Biography
This page uses content from the Bob Murawski biography page on the English version of Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. This list of authors can be seen in the page history. Rotten Tomatoes disclaims any and all warranties as to the accuracy or reliability of the content.
Bob Murawski is a film editor who often works with director Sam Raimi (of the Spider-man and Evil Dead series of films).
Murawski was born in Detroit, Michigan and grew up in the northeast "Thumb" area of the state. Bob Murawski was his high school Valedictorian. He attended Michigan State University and majored in Communications.
Bob Murawski is a partners of Grindhouse Releasing with actor/director, Sage Stallone (son of Sylvester Stallone). He has restored and digitally remastered classic cult horror films Make Them Die Slowly (aka Cannibal Ferox (1981)) and Lucio Fulci's spaghetti-horror masterpiece, E tu vivrai nel terrore (aka The Beyond) (1981) as well as Cannibal Holocaust (1980), I Drink Your Blood (1970) (directed by David E. Durston), and director Juan Piquer Simon's cult horror film, Pieces (1982).
Murawski was slated to edit friend Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs (1992) when it was to be shot on 16mm film by the then video-store sales clerk, Tarantino. Once the film found its way into production, Murawski was unavailable because he was editing Chinese action director John Woo's first American feature, Hard Target (1993).
Bob Murawski is represented by ICM. His major editing credits are: Spider-man, II, III, Army of Darkness, The Gift, From Dusk 'Till Dawn 2 (directed by Scott Spiegel), Uncle Sam, Night of the Scarecrow, and Hard Target (directed by John Woo).
Trivia
Bob Murawski is mentioned on page 2 of Sharon Waxman's blisteringly critical book "Rebels on the Backlot: Six Maverick Directors and How they Conquered the Hollywood Studio System" although his name is misspelled "Marowski." Murawski (correct spelling) was never interviewed by the writer, but is mentioned as being on videotape at a party hosted by writer-director Scott Spiegel and attended by then unknown director and video store clerk, Quentin Tarantino.
Links
- Bob Murawski [1] IMDB credits.
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