Randall Miller Net Worth

Randall Miller was born, is Director, Actor, Writer. Randall Miller is a member of the IA, the DGA, SAG and the WGA. He began his career as a struggling actor appearing in TV commercials, theater and a few stints in television shows and movies. After USC Film School he went to the AFI. His thesis film at the AFI launched his career as a director working in television when Ed Zwick hired him to direct thirty something when he was still in his twenties. His first break into features came when Todd Black hired him to direct Class Act starring Kid 'N Play. He often works with his wife and collaborator Jody Savin with whom he has written numerous screenplays, many un-produced and others produced. When they were in their 40's they took the money out of there house and produced Marilyn Hotchkiss Ballroom Dancing & Charm School starring Marisa Tomei, John Goodman and Robert Carlyle. Marilyn Hotchkiss premiered at Sundance and thus started the couples foray into independent film. Their most successful independent film was Bottle Shock starring Alan Rickman, Bill Pullman and Chris Pine. The couple raised money and self released the film domestically when they were unhappy with the distribution deals being offered.START OF HIS PROFESSIONAL CAREER AS A DIRECTORIt was at the AFI student showcase screening of the short film MARILYN HOTCHKISS' BALLROOM DANCING AND CHARM SCHOOL that Ed Zwick saw the film and invited Randall to shadow a director on the set of his hit television series THIRTYSOMETHING. When a slot became available, Randall stepped in and was hired to direct an episode of THIRTYSOMETHING. He was not even thirty at the time. Randall joined the DGA at age 27 to direct THIRTYSOMETHING. Based on the success of his having worked with kids on his short film, Randall went on to direct several children programs as well. He directed the pilot for SALUTE YOUR SHORTS in which he cast several children from his award winning short film. SALUTE YOUR SHORTS became a successful series for Nickelodeon and played for years. He directed five episodes of RUNNING THE HALLS on NBC; three episodes of CITY KIDS for ABC and Henson; and PARKER LEWIS CAN'T LOSE for Fox. At the same time as securing television directing jobs, Randall and his writing partner Jody Savin were developing and selling screenplays and television series ideas to networks and studios. PETE, a live action retelling of the Pinocchio tale, was sold to Disney Studios through Adelson/Baumgarten productions. Randall and Jody were signed to a three-picture writing deal at Disney Studios. Randall joined the WGA as well on the Disney job. Producer Alberto Grimaldi and Salvatore Alabiso optioned MARILYN HOTCHKISS BALLROOM DANCING AND CHARM SCHOOL with the idea to make the short film into a feature length film with Randall directing.CLASS ACTTodd Black saw the short film MARILYN HOTCHKISS BALLROOM DANCING AND CHARM SCHOOL, read some Randall and Jody's writing and was a fan of the THIRTYSOMETHING that Randall had directed. He took a chance on Randall and hired him to direct his first feature film, the Warner Brothers film CLASS ACT starring Kid 'n Play. CLASS ACT featured Randall's cousin, Rhea Perlman, Ray Burke who Randall had worked with as an actor on THROW MOMMA FROM THE TRAIN, Pauly Shore and several others. Class Act tested 97% excellent in front of the test audiences. This "low budget" studio film budgeted at 7.5M went on to become quite successful for Warners and grossed 13M theatrically. Over the years, Randall has been approached about doing a sequel or remake.HOUSEGUESTJoe Roth and Roger Birnbaum saw the trailer for CLASS ACT and predicted its success. Based on the buzz, they hired Randall and Jody to rewrite and Randall to direct HOUSEGUEST starring Sinbad. Randall cast Phil Hartman in the starring role opposite Sinbad. The rest of the cast included Kim Greist whom Randy had met while acting in THROW MOMMA FROM THE TRAIN, Jeffrey Jones, Paul Ben Victor, Stan Shaw and Pat Fraser who had been the lead of Randall's student film MARILYN HOTCHKISS BALLROOM DANCING AND CHARM SCHOOL. HOUSEGUEST was filmed on location in Pittsburgh. Jody served as a Co-Producer. Randall also hired his film school cinematographer Mike Ozier to be the second unit cinematographer. Joe Roth and Roger Birnbaum produced the film. Halfway through production, Joe Roth was tapped by Disney Studios to take over as the head of Production. HOUSEGUEST tested extremely well, 94% in the top two boxes and again this rather "low budgeted" studio film went onto to do quite well. Budgeted at 10M, HOUSEGUEST made 26M theatrically. Roger Birnbaum then hired Randall and Jody to write and develop their screenplay, THE LIFT.THE SIXTH MANOff the success of HOUSEGUEST, another Disney on-the-lot producer David Hoberman hired Randall to direct the basketball sports comedy starring Marlon Wayans. Marlon and Randall forged a great relationship