Dan O'Bannon

Screenwriter

Birthday September 30, 1946

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2009-12-17, Los Angeles, California, US (63 years old)

Nationality United States

#22924 Most Popular

1940

O'Bannon served in a number of capacities, including scripting, acting in one of the leading roles ("Sergeant Pinback") and editing, for which he used a 1940s Moviola.

1946

Daniel Thomas O'Bannon (September 30, 1946 – December 17, 2009) was an American film screenwriter, director and visual effects supervisor, usually in the science fiction and horror genres.

O'Bannon wrote the screenplay for Alien, adapted from a story he wrote with Ronald Shusett.

He also wrote and directed the cult horror comedy The Return of the Living Dead.

He contributed computer animation to Star Wars and worked on cult classics such as Dark Star, Heavy Metal, and Total Recall.

O'Bannon was born in St. Louis, Missouri, the son of Bertha (née Lowenthal) and Thomas Sidney O'Bannon, a carpenter.

During his childhood he was a science fiction and horror enthusiast.

He attended the art school of Washington University in St. Louis, where he did stand-up comedy routines, did make-up for campus theater productions, and provided illustrations for Student Life, the student newspaper.

While there he roomed with future movie producer Michael Shamberg.

O'Bannon moved home briefly after Washington University and attended Florissant Valley Junior College where he wrote and directed a short science fiction satire titled "The Attack of the 50-foot Chicken."

O'Bannon also attended MacMurray College in Jacksonville, Illinois.

During this period he pursued a psychology degree, but later became interested in becoming a film director.

According to O'Bannon, he was reading an issue of Playboy when he found an article discussing the best film schools, which led him to the University of Southern California (USC).

1950

Purists considered it inferior to the 1950s original and it also performed poorly at the box office.

O'Bannon also worked as a consultant for C.H.U.D., helping to create the design concept for the title creatures.

1970

He received a bachelor's degree in film from USC in 1970.

While at USC he lived near the Los Angeles Campus in an old two-story house affectionately called the "Menlo Manor" which he shared with other USC students (Don Jakoby, who collaborated on several screenplays with Dan including Blue Thunder; and Jeffrey J. Lee).

As a student, O'Bannon spent many late nights in old Hollywood editing his and other student films.

It was at USC that he met John Carpenter and collaborated with him on a student film, which they eventually expanded into the feature-length science fiction movie Dark Star.

Part of the movie was filmed at Menlo Manor.

1974

Released in 1974, it had a final budget of only US$60,000.

1975

In 1975, Dark Star won the Golden Scroll award (the Saturn Awards' original name) for Best Special Effects.

1976

He was retained to supervise special effects for an Alejandro Jodorowsky production of Frank Herbert's Dune. That project fell apart in 1976 and the movie was never made, reportedly because the major Hollywood studios were wary of financing the picture with Jodorowsky as director.

1979

While living with his friend Ronald Shusett, they came up with the story for O'Bannon's career-making film Alien (1979), for which he wrote the screenplay and supervised visuals.

1981

In 1981, O'Bannon helped create the animated feature Heavy Metal, writing two of its segments ("Soft Landing" and "B-17").

1983

O'Bannon voiced his displeasure with his next big-budget outing, John Badham's Blue Thunder (1983), an action film about a Los Angeles helicopter surveillance team.

Originally written with Don Jakoby, Blue Thunder also underwent extensive rewriting, losing some of its political content.

1985

He and Jakoby also scripted Lifeforce (1985), a movie based on Colin Wilson's novel The Space Vampires and directed by Tobe Hooper that veers from alien visitation to vampirism and an apocalyptic ending.

It was not well received at the time, and was considered a box office flop.

In 1985, O'Bannon moved into the director's chair with The Return of the Living Dead, a sequel to George Romero's Night of the Living Dead. Like Alien, the film met with success, spawned numerous sequels, and became a cult classic.

That year, he was awarded the Inkpot Award.

1986

O'Bannon would again collaborate with Jakoby and Hooper for the 1986 remake Invaders from Mars.

1990

In 1990, O'Bannon and Shusett again teamed up as writers on Total Recall, an adaptation of the short story We Can Remember It for You Wholesale by Philip K. Dick.

This was a project the two had been working on since collaborating on Alien.

With a cast featuring Sharon Stone and Arnold Schwarzenegger, Total Recall earned well over US$100 million.

1997

An earlier screenplay by the duo titled Hemoglobin was also produced as the low budget feature Bleeders (1997).

2013

O'Bannon's role is prominently featured in the 2013 documentary Jodorowsky's Dune.

The collapse of Dune left O'Bannon broke, homeless, and dependent on friends for his survival.

According to The Guardian, "George Lucas was impressed enough with his hand-animated, faux computer screen graphics to hire him to do similar work on Star Wars, but otherwise this was an incredibly lean period for him."

He eventually abandoned technical film work for scriptwriting.