Decatur, Alabama, USA
James Hunter began making movies at an extremely young age. At age 13 in 1990 he made a "Star Wars" movie using action figures with blue screen and special effects after renting out a local TV station. At age 14 he wrote "Robin Hood: Prince of Sherwood" and with the help of his father and friends, pulled together his first feature film, shot on 16mm. The film took three years to make and premiered in January 1994 at the local town theater. Tickets were sold at $5 and around 3,000 people saw the movie over 2 days. James self taught himself how to load and shoot with a 16mm film camera and also taught himself to edit on film. That same year, Hunter began his second feature film attempt at age 17, this time playing the lead role as well as directing. Also shot and edited on 16mm, "The River Bridge" was completed in 1996. This film starred Charles Napier, a veteran character actor of the 80s and 90s. In 1997, Hunter married and moved to Los Angeles where he studied film, theater, and philosophy at Los Angeles City College. He worked at the Virgin Mega Store in Hollywood, as a waiter at Hamburger Hamlet, and as an extra to make ends. Due to the Digital Revolution and Hollywood's reluctance to take such a young director seriously, Hunter put directing aside and got involved in acting at age 20 and in 2004 he became a member of the Screen Actors Guild. His teenage films remained on a shelf until 2008 when Hunter distributed the movies with the help of Ryan Sims, and the films were finally released through Indieflix and Amazon.com. In April of 2013, Hunter uploaded to films to YouTube. In 1999, Hunter went into production on his 3rd film, "Vagabond Lover 1999". Production shut down after one investor pulled the plug. Twenty years later, Hunter began pre-production again and reentered the project, writing new scenes and new characters. In 2020, the Covid pandemic shut down the production a second time. Production is scheduled to begin again in 2023. As of 2023, James has written several new projects including two horror films, a sequel to his original Robin Hood film, and a movie based on the true story of his late aunt, Mary Faye Hunter, who was murdered in 1967.

as Factory Worker (uncredited)

as Country Club Golf Hustler (uncredited)
2000

as Zombie (uncredited)
2025

as Factory Worker (uncredited)
2020

as Detective (uncredited)
2024

as Student (uncredited)
1999

as Customer Ed
1963

as Dead Parishoner (uncredited)
2024

as Poker Player
2007

as Refugee (uncredited)
1998

as Orangutan (uncredited)
2001

as Cop (uncredited)
2007

as Hidden Camera Operator (uncredited)
2020
as Bread Roll Guy (uncredited)
2024

as Zombie (uncredited)
2025

as Dead Parishoner (uncredited)
2024

as Bread Roll Guy (uncredited)
2024

as Kellog Agent (uncredited)
2024

as Angry Office Worker (uncredited)
2023

as Middle Management (uncredited)
2022

as Gala Veteran (uncredited)
2022

as Paparazzi (uncredited)
2022

as Church Parishioner (uncredited)
2022

as Cop (uncredited)
2013

as Cop (uncredited)
2007

as Poker Player
2007

as Cab Driver (uncredited)
2003
as Matise Holland
2001

as Orangutan (uncredited)
2001

as Alien Student (uncredited)
2000

as Wrestling Fan (uncredited)
1999

as SWAT Team Leader
1999

as Student (uncredited)
1999

as Bully (uncredited)
1999

as Traveller (uncredited)
1999

as Computer Programmer (uncredited)
1998

as Student (uncredited)
1998

as Refugee (uncredited)
1998
as Detective (uncredited)
1 ep.

as Country Club Golf Hustler (uncredited)
1 episodes

as Factory Worker (uncredited)
1 episodes

as Detective (uncredited)
1 episodes

as Customer Ed
2 episodes

as Hidden Camera Operator (uncredited)
1 episodes