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Actor & Director

Logan Miller

3 films on Movie OTT Β· 2 as director Β· Active 2008–2018

Logan Miller is an American actor, director, writer, and producer born on February 18, 1992, in Englewood, Colorado (Wikipedia). He's probably best known to a certain generation of Disney XD kids as Tripp Campbell, the teenage rock-band roadie at the center of *I'm in the Band*, which ran from 2009 to 2011 β€” a role that put him on the map before he'd even turned twenty. What's striking is how cleanly he pivoted from that family-friendly launchpad into genuinely darker, stranger territory without the career stall that derails so many child-adjacent TV stars.

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About Logan Miller

Logan Miller is an American actor, director, writer, and producer born on February 18, 1992, in Englewood, Colorado (Wikipedia). He's probably best known to a certain generation of Disney XD kids as Tripp Campbell, the teenage rock-band roadie at the center of *I'm in the Band*, which ran from 2009 to 2011 β€” a role that put him on the map before he'd even turned twenty. What's striking is how cleanly he pivoted from that family-friendly launchpad into genuinely darker, stranger territory without the career stall that derails so many child-adjacent TV stars.

His film work through the 2010s reads like a deliberate effort to stay unpredictable: a zombie comedy (*Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse*, 2015), a tearjerker about a dog's reincarnation (*A Dog's Purpose*, 2017), and then *Love, Simon* in 2018, which gave him one of his most emotionally grounded big-screen moments alongside a breakout ensemble cast. The *Escape Room* franchise β€” the 2019 original and its 2021 sequel *Tournament of Champions* β€” extended his reach into mainstream genre filmmaking and introduced him to a whole new audience that doesn't necessarily remember his Disney days (IMDb).

Beyond acting, Miller has kept a hand in production and writing, creating short films and building a YouTube presence that suggests someone who doesn't want to just show up on set and say lines β€” he wants to understand the whole machine. Recent credits include the long-running medical drama *Chicago Med* in 2024, and the upcoming 2026 film *Psycho Killer* signals he's not done swinging at genre work anytime soon (Rotten Tomatoes). Hard to say if the directing ambitions will eventually pull him behind the camera full-time, but the trajectory is worth watching.

Early life & background

Logan Miller was born on February 18, 1992, in Englewood, Colorado (Wikipedia). He's also recognized internationally under the transliterated name η½—ζ ΉΒ·η±³ε‹’, reflecting the reach his Disney-era work had in Chinese-speaking markets. His professional career is documented as beginning in 2008, meaning he was around fifteen or sixteen when he first started picking up credits β€” young enough that his early years in the industry and his formative years as a person were essentially the same thing. No verified public details about his parents, siblings, or formal education appear in available sources, so those particulars remain unconfirmed.

Career

Miller's career kicked off in 2008, and within a year he'd landed the lead role of Tripp Campbell in Disney XD's *I'm in the Band* β€” a sitcom built around a teenager who cons his way into living with a hair-metal band called Iron Weasel. The show ran through 2011 and gave Miller two full seasons of lead-character work at an age when most young actors are still cycling through guest spots. It's a foundation that's easy to underestimate, but two years as the anchor of a network sitcom teaches you things about timing and camera presence that you can't really fake later. The transition into film came with *Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse* in 2015, a horror-comedy that leaned hard into its R-rated premise and showed Miller could hold his own outside the family-friendly lane. *A Dog's Purpose* followed in 2017, and then *Love, Simon* in 2018 β€” probably his most critically discussed film role to date, appearing in a coming-of-age story that earned genuine warmth from reviewers and audiences alike. The *Escape Room* franchise gave him two back-to-back genre outings in 2019 and 2021, the kind of franchise work that builds name recognition in a way that quieter prestige films sometimes don't. Parallel to his live-action career, Miller has done substantial voice work β€” he voiced Sam Alexander, the second Nova, in *Ultimate Spider-Man* from 2012 to 2017, and voiced Johnny in *Phineas and Ferb* between 2010 and 2014 (Wikipedia). That's a meaningful chunk of animated television, and it's the kind of credit that tends to get overlooked when people sketch out his career arc. Beyond performance, he's written, directed, and produced short films, and maintains a YouTube channel that functions as something between a creative outlet and a production diary. His 2024 appearance on *Chicago Med* and the announced 2026 film *Psycho Killer* suggest his current period is about staying active across formats rather than consolidating around a single identity (IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes).

Cite this page

For Wikipedia, journalism, or academic references β€” copy the citation below:

Movie OTT. "Logan Miller." Accessed Jul 5, 2026. https://movieott.com/talent/logan-miller-2

Cross-references: Wikipedia

Last updated July 5, 2026 Β· Sources: tmdb+wikipedia+perplexity+tmdb-credits+ai-claude

Filmography

Frequently asked questions

What films is Logan Miller known for?

Logan Miller has 3 titles indexed on Movie OTT, including White Boy Rick, Sweetwater, Touching Home.

Has Logan Miller directed any films?

Yes β€” Logan Miller has 2 directorial credits indexed on Movie OTT.

How long has Logan Miller been active?

Logan Miller's film career on Movie OTT spans from 2008 to 2018 β€” 10 years of work.

Frequent collaborators