Alex Nohe has worked with some of the world’s most noteworthy filmmakers including Christopher Nolan on Following, Don Coscarelli on Bubba Ho-Tep, and Bill Condon on Gods & Monsters, assisting them with representation, distribution and much deserved success.
Currently he is a Partner at Blood Sweat Honey along with the legendary Jeff "the Dude" Dowd. Blood Sweat Honey is a Producers Rep and Distribution Consulting Firm that has put over 300 films into distribution since 2017. Other Reps at the company include Miguel Johnson (previously with the distributors Freestyle and Wolfe) and Chad Miller (previously a VP at Gravitas and at ATT/DirecTV). From 2013 to 2016 he was a Producers Rep and Partner at Circus Road Films where he put over 100 films into distribution.
Alex has produced two television series focusing on filmmakers and filmmaking. He was an Executive Producer of Ain’t it Cool with Harry Knowles, where guests included film directors Tim Burton, JJ Abrams, John Landis, Danny Boyle and Wes Craven, showrunner Beau Willimon (House of Cards), critic Leonard Maltin, and actor Burt Reynolds, among others. He also created and produced Independent Focus, a talk show on IFC with film critic Elvis Mitchell. Guests included such notable filmmakers as Steven Soderbergh, the Coen Brothers, David Lynch, Robert Altman and Richard Linklater, among others. A brief foray into filmmaking, he also produced and directed the critically lauded feature documentary Burning Man – The Burning Sensation.
He had a noteworthy run as the Director of Programming at IFP/Los Angeles (now Film Independent), where he oversaw a "year round film festival" of 3-4 events per week: championing films seeking distribution (both features and documentaries), preview screenings, networking events, workshops, seminars and panels. He coordinated the Independent Spirit Awards Nominating Committee, wrote for Filmmaker Magazine and Film Threat, and was a Juror at the Seattle International Film Festival, among others roles. He has 2 Oscar wins and 1 nomination for championing films seeking distribution: Gods & Monsters, The Long Way Home, and On the Ropes, respectively.
Alex started his Los Angeles career at the Agency for the Performing Arts (APA) in the literary division under two agents, one feature literary (representing writers and directors), the other alternative television (which later came to be known as reality or unscripted TV).
Alex's first job after college was driving around Martin Sheen on a movie called A Matter of Justice. Upon landing in LA, once again he worked in production, driving William Shatner around on Rescue 911.
At the University of Kansas, he ran the student screening program (doubling its attendance) and was a stage hand for Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Ice T/Body Count, the Replacements, Laurie Anderson, Fugazi, Faith No More, among dozens of other shows.