Donnie Darko (2001) is Kelly's first feature and was nominated for 21 awards, winning eleven. It later made #2 on
Empire magazine's list of the 50 greatest independent films of all time, behind
Quentin Tarantino's
Reservoir Dogs. In 2003, he wrote the thriller film
House at the End of the Street (2012) with
Jonathan Mostow set as director, before they both left the project. In 2005, Kelly wrote the screenplay for the
Tony Scott-directed film,
Domino. Kelly has said: "That was a wonderful experience. I wrote that for Tony Scott. That was Tony Scott's very personal project that he had spent eight years developing with Domino Harvey, a close friend of his and almost like a daughter to him. He had spent years trying to tell her story and so that for me, it was an honor for me to get to work with Tony and to write that script for him and to design this really elaborate puzzle for him to tell her story. So that was just a privilege." and
Louis Sachar's
Holes. His fourth film and second feature,
Southland Tales, a rough cut of which screened in competition at the
2006 Cannes Film Festival, was released November 16, 2007, and stars
Dwayne Johnson,
Sarah Michelle Gellar,
Seann William Scott,
Kevin Smith and
Miranda Richardson. In 2008, Kelly's production company Darko Entertainment announced that it was producing the adaptation of the bestselling book
I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell with director
Bob Gosse. The book's author
Tucker Max detailed Kelly's involvement in the process on his blog. After the release of
The Box, he said he was working on a thriller "set in Manhattan in the year 2014. We hope to shoot the movie in
3-D, and part of the movie would be filmed using full CGI motion capture." In 2011, he announced that he was writing and directing
Corpus Christi, a
Texas-set film to be produced by
Eli Roth. The production was cancelled due to financial and casting problems. Kelly said he would instead focus on a true crime thriller titled
Amicus, starring
James Gandolfini, whose death in 2013 prevented that. In a 2017 interview with
PopMatters magazine journalist J.C. Maçek III, Kelly said in regard to doing an official sequel to
Donnie Darko: "I'm open to doing something much bigger and longer and more ambitious that could be a new story," Kelly said and then added, "We'll see what happens. I have a lot of stuff that I'm working on and it's ambitious and it's expensive and we'll see what happens." Regarding the 2009
Donnie Darko sequel
S. Darko, Kelly has said: "I had nothing to do with it. And I hate it when people try and blame me or hold me responsible for it because I had no [involvement]. I don't control the underlying rights to [the
Donnie Darko franchise]. I had to relinquish them when I was 24 years old. I hate when people ask me about that because I've never seen it and I never will, so… don't ask me about the sequel." According to an issue of
Production Weekly, while no title, casting or plot details were revealed, a fall 2025 shoot is currently planned. ==Media==