Gregory Segal

He most recently directed a thriller shot in the Philippines Manila Bulletin Article,[1] from his own script, entitled "The Expat," Manila Standard Article, (originally entitled "White Knight" but changed after production ended), starring Lev Gorn (The Wire, The Americans), famed pinoy character actor Mon Confiado, Leo Martinez, and FHM Cover Model and actress/dancer Lovely Abella.

Indie film staple Film Threat raved "Works on almost every level…9.5/10"[2] Greg's produced films include The All-Nighter, with J.K. Simmons and Emile Hirsch, Should've Been Romeo, with Ed Asner, Carol Kane, Michael Rappaport, and Costas Mandylor, Sinners & Saints, with Johnny Strong, Tom Berenger, Method Man, and Sean Patrick Flannery, and HBO American Black Film Festival Grand Jury Prize winner, Academy Award nominee Anthony Lover's My Brother with Vanessa Williams, one of the most honored films targeting African American audiences since The Color Purple.

He served as a production executive on David Wain's The Ten, with Jessica Alba, Paul Rudd, Winona Ryder, Famke Jansen, Gretchen Mol, Oliver Platt, and Liev Schreiber, and as producer on writer-director Scott Dacko's The Insurgents, which won the Audience Award for Best Picture at the Oldenburg Film Festival ("Germany's Sundance").

Until 2003 and his entry into the movie business, Greg practiced law with firms such as Cadwalader, Ernst & Young and Deloitte.

[4] Heretic was a production company on the films "Copenhagen" which won the Slamdance Audience Award, and on "Welcome to Me," starring Kristen Wiig, and produced with Adam McKay and Will Ferrell, as well as on "Eating Animals," based on the book by Jonathan Safran Foer and produced with Natalie Portman.