John Hillcoat
EMMA Supporter
John Hillcoat is a critically acclaimed Australian director and screenwriter known for his stark, unflinching storytelling and his ability to explore human issues, morality, and survival with poetic intensity, establishing himself as a singular voice in contemporary cinema. He has supported EMMA from the start with him directing an EMMA Television/Cinema Ad in 2000, which was shown in all major cinemas, before becoming a major Hollywood Director. His friendship with the EMMA founder Bobby A Syed extends to other projects to promote peace and harmony.
Born in Queensland in 1961 and raised in Canada, John studied at Melbourne’s Swinburne Film and Television School before launching his career with music videos for artists like Nick Cave, Depeche Mode, and INXS, honing a distinct visual language rooted in grit and atmosphere.
John’s feature debut, Ghosts… of the Civil Dead (1988), co-written with Nick Cave and based on real events in a high-security prison, supported his concern in institutional violence and psychological decay. He rose to international prominence with The Proposition (2005), a critically lauded outback Western set in colonial Australia, also written by Cave, which won Best Original Screenplay at the Australian Film Institute Awards and drew comparisons to the work of Sam Peckinpah and Sergio Leone.
John’s Hollywood breakthrough came with The Road (2009), a bleak yet tender adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s novel starring Viggo Mortensen, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival and was praised for its emotional restraint and haunting post-apocalyptic imagery.
He continued to explore crime and corruption with Lawless (2012), based on Matt Bondurant’s novel The Wettest County in the World, featuring Tom Hardy and Jessica Chastain, and Triple 9 (2016), a brutal urban heist thriller starring Casey Affleck and Chiwetel Ejiofor.
Beyond film, John has left a mark on prestige television, directing the Emmy-nominated Black Mirror episode “Crocodile” (2017), several episodes of George & Tammy (2022), and the pilot of Special Ops: Lioness (2023), showcasing his versatility in high-stakes, emotionally charged narratives.
With a career defined by deep collaboration, especially with Nick Cave and cinematographer Benoît Delhomme, and a relentless pursuit of moral complexity through richly textured visual storytelling, John has become a vital figure in both Australian and international filmmaking, known for elevating genre cinema into meditative, artful explorations of the human condition.





























