John Jopson began his film career in
automobile racing, first in 1975 as a
stringer filming
Formula One races for
UPITN in London. He then worked as cinematographer on the Italian Formula One movie
Speed Fever (Formula Uno, Febbre della Velocità) in 1978, and in 1984 directed the feature-length film
Gasoline featuring
Mario Andretti and
Gilles Villeneuve based on scenes filmed in the late 1970s and early 1980s. His racing footage was also used in the 1977
Al Pacino film
Bobby Deerfield, and in 1979 Jopson won the Golden Quill Award for his eclectic
short film Mass Transit based on
Kraftwerk's 22-minute tome
"Autobahn". During the 1980s, based in
New York City, Jopson directed videos, concert films and documentaries for a diverse group of artists including
Icehouse,
Willy DeVille,
John Waite,
Art in America (band),
Poison,
REO Speedwagon,
Elton John, and
The Angels, and he toured extensively with
Hall and Oates as both cinematographer and director. In 1985, working with cinematographer
Ernest Dickerson, John directed the critically acclaimed jazz film
One Night with Blue Note. His
feature-length film
Nervous Night, a collection of
short films starring
The Hooters, won the
Billboard Music Award for "Best Longform" in 1986. Jopson was also the cinematographer on the film
Does Humor Belong in Music? written and directed by
Frank Zappa. He lived in
Australia in the late 1980s, where he directed television series, pop clips, concerts and
commercials. Based in
Los Angeles throughout the 1990s, Jopson was a
showrunner and director for numerous TV series. He was also part of the equity waiver theatre movement, where he directed more than 20 plays, including
Oliver Hailey's ''Father's Day
at the Los Angeles Theatre Center and The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail'' at the Hollywood Court Theatre. He wrote and directed a wide range of films and television programs, including
PBS'
The Champs Elysees with
Halle Berry and
Bioperfection with
Stephen Hawking and traveled into active volcanoes in
Hawaii and
Tonga for his
Discovery Channel films. He wrote, directed, and produced for numerous TV series on
paranormal subject matter, including
Encounters and
Sightings for
Fox network and was one of the principal filmmakers behind the controversial
Alien Autopsy. He relocated to
Europe in 1999 and has continued to write and direct films from his home base in
Italy. In 2001 he wrote and directed the
television pilot for
Scariest Places on Earth and directed all of the European episodes. In 2003 Jopson wrote the
screenplay for
Viktor Ivanov’s Russian
adventure film White Gold. His controversial film
Sanctified, about
pedophile priests in Italy, premiered at the Hamburg International Film Festival in November 2010, and had its UK premiere at the London Liftoff Festival in October 2011. Jopson studied film and theatre at
Lycoming College and furthered his theatre studies at the
Stella Adler Conservatory and with
Arthur Mendoza. He joined the
Directors Guild of America in 1986 as
second unit director of the
RKO/
Paramount motion picture
Campus Man. In 2013 Jopson wrote and directed the feature film
Terroir based on
Edgar Allan Poe's "
The Cask of Amontillado". Starring
Keith Carradine,
Terroir was filmed on location in
Tuscany and had its world premiere at the Wine Country Film Festival in 2014. ==Filmography==