that Miller's former girlfriend, Kimberly Cox, created a hostile work environment for Gallardo-Mills in Miller and Cox's Hell's Kitchen living and work space.[101]


In July 2020, producer Stephen L'Heureux, who worked on Sin City: A Dame to Kill For, filed a $25 million defamation and economic interference lawsuit against Miller and fellow producer Silenn Thomas. L'Heureux alleged the pair had repeatedly made, "false, misleading and defamatory statements" about L'Heureux's ownership of the developmental rights of Sin City and Hard Boiled to Skydance Media CEO David Ellison and other Skydance executives and prevented the creation of a film adaptation of Hard Boiled and a TV series based on Sin City. Miller's attorney Allen Grodsky denied the allegation stating, "The claims asserted in Mr. L'Heureux's lawsuit are baseless, and we will be aggressively defending this lawsuit."[102]

Personal life[edit]

Miller was married to colorist Lynn Varley from 1986 to 2005.[103][104] She colored many of his most acclaimed works (from Ronin in 1984 through 300 in 1998) and the backgrounds to the 2006 movie 300. Miller has been romantically linked to New York-based Shakespearean scholar Kimberly Halliburton Cox,[105] who had a cameo in The Spirit (2008).[106]


In response to claims that his comics are conservative, Miller said, "I'm not a conservative. I'm a libertarian."[107]

Received an Inkpot Award – 1981

[128]

Weird War Tales

#219: "The Edge of History" (a, with Elliot S. Maggin, 1978)

Unknown Soldier

Batman

ISBN

(w/a, 1983) collected as Ronin (tpb, 302 pages, 1987, ISBN 0-446-38674-X; hc, 328 pages, 2008, ISBN 1-4012-1908-X)

Ronin

#400: "The Living Legends of Superman" (a, with Elliot S. Maggin, among other artists, 1984)

Superman

#5 (a, with Mark Evanier, among other artists, 1999) collected in Fanboy (tpb, 144 pages, 2001, ISBN 1-56389-724-5)

Fanboy

: "Last Imp Standing!" (a, with Evan Dorkin, among other artists, one-shot, 2000)

Superman and Batman: World's Funnest

#3: "Tales of the New Gods: Nativity" (a, with Walt Simonson, 2000) collected in O: The Gates of Apokolips (tpb, 144 pages, 2001, ISBN 1-56389-778-4)

Orion

#1–3 (w, with John Romita Jr., 2019)

Superman: Year One

Edit this at Wikidata

Official website

at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)

Frank Miller

at the TCM Movie Database

Frank Miller

The Complete Works of Frank Miller

at IMDb

Frank Miller

at the Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators

Frank Miller

at Curlie

Frank Miller

at Library of Congress, with 65 library catalog records

Frank Miller