[center][img=http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-wPOsctpkWO4/UQnKiNtHPSI/AAAAAAAABQs/JwKKtBSJNjs/s1600/article-2024724-0D64BFEB00000578-439_306x423.jpg] [b]Quotes:[/b] [i]"Well, in my family we call that 'Bullshit'."[/i] -When asked about the lifelong rumor that his father (popularly known as The Bull) once killed an extra, on-set, in front of the cast and crew. [i]"When I was an infant, I wanted to be a train conductor because, in my mind, they were always alone in their cabins. Not having to deal with anyone. With only their machine's company. Then 1969 came, and with it an even more attractive scrap of metal."[/i]- Starting narration of his second feature film, "Lonesome Train". [i]"Oh, I'm sure Jonny Boy will some day achieve something. Or at least I hope so, would be a waste of a damn good last name if he didn't."[/i]- His father, jokingly, when asked about the then 7 years-old Jonathan. [b]Name:[/b] Jonathan Bullard [b]Nicknames:[/b] Jonny Boy/Junior/Bull/Bull Jr. [b]Age:[/b] 37 [b]Place of Birth:[/b] New York, N.Y., U.S.A. [b]Occupation:[/b] Writer/Director [b]Personality/History:[/b] Saul Bullard (a.k.a. The Bull) was a prominent and influential cult filmmaker who found infamy after apparently killing an extra in order to make a scene more tense for the main actors in his 1987 film [i]The Riddle Song[/i]. Although this was never proven to be anything more than a rumor, the press kept bugging Saul about it. Finally, one gloomy afternoon on the winter of 1995, Saul held a gun like a microphone and sang his swan song into it. Although Jonathan doesn't like talking about it, the influences of his father's controversies are easily observable on his work; especially on his first feature film [i]Numbness[/i] and the second one [i]Lonesome Train[/i]. Most of his repertoire consists of slow burning, existential character dramas; of the kind that stays with the viewer long after watching them (think Vinterberg or IƱarritu, but concentrating in less characters). He won a large number of prestigious awards for his "big-budget" biopic [i]Goodbye, Hemingway[/i], which was about Hemingway's last years. [b]Extra:[/b] [list] [*]He appeared on three of his father's films: [i]The Riddle Song[/i] (1987), [i]Who? When? Where?[/i] (1991) and [i]Raspberries[/i] (1994).[/*] [*]He has four feature films under his belt so far: [i]Numbness[/i] (1996), [i]Lonesome Train[/i] (2002), [i]Out On The Weekend[/i] (2005) and [i]Goodbye, Hemingway[/i] (2012). [/*] [/list] [/center] If any of the actors and/or actresses wants to, I could try to accommodate them into having been on [i]Goodbye, Hemingway[/i].