
Age: 60
male
Matthew George "Matt" Reeves (born April 27, 1966 in Rockville Center, New York, USA) is an American screenwriter, director, and producer. He began making movies at age eight, directing friends and using a wind-up camera. Reeves befriended filmmaker J.J. Abrams when both were 13 years old and they were making short films together. When Reeves and Abrams were 15 or 16 years old, Steven Spielberg hired them to transfer some of his own Super 8 films to videotape. Reeves began his career as a screenwriter for the films Under Siege 2: Dark Territory (1995) and The Pallbearer (1996), the latter of which marked his feature-length directorial debut. He then transitioned into television as a director and co-creator of the drama series Felicity (1998–2002) alongside J.J. Abrams. Reeves has since directed the horror film Cloverfield (2008), the romantic horror film Let Me In (2010), and the science fiction sequels Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014) and War for the Planet of the Apes (2017). In February 2017, Warner Bros. announced that Reeves would direct The Batman (2022) by DC, starring Robert Pattinson.

Matt Reeves

Writer
for Writer in The S.C.P Foundation: The Sculpture
Suggested by misterwolf

The S.C.P Foundation: The Sculpture is a 2025 American science fiction action film based on SCP-173 / The Sculpture. It was produced by Legendary Pictures and RatPac-Dune Entertainment and written by Ridley Scott and Guillermo del Toro. Directed by Matt Reeves, co-produced by Zack Snyder, and edited by James Wan, the film stars Lauren Cohan, Vera Farmiga, Jude Law, Norman Reedus, Donald Glover, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Danai Gurira, Laurie Holden, David Harbour, and Laurence Fishburne. Alice is told of an S.C.P creature called the Sculpture, known scientifically as SCP-173. She heads out to seek the help of her sister Carol and others so she can succeed in capturing or killing the creature. The Sculpture premiered in Los Angeles on January 5th, 2025; releasing on February 16th, the film received generally positive reviews, with praise for the action sequences, visual effects, and Cohan's performance. It was also a financial success like the other two films, grossing $987 million worldwide against its break-even point of $146 million. A sequel entitled The S.C.P Foundation: The Last Hunt was released a year later.