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Vin Diesel (born Mark Sinclair Vincent on July 18, 1967) is an American actor, writer, director, and producer. Diesel is the founder of the production companies OneRace Films, Tigon Studios, and Racetrack Records. He is distinguished by a shaved head, athletic physique, tell-it-like-it-is attitude, and a deeply textured baritone voice.
Diesel made his stage debut at age seven when he appeared in "Theatre for the New City," which was produced in Greenwich Village and directed by Thomas Hinkerman. He remained involved with the theatre throughout adolescence, going on to attend the city's Hunter College, where his creative writing studies led him to begin screenwriting. Diesel became an active filmmaker in the early 1990s, first earning notice for the short film Multi-Facial, which was selected for screening at the 1995 Cannes Festival. He made his first feature-length film, 1997's Strays, an urban drama in which he was self-cast as a gang boss whose love for a woman inspires him to try to change his ways. Written, directed and produced by Diesel, the film was selected for competition at the 1997 Sundance Festival, leading to an MTV deal to turn it into a series.
In an interview on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, he claimed to have changed his name to Vin Diesel while working as a bouncer, because in that business one's real name is not usually given out. The name "Vin" is simply a shortened version of "Vincent". He received the nickname "Diesel" from his friends who said he ran off Diesel, referring to his non-stop energy.
Career
Diesel's first film role was an uncredited appearance in the 1990 film Awakenings. He then produced, directed and starred in the 1994 short film Multi-Facial, a short semi-autobiographical film which follows a struggling actor stuck in the audition process, because he is regarded as either "too black" or "too white", or not black or white enough.
He was then cast in Steven Spielberg's 1998 Oscar-winning film Saving Private Ryan on the poignancy of his performance in Multi-Facial, and followed it up with a major role in Boiler Room (2000) and his breakthrough role in Pitch Black (2000). He also earned critical acclaim for voice work as the title character in The Iron Giant (1999). He attained action hero superstardom with the 2001 film The Fast and the Furious and the 2002 film xXx. In 2004, he reprised his role as Pitch Black's Riddick in The Chronicles of Riddick. In 2005 he played a comedic role in the film The Pacifier to avoid being typecast as an action hero. In 2006 he played mobster Jack DiNorscio in Sidney Lumet's Find Me Guilty which was based on one of the longest mafia trials in American history.
He has announced his intention to direct Hannibal the Conqueror, and star as the legendary Carthaginian general who crossed the Alps by elephant to attack Rome.
Diesel was originally offered the lead role in Doom, but turned it down. The role eventually went to The Rock.
On March 8, 2006, Diesel revealed he is working on a sequel to The Chronicles of Riddick.
He was attached to star as the popular video game assassin Codename 47 in the film adaptation of the Hitman video game series and has said he will do the voice for the game. The role for the movie will now be played by Timothy Olyphant.
Filmography
| Year |
Movie |
Role |
Other notes |
| 1997 |
Strays |
Rick |
|
| 1998 |
Saving Private Ryan |
Private Caparzo |
|
| 1999 |
Multi-Facial |
Mike |
|
| 1999 |
The Iron Giant |
The Iron Giant (voice) |
|
| 2000 |
Boiler Room |
Chris Varick |
|
| Pitch Black |
Richard B. Riddick |
|
| 2001 |
The Fast and the Furious |
Dominic Toretto |
|
| Knock Around Guys |
Taylor Reese |
|
| 2002 |
xXx |
Xander Cage |
|
| 2003 |
A Man Apart |
Agent Sean Vetter |
|
| 2004 |
The Chronicles of Riddick: Dark Fury |
Richard B. Riddick (voice) |
Straight-to-DVD, animated |
| The Chronicles of Riddick |
Richard B. Riddick |
|
| 2005 |
The Pacifier |
Lieutenant Shane Wolfe |
|
| 2006 |
Find Me Guilty |
Jack DiNorscio |
gained 40 pounds for the role |
| The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift |
Dominic Toretto |
Cameo appearance |
| evilfish |
voiceover |
Announced; animated |
| 2007 |
The Wheelman |
The Wheelman |
Announced |
| Babylon A.D. |
Hugo Cornelius Toorop |
in production |
| 2008 |
Hannibal (animated) |
Hannibal Barca (voice) |
Announced |
| Hannibal the Conqueror |
Announced |
Producer - filmography
-
Multi-Facial (1994) (producer)
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monsters (1997) (executive producer) (producer)
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xXx (film) (2002) (executive producer)
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A Man Apart (2003) (executive producer)
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Chronicles of Riddick (2004) (executive producer)
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Life is a Macomb (2004) documentary (executive producer)
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Find Me Guilty (2006) (producer)
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Hannibal (2007) (producer)
Director - filmography
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Multi-Facial (1994)
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Strays (1997)
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Hannibal (2008) .... Hannibal Barca - announced - soft-pre-production
Writer - filmography
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Multi-Facial (1994)
-
Strays (1997)
Salary
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Saving Private Ryan (1998) $100,000
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The Fast and the Furious (2001) $2,000,000
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xXx (2002) $10,000,000
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Man vrs. Macomb (2003) $2,500,000
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The Chronicles of Riddick (2004) $11,500,000
Vin Diesel "Fact" Generator
A popular internet meme exists where jokes are created to suggest superhuman feats accomplished by Vin Diesel. These feats are always focused on portraying greatness, prowess, and "awesomeness" in a humorous way. A great number come from the Something Awful forums and continue to be cited in forum signatures and small compilations.
Examples
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"In an average living room there are 1,242 objects Vin Diesel could use to kill you, including the room itself."
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"The letters of Vin Diesel's name can be rearranged to form his credo: I end lives."
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"Vin Diesel beat the original Super Mario without ever touching the controller. He simply screamed at his NES between bites of his Filet of Child sandwich, causing the game to beat itself out of pure fear."
The meme is not likely completely original, but it was the first to be widely popular, and the idea most likely originated in the 1990s with a series of Saturday Night Live sketches about a mythical Bill Brasky. These all owe lineage to tall tales such as those of Paul Bunyan. Similar sets of "facts" for Chuck Norris, Mr. T, Samoa Joe, and Jack Bauer later became common, based on the popularity of the Vin Diesel meme.
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