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  1. Roger Lindsey Donaldson ONZM (born 15 November 1945) is an Australian and New Zealand film director, screenwriter, and producer. His 1977 debut film, Sleeping Dogs, is considered landmark work of New Zealand cinema, as one of the country’s first films to attract large-scale critical and commercial success. [1]

  2. Roger Donaldson is an Australian director, producer and writer, known for The World's Fastest Indian, No Way Out and Species. IMDb provides his contact info, resume, credits, photos, videos, trivia and more.

    • January 1, 1
    • 1.88 m
    • Ballarat, Australia
  3. Roger Donaldson is an Australian-born director and producer of films such as The World's Fastest Indian, No Way Out and Species. He was born in 1945, married to Marliese Schneider and has four children.

    • November 15, 1945
  4. Roger Donaldson is a New Zealand-born director of political thrillers, such as No Way Out and Thirteen Days. Explore his movies, ratings, reviews, and box office performance on Rotten Tomatoes.

    Tomatometer®
    Audience Score
    Title
    Credit
    79%
    81%
    Director
    35%
    46%
    Director
    28%
    39%
    Director
    80%
    74%
    Director
  5. Mar 24, 2006 · The World's Fastest Indian: Directed by Roger Donaldson. With Anthony Hopkins, Iain Rea, Tessa Mitchell, Aaron Murphy. The story of New Zealander Burt Munro, who spent years rebuilding a 1920 Indian motorcycle, which helped him set the land speed world record at Utah's Bonneville Salt Flats in 1967.

    • (59K)
    • Biography, Drama, Sport
    • Roger Donaldson
    • 2006-03-24
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  7. The director of Sleeping Dogs, The Bank Job, Thirteen Days and more talks about his films, challenges and collaborations. He also reveals how he made his debut feature in New Zealand with limited resources and a lot of problem solving.

  8. Roger Lindsey Donaldson is an Australian and New Zealand film director, screenwriter, and producer. His 1977 debut film, Sleeping Dogs, is considered landmark work of New Zealand cinema, as one of the country’s first films to attract large-scale critical and commercial success.

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