Jeremy Kipp Walker
Jeremy Kipp Walker is an American film producer, director, and executive. His projects have earned two Academy Award nominations, thirteen Independent Spirit Award nominations, three Spirit Award wins, and three AFI Movie of the Year awards. He has held senior production roles at both Netflix and LAIKA, in addition to directing award-winning short films and the cult feature The History of Future Folk.
Career
Early work
Walker began working in film production in 2000. His producing breakthrough came with Half Nelson, which earned Ryan Gosling his first Academy Award nomination for Best Actor.He subsequently produced several acclaimed independent films, including:
- Sugar, directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, recognized as one of the best sports films by The Athletic, The Hollywood Reporter, Newsweek, Vulture, and Business Insider.
- Cold Souls, starring Paul Giamatti.
- It's Kind of a Funny Story, with Zach Galifianakis and Emma Roberts.
- Mississippi Grind, starring Ryan Reynolds.
- Table 19, starring Anna Kendrick.
- The Big Sick, which premiered at Sundance, was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, and became a critical and commercial success.
Netflix
After departing his executive role, Walker signed a producing deal with Netflix, where he produced two features for the company, each debuting as the number one film globally on the platform upon release. He also co-founded Netflix’s Emerging Filmmaker Initiative, an incubator for early-career directors.
LAIKA
In 2023, Walker joined LAIKA as Executive Vice President of Live-Action Production. Upcoming projects under his supervision include Atmosphere, directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck and based on Taylor Jenkins Reid’s novel; Audition, directed by Lulu Wang and based on Katie Kitamura’s book; Crumble, directed by Brian Duffield; and the untitled directorial debut of screenwriter Jon Spaihts.Directing
Alongside producing, Walker has collaborated with director J. Anderson Mitchell on several projects.Their debut short, Goodnight Bill, won multiple festival prizes and qualified for Academy Awards consideration; Film Threat described it as "funny, touching and on par with any two-hour epic...a brilliant showcase of what short films are capable of achieving in the right hands".
Their follow-up, Super Powers, won the Jury Award at the Tribeca Film Festival and was named one of IndieWire’s “most buzzed-about” shorts. It later gained over one million views online.
The duo expanded into features with The History of Future Folk, a micro-budget science fiction comedy that became a cult hit. The film received a 95% "Certified Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes and was nominated for a Spirit Award. Indiewire ranked it among the "top 5 first features" of the year.