and made the basketball film in Vancouver BC. Jody and Randall rewrote the script, and Jody served as an Executive Producer on the film. The supporting cast included many well-known college coaches and basketball royalty: Nolan Richardson, John Thompson, Brad Nessler, Dick Vitale, Jerry Tarkanian, George Raveling, Billy Packer, Todd Bozeman, Jim Harrick, Lute Olson. The supporting cast was also a combination of actors and former players: Kadeem Hardison, Paul Ben Victor, David Paymer, Will Sasso, Michael Michelle, Lorenzo Orr, Travis Ford, Kevin Dunn and Chris Spencer. Randall discovered and cast Octavia Spencer who got her SAG card on that film. Randall hired Mike Ozier, his AFI film school buddy, as the cinematographer on the film. SIXTH MAN was a moderate success; it cost 11M and went on to make 15M theatrically.TELEVISION FILMSRandall filled his time between the studio films he and Jody were writing and developing with directing assignments in television both in movie-for-television and episodic. Randall directed episodes of NORTHERN EXPOSURE, JACK AND JILL, POPULAR, the pilot for DEAD LAST. Randall directed two MOWs for ABC, THE TALE OF TWO BUNNIES shot in Toronto and ABC's H-E-DOUBLE HOCKEY STICKS in Vancouver, and one MOW for ABC Family TILL DAD DO US PART starring John Larroquette and Markie Post. He developed a movie for ABC about the creation GILLIGAN'S ISLAND with Gilligan creator Sherwood Schwartz and his son Lloyd Schwartz.SCREENPLAYS SOLDRandall and his writing partner sold THE BEST WOMAN to Universal and PARENT WARS to Universal with Robert Simonds attached to produce. They sold PIRATE TOM to Fox with Larry Brezner attached to produce. Randall and Jody developed and sold a sit-com pilot called PROMISE AND DASH to Paramount Studios and Paramount Television.INDEPENDENT FILMS MARILYN HOTCHKISS BALLROOM DANCING & CHARM SCHOOLFrustrated with the types of films he was being offered as a director, Randall and Jody wrote, produced and Randall directed a feature length version of the short film of the same name. Randall and Jody took a loan against their house and with two small children at home, they put their money into the film. The film cost 2M and was cobbled together with money from friends and family and a small group of investors. Randall made a deal with AFI to buy the rights back to his film to incorporate that original 16mm footage into the feature film as a flashback. The original film's negative was scanned and repaired using digital clean-up to be incorporated in the larger film. The current day part of the film was populated with an all-star cast who responded to the screenplay and the fact that these filmmakers had so much on the line. The cast included: Academy Award winner Marisa Tomei, Robert Carlyle, John Goodman, Danny DeVito, Donnie Wahlberg, a now grown-up Elden Henson (who also starred in the short film years earlier), Octavia Spencer, Academy Award winner Mary Steenburgen, Sean Astin, David Paymer, Miguel Sandoval, Camryn Manheim, Adam Arkin and Ernie Hudson. The film premiered in 2005 at the Sundance Film Festival to standing ovations. It was sold and released by Samuel Goldwyn and overseas by Shoreline Entertainment. The film played numerous film festivals both domestically and abroad, garnering several awards.NOBEL SONOff the success of MARILYN HOTCHKISS BALLROOM DANCING AND CHARM SCHOOL, Randall and Jody teamed with many of the same investors as well as new investors to make the 4M dollar budgeted film in Los Angeles. Randall and Jody wrote, produced and Randall directed Nobel Son, a dark comedic tale of the son of a Nobel Prize winning scientist. Maybe the best moment of Randall and Jody's careers as writers was the phone message on their machine left by Alan Rickman after he read the screenplay, "Thank you for being real writers, but unfortunately I don't see how I can fit the film into my schedule." He left his phone number. So Randall and Jody called Alan Rickman and proceeded to change the film's schedule to fit Alan's. It was the start of a great collaboration and friendship. In addition to Alan Rickman, the film starred Mary Steenburgen, Bill Pullman, Ernie Hudson, Danny DeVito, Sean Hatosy, Eliza Dushku, Ted Danson, Tracy Walters and Bryan Greenberg. NOBEL SON premiered at the Tribeca Film festival in 2007 and was released theatrically in 2008.BOTTLE SHOCKDrawing on his days at UC Davis studying enology, Randall next directed BOTTLE SHOCK about the birth of the Napa wine scene in 1976 following the Judgement of Paris in which the Napa wines defeated their French counterparts in a blind taste testing. Randall and Jody were approached by Marc and Brenda Lhormer of the then Sonoma Film Festival about the tale when the festival screened MARILYN HOTCHKISS BALLROOM DANCING AND CHARM SCHOOL. Marc and Brenda Lhormer along with Todd Harris produced the film with Randall and Jody. Randall and Jody rewrote the screenplay