Nick Louvel

Nick Louvel was a filmmaker best known for his work on the 2005 mystery film Domino One, which starred Steve Guttenberg, Tatyana Ali and Natalie Portman.

Louvel studied English at Harvard and completed the Sight and Sound summer program at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts. He acquired credits as a director, editor, producer, cinematographer, writer and actor, often in both film and television. Domino One was co-written by Louvel and Nick Garrison and directed and edited by Louvel. The movie was entered into the 2005 DC Film Festival, but was never released to the public.

Louvel also worked as a production assistant on the 1999 film The Thomas Crown Affair, starring Pierce Brosnan and Rene Russo. Additionally, he contributed to the documentaries The Windmill Movie, and the 2015 films The Seventh Fire and The Uncondemned.

His work in television included the 2001 action series Black Scorpion and the telefilms Pizza Time and Haiti: Where Did the Money Go, a documentary about the 2010 earthquake that prompted an outpouring of financial support.

Nick Louvel was a filmmaker best known for his work on the 2005 mystery film Domino One, which starred Steve Guttenberg, Tatyana Ali and Natalie Portman.

Louvel studied English at Harvard and completed the Sight and Sound summer program at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts. He acquired credits as a director, editor, producer, cinematographer, writer and actor, often in both film and television. Domino One was co-written by Louvel and Nick Garrison and directed and edited by Louvel. The movie was entered into the 2005 DC Film Festival, but was never released to the public.

Louvel also worked as a production assistant on the 1999 film The Thomas Crown Affair, starring Pierce Brosnan and Rene Russo. Additionally, he contributed to the documentaries The Windmill Movie, and the 2015 films The Seventh Fire and The Uncondemned.

His work in television included the 2001 action series Black Scorpion and the telefilms Pizza Time and Haiti: Where Did the Money Go, a documentary about the 2010 earthquake that prompted an outpouring of financial support.

Louvel died in an automobile accident on September 24, 2015, in East Hampton, New York. He was 34.

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