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Duncan Jones ’95

Duncan Jones

More than 100 million people have played the games that make up Blizzard Entertainment鈥檚 World of Warcraft universe since the first one was released in 1994. And judging from the worldwide box office of $433 million 鈥 including more than $220 million in China alone 鈥 a good portion of them rushed out to see the long-awaited big-screen adaptation directed by Duncan Jones 鈥95 when it was released in 2016.

As a longtime Warcraft player himself 鈥 going back to his days as a student at Wooster 鈥 Jones had a very clear vision of the world he wanted to bring to life on screen. 鈥淎fter聽鈥楾he Fellowship of the Ring,鈥欌 he told TechCrunch, 鈥渢he films that followed it, instead of having their own unique aesthetic, they all wanted to be聽鈥楲ord of the Rings鈥櫬燼s opposed to learning from聽鈥楲ord of the Rings.鈥 I wanted to break with the genre a bit, give the palette a little bit more vibrancy and saturation.鈥

鈥淲arcraft鈥澛爓as Jones鈥 third feature film, following the critically acclaimed聽鈥淢oon鈥澛燼nd聽鈥淪ource Code.鈥 The聽Village Voice聽said聽鈥淢oon鈥澛犫渕arked him as a major new talent鈥 and聽The New York Times聽called聽鈥淪ource Code鈥澛犫渁 science-fiction thriller with a contemporary twist,鈥 while in the U.K.,聽The Guardian聽hailed it as 鈥渁 superb follow-up鈥errifically exciting and hugely enjoyable.鈥
Jones鈥 first foray into filmmaking came on a decidedly more modest scale: a few short films, shot with his dad鈥檚 help, 鈥渨hen I must have been six or seven years old. It was pretty much my favorite father/son hobby, and made use of an 8mm film camera capable of shooting one-stop animation鈥 using Star Wars toys and Smurfs.鈥

Jones moved around a lot as a child, living in England, Switzerland, Japan, and Australia, before landing at an austere, military-style boarding school in Scotland at age 12 (and from which he was asked to depart at 18, after falling asleep in his English A-level exam). He cheerfully admits that he was a 鈥渕assively geeky鈥 and 鈥減ainfully shy鈥 boy.

At the urging of his old headmaster, he took the SAT and began looking at U.S. colleges. In the course of two weeks visiting campuses in New England and the Midwest, he discovered Wooster and it immediately felt 鈥渃omfortable鈥ulticultural and multinational.鈥

鈥淲ooster hit me at just the right time in my life,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 was just starting to get excited about what I could do with my life. I took creative writing and art classes, and tried to spread out as much as possible鈥ne of the wonderful things about Wooster was it gave us all a sense of empowerment…We wanted to make a difference and do things that people would notice.鈥

While Jones did no filmmaking at Wooster, he does trace some of the themes he explored in聽Moon聽back to his Independent Study project, 鈥淗ow to Kill Your Computer Friend: An Investigation of the Mind/Body Problem and How It Relates to the Hypothetical Creation of a Thinking Machine.鈥澛 And it鈥檚 easy to see why the聽鈥淪ource Code鈥 script appealed strongly to this philosophy major. In the聽罢颈尘别蝉鈥聽review, Manohla Dargis wrote that the Jake Gyllenhaal character 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 just jump through action-flick hoops, he also confronts some Big Questions 鈥 Are we alone? Are we free? Do we have free will?鈥

After graduating from Wooster, Jones went to the London Film School. He worked as a camera operator for director Tony Scott, directed music videos and commercials in the U.K., and produced several short films.

When he won a BAFTA 鈥 a British Academy of Film and Television Arts award 鈥 in 2010 for聽鈥淢oon,鈥 an emotional Duncan Jones told the audience, 鈥淚t鈥檚 taken me an awful long time to know what I wanted to do with my life and finally I think I鈥檝e found what I love doing.鈥

Posted in Alumni on March 7, 2018.