and approached Alan Rickman to play the lead role of wine connoisseur Steven Spurrier in the film and Bill Pullman to play the vintner Bo Barrett of Chateau Montelena. The strong cast included Freddy Rodriguez, Bradley Whitford, Dennis Farina, Racheal Taylor, Eliza Dushku, and Miguel Sandoval. To play the young lead, they discovered another great talent, Chris Pine. After seeing Chris Pine in BOTTLE SHOCK, JJ Abrams cast Chris in STAR TREK as Captain Kirk. BOTTLE SHOCK was filmed entirely on location in Sonoma and Napa Counties, with an old vineyard doubling for the French countryside. BOTTLE SHOCK was a tremendous success at Sundance when it premiered in 2008. BOTTLE SHOCK went on to win awards at the Seattle International Film Festival and the Maui Film Festival amongst others. Unhappy with the offers being held out at Sundance, Randall and Jody choose to self-release the feature film. They raised additional capital, hired the marketing team from Roadside Attractions and sold the home video to Fox. They were involved in creating television ads and billboards and bought the internet banners. They sold the airline rights separately, and many of the foreign markets one by one. To this day the way Randall and Jody released BOTTLE SHOCK is often studied as a case-study in self-release.SAVANNAHOff the success of BOTTLE SHOCK, several other filmmakers approached Randall and Jody about producing and releasing their features. One person that approached Randall and Jody was Annette Haywood Carter who had served as the script supervisor on Randall's CLASS ACT years before. Randall and Jody travelled to Savannah, Georgia where they met and convinced John Cay to fund the entire film. Randall brought many members of the crew who had worked with him on the prior films including his DP Mike Ozier, Designer Craig Stearns, the camera team and the line producer to work on the movie SAVANNAH. Randall and Jody met and made a deal with Nick Gant and his Meddin Studios in Savannah to provide all the necessary physical production. Randall stood behind Annette and helped her put together a tremendous cast: Jim Caviezel, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Jaimie Alexander, Bradley Whitford, Jack McBrayer, Sam Shepard, and Hal Holbrook. SAVANNAH premiered at the Sedona Film Festival and played in many regional festivals before its theatrical release in 2013.CBGBRandall and Jody successfully secured the rights from the family of the late Hilly Kristal who started the legendary rock 'n' roll club in NYC on the Bowery called CBGB: Country Blue Grass and Blues. The club was the home to Blondie, the Talking Heads, the Ramones and was the first place the Police played in America. It was a hotbed of music and art and culture in a time of unrest and malaise in the 70's in NYC. Randall and Jody partnered with Brad Rosenberger of Warner Chappell Music Group to produce the film. Brad, Randall and Jody had been developing THE DRUMMER about Beach Boys drummer Dennis Wilson. When THE DRUMMER fell apart the three decided to team up for CBGB. Alan Rickman agreed to play the title role of Hilly Kristal, the owner and founder of CBGB. They decided to build the club on the soundstages at Meddin Studios in Savannah. They recreated the downtown Bowery on a small street in downtown Savannah next to Lady and Sons owned by Paula Deen. The film starred an amazing supporting cast: Malin Akerman, Justin Bartha, Richard DeKlerk, Kyle Gallner, Johnny Galecki, Ashley Greene, Taylor Hawkins, Ryan Hurst, Stana Katic, Joel David Moore, Ahna O'Reilly, Freddy Rodriguez, Bradley Whitford, Mickey Sumner and Josh Zuckerman. CBGB opened the CBGB Music Festival and was released by Xlrator Media theatrically and Direct TV in 2013. The soundtrack was a collection of classic rock tracks that were all born out of CBGB including tracks from the Police, the Ramones, the Dead Boys, Blondie, The Talking Heads, Television and many others.PERSONAL LIFERandall and Jody finally married in 1999 after Jody's mother was diagnosed with a rare brain cancer. She died the night of their wedding. Randall and Jody have two children. They live in Pasadena, not far from where Randall grew up. The children both attend the same school that Randall did as a child. Randall's mother and father have both passed.EARLY LIFERandall Miller grew up in Pasadena, California the son of two politically liberal doctors. His mother, Leona Miller, was an internist and professor at USC County Medical Center and President of the Diabetes Association. His father, Alexander Miller, was a Professor at UCLA in Micro-Biology after completing his graduate studies at Cal Tech in Pasadena. Randall's childhood home through the 1960's and 1970's was filled with people: exchange students (post docs or children of foreign colleagues from Nigeria, Mexico and South America); a grandparent, cousin or other distant family member often lived with the Miller