


Broderick spent several of his early childhood years in Japan, exploring Tokyo’s streets and taking photographs, later writing short stories inspired by the images. He is a media practitioner and scholar who endeavors to put theory into practice and to translate his practical experience into new theory.
After graduating summa cum laude from Harvard University, Fox went on to receive an M.F.A. in Production from the University of Southern California’s School of Cinema-Television. He then continued on at USC, receiving his Ph.D. in Critical Studies from the School of Cinema-Television, where he was subsequently awarded their Post-Doctoral Fellowship and taught as a Visiting Assistant Professor.
Fox’s award winning narrative, experimental, and documentary works have screened internationally--theatrically, on television, at film festivals, and online. Fox’s film love, death, & cars received PBS broadcast and was the longest running gay/lesbian drama on AtomFilms.com His screenwriting work has received finalist and semifinalist nods from the Chesterfield and Final Draft Screenwriting competitions and has been workshopped as part of the Sundance Independent Producers Program.
Tak For Alt: Survival of a Human Spirit, a documentary he co-directed and edited, won the Dore Schary Award, received national PBS broadcast, a Laemmle theatrical release in Los Angeles, and garnered special recognition from the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences in their Best Documentary Series. His video things girls do… premiered at Outfest and continues to play internationally at festivals and conferences.
Broderick works professionally as a film and video editor and a screenwriter. His critical writing has appeared in Film Quarterly, Spectator, and various book anthologies; he continually presents new research as a guest lecturer and conference panelist. He teaches courses in film and video production, narrative theory and screenwriting, documentary history and production, cinema aesthetics, and themed theory-production seminars on subjects such as autobiography in film and video and representations of body, gender, and sexuality in media. Fox currently teaches at Occidental College in the Department of Art History and Visual Arts and at the University of Southern California’s School of Cinema-Television in the Division of Critical Studies. He is presently at work on a book entitled Revolutionary Media.
A Silverlake, Los Angeles resident and artist, Broderick is also in production on his next documentary project, The Skin I’m In. His screenplay Migration recently won the 2007 Arizona Screenplay Challenge, and he will go into production on another of his scripts One Degree of Separation this May. One Degree will be Fox’s first feature fiction film.
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