Jason Blum, founder of Blumhouse Productions, is a three-time Academy Award ® - nominated and two-time Primetime Emmy Award and Peabody Award-winning
producer. His multimedia company is known for pioneering a new model of studio filmmaking: producing high-quality micro-budget films. Blumhouse is widely regarded as a driving force in the current horror renaissance.
The 2019 film Glass from M. NIght Shyamalan; 2017 blockbusters Split from M. Night Shyamalan; and Get Out from Jordan Peele, with combined budgets of less than $35
million, went on to gross more than $730 million worldwide. Glass was also Blumhouse’s 11th film to open at No. 1. In addition, Get Out was nominated for four Academy Awards ® in 2018—including Best Picture—and won the Oscar ® for Best Original Screenplay. In October, the company’s Halloween posted the second-highest opening ($76 million) for a horror movie after IT.
Blumhouse has also produced the highly profitable The Purge, Insidious, Sinister and Paranormal Activity franchises, which together have grossed more than $1.6 billion at the global box office. Paranormal Activity, which was made for $15,000 and grossed close to $200 million worldwide, launched the Blumhouse model and became the most profitable film of all time. Blum, who was nominated for an Academy Award ® for producing Whiplash, has appeared on Vanity Fair’s “New Establishment List” each year since 2015, received the 2016 Producer of the Year Award at CinemaCon and was named to the TIME 100 list of the world’s most influential people in 2017.
In television, Blum won Primetime Emmy Awards for producing HBO’s The Normal Heart and The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst and two Peabody Awards—for The Jinx and the documentary How to Dance in Ohio. Recent television projects include Sharp Objects, a miniseries for HBO based on Gillian Flynn’s best-selling novel of the same name, and The Loudest Voice in the Room, a miniseries for Showtime based on journalist Gabriel Sherman’s reporting on former Fox News Chief Roger Ailes.
Blum is a member of the Sundance Institute’s Board of Trustees. He also serves on the Board of the Public Theater in New York and the Board of Trustees for Vassar College. Before founding Blumhouse, Blum served as co-head of the Acquisitions and Co-Productions department at Miramax Films in New York. He began his career as the producing director of the Malaparte Theater Company, which was founded by Ethan Hawke.
He is married to journalist and screenwriter Lauren Blum and they have a daughter, Roxy, and a son, Booker.