4.9Directing

John Trent

Jan 1, 1935 - London, United Kingdom

John Trent (1935, London - June 3, 1983, Snelgrove, Ontario, Canada) was a British-born Canadian film director. He directed such films as Homer, Middle Age Crazy, and It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time.

Before working in feature films, Trent worked in Canadian television in the 1960s, directing episodes of such popular CBC series as Quentin Durgens, M.P. and Wojeck, based on the career of the controversial Dr. Morton Shulman, then Toronto’s chief coroner. In addition to producing his own films, his company Quadrant Films also produced such fare as Bob Clark's vampire horror film Deathdream.

Trent died in a road accident while returning from delivering his son, who was the Ontario Under 16 show-jumping champion, to an event. He was killed by a police car which came around a bend on the wrong side, and hit his compact Cadillac head-on.

Credits

Cast

No cast credits available.

Crew

Media
Movie1974Dead of NightProducerProduction
Movie1980Middle Age CrazyDirectorDirecting
Movie1984Best RevengeDirectorDirecting
Movie1974Sunday in the CountryDirectorDirecting
Movie1969The BushbabyDirectorDirecting
Movie1970HomerDirectorDirecting
Movie1975It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the TimeDirectorDirecting
Movie1970The Man Who Wanted to Live ForeverDirectorDirecting
Movie1979CrossbarDirectorDirecting
Movie1976Find the LadyDirectorDirecting
Movie1974Blue BloodProducerProduction
Movie1969The BushbabyProducerProduction
Movie1981Freddie the Freeloader's Christmas DinnerDirectorDirecting
Movie1974Sunday in the CountryScreenplayWriting
Movie1975It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the TimeWriterWriting
Movie1976Find the LadyWriterWriting
Movie1976Find the LadyProducerProduction
TV Show1977For The RecordDirectorDirecting
TV Show1980The Phoenix TeamDirectorDirecting