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Christopher B. Landon

Christopher B. Landon
Born Christopher Beau Landon
(1975-02-27) February 27, 1975 (age 41)
Los Angeles, California, United States
Occupation Film director, producer, screenwriter
Nationality American
Alma mater Loyola Marymount University
Notable works Disturbia
Paranormal Activity 2
Paranormal Activity 3
Paranormal Activity 4
Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones
Relatives Michael Landon (father)
Marjorie Lynn Noe (mother)
Leslie Landon (sister)
Michael Landon, Jr. (brother)
Jennifer Landon (paternal half-sister)
Mark Landon (adoptive brother)

Christopher Beau Landon (born February 27, 1975) is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter best known as the writer of 2007 film Disturbia, the last three Paranormal Activity films and as the son of late actor Michael Landon. Landon wrote and made his first directorial debut on the satirical thriller Burning Palms, which was released in 2010. He wrote and directed the found footage horror film Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones, and directed and co-wrote the horror comedy film Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse.

Landon is the son of Michael Landon and Lynn Noe, the youngest of four children produced by their marriage. His parents divorced in 1980, when he was four years old, and he proceeded to live with his father, until he died of pancreatic cancer when Christopher was sixteen. One of his brothers is Michael Landon, Jr., an actor, and one of his half-sisters is Jennifer Landon, an actress.

Landon, following his father Michael Landon's footsteps in filmmaking, studied screenwriting at Loyola Marymount University, but dropped out three years into the course to pursue a career when film director Larry Clark offered him a writing job after reading one of his scripts. He went on to co-write the script of Another Day in Paradise with Eddie Little and Stephen Chin. After writing Another Day in Paradise, he came out as gay, aware that homophobia may have harmed his potential in the industry. "I may fall off some list because of my sexuality. But if that happens, then I really don't want to be on that list anyway," he said, speaking of homophobia in Hollywood and the film industry. "I was the flavor of the month, and then I was quickly dismissed. I reached a point in my career when I couldn't get a meeting anywhere." He moved from Los Angeles to Austin, Texas, contemplating the future of his career, which he revived only a few years later.


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