family along with five undocumented Mexican immigrants and indigent patients of his mother who needed extra care. It was a rambling Pasadena commune. This is the life that Randall knew and became the basis for not only his sense of humor, but his sense of story and a yearning to tell these stories on film. Randall rode his bike three miles to school starting at the age of seven, and in the third grade, he was hit by a Burkhard Nursery truck which resulted in compound fractures to his leg and ankle. He spent six months in a cast and spent the year in a wheelchair. He recovered fully and played sports throughout high school.Randall played football and soccer in high school garnering all-league and all-state honors in both. On his Polytechnic high school football team, Randall was a captain and played the defensive linebacker; on offense he was a tight end and was the placekicker as well. He often scored points on offense and defense as he took his tiny eight-man football team to the state championships only to lose in the finals. He was invited to play in several San Gabriel Valley and California State All-Star games after high school where he realized how much bigger and stronger college-bound D1 athletes were than he was. While at high school, Randall also acted in plays and took part in the high school musicals. After high school, Randall attended UC Davis where he studied Bio Chemistry with the idea that he would follow his parents into medicine. While at Davis, one of the classes that he excelled in was Enology (the study of wine and wine production); Randall would later use some of what he learned when he wrote and directed Bottle Shock.Randall lifted weights and strengthened himself enough to play a season of football at UC Davis where he caught passes from Ken O'Brien who later went on to play professionally for the New York Jets. Against larger college athletes, Randall suffered a back injury that sidelined him from football and later would cause him to have two back surgeries. He walked onto the UC Davis soccer team and became a starter. But his soccer career was cut short when he ruptured a tendon in his ankle. At UC Davis Randall auditioned and took parts in theater productions. It was there where he caught the acting bug.Between his sophomore and junior year of university study he studied acting with Milton Katselas at the Beverly Hills Playhouse. While in Los Angeles he got a theatrical and commercial agent and began booking television national commercials for such products as Kleenex, Miller Beer, Budweiser, Chilis, Michelob and Coca Cola. Randall joined SAG at 19 years of age and has worked on and off ever since as an actor. On the television and movie side, he booked roles in Highway to Heaven, Cheers and Throw Momma From The Train. One semester into his junior year at UC Davis, Randall transferred to UCLA so that he could continue auditioning and taking his acting classes at Beverly Hills Playhouse. He started writing plays and one acts and it was one of his plays, FRIGIDAIRE, which he later performed at the Beverly Hills Playhouse, which caught the attention of Bob Zemeckis who was married at the time to Mary Ellen Trainor, a fellow student at the playhouse. As a result of FRIGIDAIRE being produced professionally, Randall joined the Dramatists Guild. Zemeckis suggested that Randall finish his studies at USC School of Cinema, and Zemeckis, offered to write a letter of recommendation.Randall credits Zemeckis' letter with garnering him acceptance to the USC Cinema School where he studied film and directing. While at USC, FRIGIDAIRE, Randall's play that he had mounted at the Beverly Hills Playhouse, was made into an award-winning thesis film. Randall acted in that short film which he wrote and was directed by Terilyn Shropshire. With the aid of fellow students, Randall wrote and directed CHUTZPAH, a short film that garnered several awards, and it was with that short that he was accepted to the American Film Institute Director's program. It was at AFI that Randall wrote and directed several short films: MR. WONDERFUL, EL TANGERO and THE WURST, but it was his second-year graduate thesis film MARILYN HOTCHKISS' BALLROOM DANCING AND CHARM SCHOOL that launched his professional career and landed him the prestigious CAA as his writing and directing agent. MARILYN HOTCHKISS' (the short film) garnered 18 international film awards, a Cine Golden Eagle and a FOCUS award for best film and best film editing.MARILYN HOTCHKISS told a semi-autobiographical tale of a boy in Pasadena who was sent to Charm School. Randall attended Dorothy Gallotz Cotillion Dance Classes on only one occasion, but that one night shaped his memory indelibly. The film featured sixty kids ranging from 8 to 12 and was narrated by Academy Award winner William Hurt. During his time at USC and later at AFI, Randall continued to act in movies and television and book commercials, "Acting