Joe Carnahan (birthname:
Joseph Aaron Carnahan) is a much in-demand director/writer/producer of action movies who launched his busy and successful Hollywood career as director/writer/producer/editor/co-star of the indie action comedy,
Blood, Guts, Bullets and Octane (1998), premiering at the Sundance Film Festival and released by Lionsgate. Carnahan continued with Lionsgate as director/writer of the crime thriller,
Narc (2002), starring Jason Patric,
Ray Liotta (who also produced), Busta Rhymes, and Chi McBride, and released by Paramount Pictures for a $12.6 million return.
Carnahan directed and wrote his biggest hit to date with the action thriller,
Smokin’ Aces (2006), co-starring
Ben Affleck,
Jason Bateman, Common, Ray Liotta, Alicia Keys, Andy Garcia, Jeremy Piven, and
Ryan Reynolds, and earning over $57 million for Universal Pictures. Carnahan was the story writer and executive producer on the sequel,
Smokin’ Aces 2: Assassins’ Ball (2010). Carnahan was co-writer (with director
Gavin O’Connor) of the crime drama,
Pride and Glory (2008), co-starring Edward Norton,
Colin Farrell, Jon Voight, and Noah Emmerich, and grossing a poor $43.4 million for New Line Cinema.
Joe Carnahan joined the long-in-development movie version of
The A-Team (2010) as director and co-writer (with Brian Bloom and Skip Woods), co-starring
Liam Neeson, Bradley Cooper, Jessica Biel, Quinton Jackson,
Sharlto Copley and Patrick Wilson, produced in part by the show’s creator Stephen J. Cannell but delivering a disappointing $177 million gross (against an estimated $110 million budget) for distributor 20
th Century Fox. Carnahan worked again with star Neeson as director/writer/producer of the survival thriller,
The Grey (2011), co-starring
Frank Grillo, Dermot Mulroney, Dallas Roberts, and James Badge Dale, produced in part by Ridley Scott and released by Open Road Films to a tune of $81 million.
Carnahan was writer only of the critically and commercially disappointing remake of
Death Wish (2018), starring Bruce Willis and directed by
Eli Roth, and then Carnahan in the same year was both co-writer (with director Ben Hernandez Bray) and producer of
El Chicano (2018), regarded as the first Latino superhero movie, with
Raul Castillo, Aimee Garcia, Sal Lopez, Kate del Castillo and George Lopez, but losing money ($1.4 million gross against $8 million costs) for producer WarParty Productions and distributor Briarcliff Entertainment.
Carnahan was again writer only (with co-writers Chris Bremner and Peter Craig) of the sequel directed by
Adil El Arbi and Bilail Fallah,
Bad Boys for Life (2020), co-starring
Will Smith and
Martin Lawrence, earning a robust $426.5 million worldwide, and then Carnahan stayed in the same crime comedy mode as director/writer/producer of
Copshop (2021), co-written by Kurt McLeod, and co-starring
Gerard Butler, Frank Grillo and Alexis Louder, but proving to be a box office disaster for distributor
Open Road Films and Briarcliff Entertainment with a $6.8 million return against $43.5 million costs.
Joe Carnahan directed and wrote the action movie,
Shadow Force (2025), pairing
Kerry Washington (who also produced) with French movie star
Omar Sy, with Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Method Man, and Mark Strong, and released by Lionsgate. Carnahan returned to his triple threat role as director/writer/producer for the survival thriller
Not Without Hope (date to be announced), based on the book (by Nick Schuyler and Jeré Longman) about the tragic deaths of NFL players Marquis Cooper and Corey Smith, co-written by E. Nicholas Mariani, and co-starring
Zachary Levi, Logan Kellogg,
Josh Duhamel and JoBeth Williams, and released by Highland Film Group. Carnahan was producer or executive producer only on
The Fourth Kind (2009),
Wheelman (2017),
Point Blank (2019), and
Into the Ashes (2019).