
What is Ryan Coogler’s Net Worth and Salary?
Ryan Coogler, the American director and screenwriter, is worth $25 million. Coogler is best known for his work on the films “Fruitvale Station,” “Creed,” and “Black Panther.”
Coogler’s first feature film, “Fruitvale Station,” won over 20 awards. He has also worked as a boom editor, sound editor, sound mixer, assistant cameraman, and grip. Coogler was the executive producer for a 2014 ESPN “30 for 30” episode, and he produced the 2021 films “Space Jam: A New Legacy” and “Judas and the Black Messiah.”
“Black Panther,” which Coogler directed, received critical and commercial success, earning $700 million domestically and $1.4 billion worldwide. It is currently the ninth highest-grossing movie in history.
In 2013, Coogler was featured on “Time” magazine’s “30 People Under 30 Changing the World” list. In 2018, he was the runner-up for “Time” Person of the Year and was included in the publication’s list of the world’s most influential people.
Ryan Coogler’s Background
Ryan Coogler was born on May 23, 1986, in Oakland, California. He grew up in Oakland and Richmond, California, with his mother Joselyn, father Ira, and brothers Keenan and Noah. Coogler attended Saint Mary’s College High School in Berkeley, where he enjoyed playing sports and excelled in football and track. He earned a football scholarship to Saint Mary’s College of California, where he took a creative writing class and was encouraged to pursue screenwriting. After the school ended its football program, Coogler transferred to Sacramento State on a scholarship, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in finance and took several film classes.
Coogler then attended the USC School of Cinematic Arts and directed four short films, including “Locks,” which received the Dana and Albert Broccoli Award for Filmmaking Excellence at the Tribeca Film Festival. He also won awards for his shorts “Fig” and “Gap.”
Ryan Coogler’s Film Career
Ryan Coogler’s breakout film was “Fruitvale Station,” which premiered at Sundance in 2013 and was later acquired by The Weinstein Company for $2 million. The film grossed $17.4 million and starred Michael B. Jordan, who would become a frequent collaborator.
Coogler teamed up with Jordan again for “Creed,” a spin-off/sequel of the “Rocky” series, which grossed $173.6 million at the box office. He later served as an executive producer on “Creed II.”
Coogler’s biggest hit to date is “Black Panther,” which starred Chadwick Boseman, Lupita Nyong’o, and Danai Gurira. Coogler was the youngest person to direct a Marvel film, and he is set to direct “Black Panther II.”
After Boseman’s death in August 2020, Coogler released a statement expressing his grief and admiration for the star. In February 2021, Disney+ announced a five-year deal with Coogler’s production company, Proximity Media, to develop a series set in the Kingdom of Wakanda. Coogler’s produced film “Judas and the Black Messiah” earned several awards in 2021, and Coogler himself earned an Academy Award nomination for the movie.
Ryan Coogler’s Activism
Ryan Coogler, who married producer Zinzi Evans in 2016, has been working as a counselor at San Francisco’s Juvenile Hall since he was 21 years old. He has been helping incarcerated youths and making an impact on their lives. Coogler also co-founded Blackout For Human Rights, a network that comprises of concerned artists, activists, filmmakers, musicians and citizens who have dedicated their energy and resources to address the human rights violations against fellow Americans throughout the United States.
Awards and Honors
Ryan Coogler has received numerous awards and honors for his work as a film director and screenwriter. He received an Academy Award nomination for Best Motion Picture of the Year for “Judas and the Black Messiah” in 2021. Coogler has also earned nine Black Reel Award nominations, winning Outstanding Director, Motion Picture and Outstanding Original or Adapted Screenplay, Motion Picture for “Creed” and Outstanding Director for “Black Panther.”
He was named Director of the Year at the 2018 CinemaCon Awards, and “Fruitvale Station” won the Un Certain Regard – Avenir Prize at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival and a Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. Coogler won NAACP Image Awards for Outstanding Directing in a Motion Picture and Outstanding Writing in a Motion Picture for “Black Panther” and “Creed,” and the Satellite Awards honored him with an Honorary Satellite Award in 2014 and an Auteur Award in 2019.
Ryan Coogler has also won awards from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films (“Black Panther”), African-American Film Critics Association (“Creed” and “Black Panther”), All Def Movie Awards (“Creed”), Black Film Critics Circle Awards (“Black Panther” and “Fruitvale Station”), Dragon Awards (“Black Panther”), Film Independent Spirit Awards (“Fruitvale Station”), Gotham Awards (“Fruitvale Station”), National Board of Review (“Fruitvale Station”), and PGA Awards (“Fruitvale Station”).
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