Rylend was twice a finalist for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Nicholl Fellowship in Screenwriting (2003 and 2004)[4][5] and he won the Final Draft Big Break Competition in 2004.[6] His scripts appeared on Franklin Leonard's Black List in 2005 and 2009, an annual list of Hollywood's best unproduced screenplays as voted by studio and film executives.[7][8] In 2009, Total Film called his script The Ghost and the Wolf one of the top 50 unproduced scripts in Hollywood.[9][10]
Grant co-wrote Haunted Heart with Academy Award winning director Fernando Trueba. The film stars Academy Award nominee Matt Dillon (“The House That Jack Built”), Goya-nominated Aida Folch (“The Artist and the Model”), and Juan Pablo Urrego (“Memoria”). The English-language film started shooting in Greece in September 2022.[13]
Grant co-wrote State of Consciousness with Dikran Ornekian and Guillaume Tunzini. The film - starring Emile Hirsch (Into the Wild) and directed by Marcus Stokes (The Walking Dead) - will be released in 2022.[14][15]
Fiction
Rylend has published several short stories, many of which are being developed for film and television. His short story Thief Coach, written with Dikran Ornekian, was published online at Popcorn Fiction.[16] The film rights were sold to Fast & Furious director Justin Lin's Perfect Storm Entertainment.[17][18][19] Rylend recently finished writing the filmic adaptation for Lin to direct.
In July 2018, collider.com announced that the series was being developed as a one hour television series by 24 and Felicity Executive Producer Tony Krantz via his Flame Ventures banner and that Grant would be penning the pilot and producing the series alongside Krantz.[30][31][32]
Grant's Tokusatsu Comic Book Suicide Jockeys was published by Source Point Press in 2021.[37] The book is described as "Voltron meets The Fast and the Furious ... with an extra dollop of heart and soul."[38]
Grant has released two comic book titles on Kickstarter; a paranoid thriller set in the world of astral projection called The Jump[41] and a dark crime drama called The Peacekeepers.[42]
Grant also collaborated with Monster Matador creator Steven Prince on spinoff of the indie comic book called Tales From the World of Monster Matador.[43][44][45]
Before working as a writer, Rylend exclusively made his money playing poker online and in card rooms in and around Los Angeles, CA.[49][50][51] He cashed in over a dozen high profile tournaments at the Bicycle and Commerce Casinos in the mid '00s, most notably winning the $200 buy-in No Limit Hold'em event at the California Poker Open and placing third at the $300 buy-in No Limit Hold'em event at the Heavenly Hold'em tournament. He's also won or cashed in hundreds of tournaments online.[52][53]
Grant was featured prominently in director Pirooz Kalayeh's documentary about Warner and Dogen Sangha Los Angeles (now the Angel City Zen Center) titled Brad Warner's Hardcore Zen.[57][58]
American Ninja Warrior
Rylend was a contestant on season 2 (2010) of the sports entertainment television series American Ninja Warrior, a spin-off of the Japanese television series Sasuke, in which competitors try to complete a series of obstacle courses of increasing difficulty. Grant breezed through the course, but ultimately failed to surmount the final and most difficult obstacle, the warped wall.[59][60]