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・ David Wylie (author)
・ David Wylie (footballer)
・ David Wyman
・ David Wyman (American football)
・ David Wyn Jones
・ David Wyn Roberts
・ David Wynn Miller
・ David Wynne
・ David Wynne (composer)
・ David Wynne (sculptor)
・ David Wysong
・ David Wyss
・ David X of Kartli
・ David Winnick
・ David Winnie
David Winning
・ David Winninger
・ David Winston
・ David Winter
・ David Winters
・ David Winters (choreographer)
・ David Winters (footballer)
・ David Winters and his dancers
・ David Winton Thomas
・ David Wirrpanda
・ David Wisdom
・ David Wise
・ David Wise (composer)
・ David Wise (cricketer)
・ David Wise (freestyle skier)


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David Winning : ウィキペディア英語版
David Winning

David Winning (born May 8, 1961) is a Canadian and American dual Citizen film and television director, screenwriter, producer, editor, and occasional actor. Although Winning has worked in numerous film and TV genres, his name is most commonly associated with science fiction, thrillers and drama.
==Life and career==
Winning was born in Calgary, Alberta. He became a dual citizen of the US and Canada in 2003 and lives in Los Angeles. He was making films at age ten with a Super 8 camera. In 1979, he received a Canada Council grant to make the sixteen millimeter drama ''Sequence'', and expanded the plotline into his first feature film Storm, filmed in the summer of 1983 in Bragg Creek, Alberta. It was shot with money that his father had set aside for film school and was screened at Cannes.〔 It took four years to finish and was released by Golan-Globus' Cannon Films International and Warner Home Video in 1988. A December 11, 1989 LA Times review called the film "taut, ambitious and darkly comic".
At 27, he directed episodes of ''Friday the 13th: The Series'' for Paramount and received three Gemini Award nominations.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1989, 1990 Gemini Awards 3 nominations )〕 His second feature ''Killer Image'' followed in 1992; the mystery-thriller starred Michael Ironside and M. Emmet Walsh. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s he directed 17 movies and episodes of twenty-seven series, including Stargate: Atlantis, ABC's Dinotopia filmed in Budapest, Nickelodeon’s Are You Afraid of the Dark?, and four seasons on Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda. He directed Kim Cattrall, Sean Young, and Eric McCormack in the award-winning thriller Exception to the Rule. His biggest budget studio movie to date is the $29-million kids sci-fi action sequel Turbo: A Power Rangers Movie for 20th Century Fox. He directed seven episodes of the Cannell police series Street Justice with Carl Weathers. Winning said “Episodic TV gets no respect” in a March 2000 Toronto Star interview. He directed a 16-year-old Ryan Gosling in the Pilot and seven episodes of the Paramount UPN kid series Breaker High.
According to the February 2010 Avatar issue of ''Sci Fi Magazine'', he was slated to direct the movie ''Sinbad: The Fifth Voyage'' with Patrick Stewart.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Pre-production Begins on Middle Eastern Fairy Tale Sinbad The Fifth Voyage )
He directed episodes of Space Channel's comedy/horror series Todd and the Book of Pure Evil and Lost Girl〔 for SYFY Channel and Showcase—and supervised and directed the far north webisode series ''YUKONIC'' online in 2011. He is directing XIII: The Series with Stuart Townsend, produced by Roger Avary for French Canal +, and multiple episodes of the live audience multi-camera sitcom Mr. Young for The Disney Channel.

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