in commercials was how I paid for film school." It was at film school at AFI that he met and became romantically involved with Jody Savin. Jody was a second year Writing Fellow who had watched many Directors come through the program. When she saw Randall's first short film, the crowd-pleasing MR. WONDERFUL, a fluff piece about a man dating three women simultaneously, she marched up to him immediately after the screening and said "You have so much talent, but you are wasting it on drivel!" After the initial shock, Randall and Jody became writing partners as well as boyfriend and girlfriend and began to forge a career together as screenwriters and creative partners. MIDNIGHT RIDERRandall and Jody were approached by Gregg Allman's representatives to make a film on the life of Gregg Allman based on the Gregg's autobiography My Cross to Bear. Randy and Jody again partnered with Brad Rosenberger to produce the film. This time Jody wrote the screenplay while Randall finished the post production on CBGB. Jody and Randall decided to use Meddin Studios again as they had done previously on CBGB and SAVANNAH. However, unlike those films, Randall and Jody hired mostly local crew to work on the production. Aside from Mike Ozier who had DP'd most of Randall's previous films the entire below-the-line crew was local Savannah and Georgia crew members. Gregg Allman and Michael Lehman, Gregg's manager, served as producers alongside Randall and Jody on the film. Michael was helpful in raising the funds to make the film. Michael introduced Jim Tharpe to the project. Jim Tharpe would later sign on as one of the film's Executive Producers and main equity investor. Again, Randall put together a strong cast: William Hurt, Wyatt Russell, Zoey Deutch, Tyson Ritter, Eliza Dushku, Charles Dutton, Bradley Whitford and several others.On the very first day of production, an accident occurred on a train trestle while filming a scene with William Hurt and Wyatt Russell. The second assistant cameraperson, Sarah Jones was killed when CSX train Q12519 failed to stop even though CSX train engineer Michael Ryan had seen people on the train tracks from ¾ of a mile away. The film crew had signed permission to be on the property of Rayonier, a multi-billion dollar multi-national company, whose representatives led the film crew onto the property through a locked gate, which they opened. Kat Parkinson, Head of DSI/Rayonier security testified "We opened the gate." Not only did Film Allman, the company making the film, have a signed agreement with the land owner Rayonier, but Rayonier employee Tina Kicklighter was in the contract as the designated representative responsible to be on site at all times. It was later discovered that 5 people from Rayonier were present at the shoot. Kat Parkinson, Tina Kicklighter and Gwennette Stewart of Rayonier were present, no one disputes that. Two witnesses at the scene place mill manager Jack Perrett, the highest person in charge at the mill, at the scene as well.Randall and Jody were in Los Angeles when the film crew scouted the trestle. The crew that scouted was led out onto the bridge by Rayonier representative Tina Kicklighter. After the accident, Randall and Jody, as the film's director and producer, were charged with criminal trespass and involuntary manslaughter. Jody was never on the trestle or the tracks. The maximum sentence for the charges against Randall and Jody was 13 years. Wayne County has a 98% conviction rate. As an outsider going up against both Rayonier and CSX, two major local corporation, with a very slim chance of getting a fair trial in Wayne County, Randall struck a plea deal so that his wife could go home to their children.Recently the family of Sarah Jones secured an $11.2M judgement against CSX in Superior court in Savannah. The jury found that CSX was 35% liable and Rayonier was 18% liable. The culpability found against these two entities dwarfs the responsibility allocated to Mr. Miller and this occurred in a court proceeding where Mr. Miller was not present and where there was no one to defend him. On the contrary, the full weight of the CSX attorneys tried to pin the blame Miller, but the jury saw through their accusations and CSX and Rayonier were found collectively 53% culpable.In jail in Wayne County, Randall taught GED and helped inmates earn their high school diplomas. He was tasked by the Sheriff to raise money to make a film about the drug problem and the local Wayne County Drug Court. He worked on that film with the Honorable Judge Stephen Kelley, Captain Detective Joe Naia and filmed both in and out of the courtroom, as well as in the jail interviewing inmates, drug offenders and clinical workers. Even Governor Nathan Deal and his son the Honorable Judge Jason Deal were interviewed for the film. The completed film is being shown and used in the Drug Courts in Georgia as a teaching tool.
Randall Miller is a member of Director

