Hollywood Flashback: 15 Years Ago, Jesse Eisenberg and Sebastian Stan Starred in Fred Durst’s First Film

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Long before Jesse Eisenberg and Sebastian Stan both earned 2025 Golden Globe Awards nominations, the pair appeared together in an indie coming-of-age drama that marked the directorial debut of rocker Fred Durst. The Education of Charlie Banks hit theaters in 2009 starring Eisenberg as Charlie, an Ivy League freshman who is troubled when high school bully Mick (Jason Ritter) mysteriously resurfaces and inserts himself into Charlie’s life in upstate New York. 

Filmmaker Peter Care (The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys) was initially attached to direct Peter Elkoff’s script, which was based on the writer’s autobiographical experiences. Ultimately landing in the director’s chair was Durst, who had become an MTV fixture in the late 1990s as the frontman for rap-metal band Limp Bizkit. Durst has cited Matt Dillon’s role in the 1980 feature My Bodyguard as an inspiration for The Education of Charlie Banks, which co-stars Stan as Charlie’s charming college buddy Leo, plus Eva Amurri (Susan Sarandon’s daughter) and Charles Parnell. “I’ve had a lot of opportunities, a lot of big movies thrown at me through the years — cheesy blockbusters, horror films,” Durst said at the time. “I’m more into timeless pieces.”

The Education of Charlie Banks premiered at Tribeca in 2007, where it won the “Made in NY” narrative feature award. “Fred grew up in the South, but he was so adamant about making [the film] authentically on location in New York,” Eisenberg said while accepting the prize. Anchor Bay released the movie on March 27, 2009, and THR’s review praised it for going in “unexpected, thoughtful directions.” 

Fifteen years later, Eisenberg and Stan are competing for the Golden Globe for best actor in a musical or comedy — Eisenberg for A Real Pain, which he wrote and directed (and for which he’s also up for best screenplay; see page 10), and Stan for A Different Man. Stan is also vying for best actor in a drama for playing a young Donald Trump in The Apprentice. As for Durst, his most recent directorial effort was 2019’s John Travolta-led The Fanatic, while he had acting roles in the 2024 projects I Saw the TV Glow and Y2K. At the time of the Charlie Banks release, Durst acknowledged that some viewers may have been surprised by his involvement: “Hopefully, there will be some people who leave [and] are inspired and caught off guard by just a solid, strong character piece.”

This story first appeared in a January stand-alone issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.

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