Mick Jackson is a Director and Producer British born on 4 october 1943 at Grays (United-kingdom)
Mick Jackson
Mick Jackson participated to
15 films (as actor, director or script writer).
Among those,
2 have good markets following the box office.
Here are the best films classified by number of entries :
Director
, 2h9
Directed by Mick JacksonOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Thriller,
Comedy-drama,
Action,
Musical,
RomanceThemes Films about music and musiciansActors Kevin Costner,
Whitney Houston,
Gary Kemp,
Bill Cobbs,
Michele Lamar Richards,
Ralph WaiteRating64%
Rachel Marron (Whitney Houston) is an Academy Award-nominated music superstar who is being stalked and sent death threats. Things get dangerously out of hand when a bomb disguised as a doll explodes in her dressing room. Rachel's manager, Bill Devaney (Bill Cobbs), seeks the services of a professional bodyguard, Frank Farmer (Kevin Costner), to protect her. He is a highly successful private bodyguard, mostly protecting corporate VIPs. Formerly he was a Secret Service agent who served as part of the presidential protection detail during two presidencies. Frank is reluctant to accept the offer to guard Rachel as he sees her as a spoiled diva who is oblivious to the threats against her life., 1h44
Directed by Mick JacksonOrigin USAGenres Drama,
Science fiction,
Thriller,
Disaster,
Action,
AdventureThemes La fin du monde,
Transport films,
Volcanisme,
Rail transport films,
Films about volcanoes,
Children's films,
Disaster films,
American disaster filmsActors Tommy Lee Jones,
Anne Heche,
Gaby Hoffmann,
Don Cheadle,
John Carroll Lynch,
Jacqueline KimRating55%
An earthquake strikes the city of Los Angeles. Mike Roark (Tommy Lee Jones), the head of the city's Office of Emergency Management, insists on coming to work to help out with the crisis, even though he has taken a vacation with his daughter Kelly (Gaby Hoffmann). His associate Emmit Reese (Don Cheadle) notes the quake caused no major damage, but seven utility workers are later burned to death in a storm drain, one escaped and survived but was severely burned on one side of his face at MacArthur Park. As a precaution, Roark tries to halt the subway lines which run parallel to where the deaths took place, but Los Angeles MTA Chairman Stan Olber (John Carroll Lynch) declines, feeling there is no threat to the trains. Against regulations, Roark and a colleague Gator Harris (Michael Rispoli) venture down the storm sewer in the park to investigate. They are nearly burned to death when hot gases suddenly spew out of a crack in the concrete lining and flood the tunnel. Geologist Dr. Amy Barnes (Anne Heche) believes a volcano may be rapidly forming beneath the city with magma flowing underground (similar to the formation of the Mexican volcano Parícutin which emerged and grew tremendously in just one week) but cannot come up with enough evidence for Roark to take action.