Age, Biography and Wiki

Who is it? Director, Actor, Writer
Birth Place American
Alma mater UC Davis USC School of Cinematic Arts
Occupation Filmmaker

💰 Net worth: $100K - $1M

Some Randall Miller images

Biography/Timeline

1992

Class Act, released in 1992, is a modern-day comedic take on The Prince & the Pauper, about a pair of teenagers with switched identities.

1993

In 1993, Miller was nominated for CableACE Awards for his writing and direction of a short children's musical entitled Marilyn Hotchkiss' Ballroom Dancing and Charm School (later remade as a feature film with the same title). In 2000, he was nominated for a Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directing – Children's Programs for the Wonderful World of Disney episode "H-E Double Hockey Sticks". He then directed a number of independent films, including his self-distributed 2008 film Bottle Shock which premiered at the Sundance Film festival in 2008. His previous film Marilyn Hotchkiss' Ballroom Dancing and Charm School premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2005; Nobel Son premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2007 and CBGB in 2013.

1995

In 1995, Miller helmed Houseguest, another movie about mistaken identities. The Los Angeles Times said of it, "Houseguest, a rowdy fish-out-of-water comedy, is as good-natured as its big, beefy star, Comedian Sinbad." The film debuted at No.3 and went on to gross $26 million in North America, making it a modest commercial success considering its 10.5 million budget.

2005

In 2005, Miller wrote and directed Marilyn Hotchkiss' Ballroom Dancing and Charm School, a full-length feature of his 1990 short film of the same name. Nobel Son was written and directed by Miller, and was a 2007 American black comedy release about a dysfunctional family dealing with the kidnapping of their son for ransom following the father's winning of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. It featured Alan Rickman in the leading role.

2008

Alan Rickman returned in a leading role for Miller's movie Bottle Shock in 2008, a dramedy about a 1976 wine competition where a California wine defeated a French wine in a blind taste test. Miller and wife, Jody, were introduced to Marc and Brenda Lhormer, the founders of the Sonoma Valley Film Festival, in 2006 at the opening night of Marilyn Hotchkiss' Ballroom Dancing and Charm School. In 2008, the founder couple presented the screenplay of a story involving the 'Judgement of Paris' to Miller and his wife. This story interested Miller and Jody and they took the story on board. They ended up writing, directing and producing Bottle Shock.

2013

Rickman returned for the third time to play Hilly Kristal in CBGB, a 2013 historical film about the former New York music venue of the same name. Miller wrote the screenplay, produced and directed the film revolving around the life of Kristal, musician and owner of the CBGB club.

2014

In 2014, during production of Miller's film Midnight Rider, camera assistant Sarah Jones was killed during the filming of a scene. A police investigation concluded that Miller and crew were trespassing on an operating railway line. Miller ultimately took a plea deal, pleading guilty to involuntary manslaughter, and serving a year in prison. Miller is the first Director to receive a prison sentence due to the death of a cast or crew member. As part of his plea agreement he is prohibited from working as a Director or assistant Director or in any supervisory role that includes safety responsibility of a film production.

2017

On July 17th, 2017, Sarah Jones' family won a significant legal victory when they were awarded $11.2 million in damages. "The jury found that CSX (the train's operator) was primarily liable for the accident and should pay 35% of the total judgment. Miller was found responsible for 28% of the amount of the latest ruling. Rayonier Performance Fibers, owners of the land where the accident occurred, are responsible for 18% and the rest of the liability is divided between individual members of the film's production company."