Music videos During the 1990s, he worked at Oil Factory, a
music video production company based in Caledonian Road, Kings Cross. He worked on a variety of productions in numerous roles, including casting director. Here, he was able to get the opportunity to direct some music videos. Alongside this, particularly on the strength of his short film work, he was also developing
The End, his second short film. During this decade, he also worked part-time as a roadie for Vegetable Vision, who created visuals for electronic music bands such as
Chemical Brothers,
Darren Emerson,
Underworld and
Andrew Weatherall. Wright attributes some of the aesthetic and emotion of the UK
rave scene as an influence on his work.
Television On the success of his first short film, Wright was offered the script for the serial
Nature Boy (2000). He followed this up with the serials
Bodily Harm (2002) with
Timothy Spall and the highly acclaimed
Charles II: The Power and the Passion (2003) with
Rufus Sewell, which won the
BAFTA Award for Best Drama Serial. In 2022, Wright began directing an
eight-part adaptation of the bestselling novel
M: Son of the Century, a
historical novel by
Antonio Scurati recounting the rise of Italian dictator
Benito Mussolini.
Mussolini: Son of the Century premiered at the
81st Venice International Film Festival on 5 September 2024 and began airing on
Sky Atlantic on 10 January 2025. In 2023, Wright was developing an adaptation for
HBO of the bestselling non-fiction book
Empty Mansions: The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Fortune about
heiress Huguette Clark, daughter of
copper baron and
United States Senator William A. Clark.
Feature films In 2005, Wright made the transition to feature films with his critically acclaimed adaptation of
Pride & Prejudice starring
Keira Knightley and
Matthew Macfadyen. It received numerous accolades, nominations and awards, including four
Academy Award nominations (including
Best Actress) and six
BAFTA nominations (Wright won for Most Promising Newcomer). Wright's next feature was an adaptation of
Ian McEwan's
Booker Prize-shortlisted novel
Atonement (2007), which reunited Wright with
Keira Knightley, and also stars
James McAvoy and
Saoirse Ronan. It was nominated for seven
Golden Globe Awards, more than any other film that year. Though Wright was not nominated for director, the film received seven Academy Award nominations, winning only for Best Original Score. At the BAFTA Awards, it received 14 nominations and won Best Film and Best Production Design. Wright's next film was
The Soloist, starring
Jamie Foxx and
Robert Downey, Jr. It is about the "true story of musical prodigy
Nathaniel Ayers, who developed schizophrenia in his second year at
Juilliard and ended up homeless on the streets of downtown L.A. where he performs the violin and cello." It was to be released on 21 November 2008, but was pushed back to 24 April 2009. Wright reunited with
Atonement star
Saoirse Ronan for the 2011 action thriller
Hanna. The title character is a 15-year-old girl trained since birth to be an assassin by her father (
Eric Bana), a rogue CIA asset. It received mostly positive reviews, with
Roger Ebert calling it a "first-rate thriller". It received an aggregate score of 65 from Metacritic ("generally positive" reviews). Wright directed the
2012 screen adaptation by Sir
Tom Stoppard of
Leo Tolstoy's classic novel
Anna Karenina. The cast included
Keira Knightley as Anna,
Jude Law as her husband,
Aaron Taylor-Johnson as her young love, Irish actor
Domhnall Gleeson as Konstantin Levin, as well as
Kelly Macdonald,
Olivia Williams,
Matthew Macfadyen and
Michelle Dockery.
Saoirse Ronan and
Andrea Riseborough were initially cast, but dropped out and were replaced by
Alicia Vikander and
Ruth Wilson, respectively. Wright then directed the
2015 prequel to
Peter Pan for Warner Bros. The film starred
Hugh Jackman,
Garrett Hedlund,
Rooney Mara,
Amanda Seyfried and
Levi Miller as Peter. The screenplay by actor-turned-screenwriter
Jason Fuchs was from the 2013
Hollywood Black List, a selection of popular unproduced scripts. The film was negatively received by critics and was considered a commercial flop, failing to recoup its budget at the box office.
Rooney Mara's casting as Tiger Lily caused a
controversy, due to her being of
European ancestry, while Tiger Lily is traditionally portrayed as
Native American. Wright's 2017 film
Darkest Hour covers a pivotal month in the life of former British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill. It stars
Gary Oldman as Churchill, along with
Ben Mendelsohn,
Ronald Pickup,
David Schofield,
Kristin Scott Thomas,
Samuel West and
Lily James. Wright said the film was a rebuke to
Donald Trump. In 2021, Wright directed
The Woman in the Window, a psychological thriller starring
Amy Adams, which received negative reviews. The same year, he also directed
Cyrano, a musical based on the
Cyrano de Bergerac. The film was well-received and earned multiple
Golden Globe and
BAFTA nominations. Wright is also set to direct AI thriller
Alignment, written by Nathan Dotan and distributed by
Fifth Season. ==Directorial trademarks==