Angus MacLachlan is a playwright, screenwriter, and director, best known for writing the screenplay for the 2005 film Junebug. A native of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, many of his films take place in that region of the southern United States.
MacLachlan wrote a short film called Tater Tomater which was directed by Phil Morrison, a student at NYU and a childhood friend of MacLachlan; they grew up together in Winston-Salem. The short is based on MacLachlan's stage play Behold Zebulon. It was first screened in 1989 at the Rialto Theater in Raleigh, North Carolina and in 1992, both screened at Sundance and aired on PBS American Playhouse. The short stars Beth Bostic and Mary Lucy Bivins as two servers working in a cafeteria; Bostic continually asks customers if they want "taters" or "tomaters" until she has a mental breakdown. Since its premiere the short has received praise and taken on cult film status. A now-defunct website, tatertomater.com, was launched and allowed fans to take polls, sign a guestbook, or purchase a copy of the short film.
MacLachlan's first feature film screenplay was 2005's Junebug, which was also directed by Phil Morrison in his directorial debut. MacLachlan's screenplay was nominated for Best First Screenplay at the Independent Spirit Awards. The film was also a breakthrough for Amy Adams, who received an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress.
He adapted one of his plays into a screenplay for the 2010 film Stone, directed by John Curran and starring Robert De Niro, Milla Jovovich, and Edward Norton.
In 2014, he wrote and directed Goodbye To All That, his feature film directorial debut. In 2017, he wrote and directed Abundant Acreage Available, which was awarded "Best Screenplay in a U.S. Narrative Feature Film" at the Tribeca Film Festival.
In 2023, MacLachlan wrote and directed A Little Prayer, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, his first film premiere at Sundance since 2005’s Junebug. The film was initially picked up by Sony Pictures Classics for global distribution after the festival. After two years with no release, ownership reverted back to the producers, and it was eventually purchased by Music Box Films for a theatrical release in August 2025.
2005 | Junebug | ||
2010 | Stone | ||
2014 | Goodbye To All That | ||
2017 | Abundant Acreage Available | ||
2023 | A Little Prayer |
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