Ronald Shusett | |
Birth Place: | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Years Active: | 1974–present |
Spouse: | Linda Turley |
Ronald Shusett (born June 1935) is an American screenwriter and film producer, best known for his works in the science fiction and horror film genres. Along with co-writer Dan O'Bannon, he is the creator of Alien film franchise.[1]
Shusett was born to a Jewish family in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but raised in Los Angeles from the age of 3.[2] His brother, Gary Shusett, is the founder of the Sherwood Oaks Film School. Shusett studied drama at the University of California, Los Angeles, and initially worked as a playwright. He cites Alfred Hitchcock as a major inspiration.
In 1974, Shusett's psychological thriller screenplay W was produced by Bing Crosby Productions into a film directed by Richard Quine and starring Twiggy. That same year, Shusett optioned the Philip K. Dick short story, "We Can Remember It for You Wholesale", that became the basis of the film Total Recall.
It was during this time he met his writing partner Dan O'Bannon, after being impressed by his student film Dark Star. The two wrote several spec scripts, with the one entitled Star Beast eventually evolving into Alien (1979). The final script was heavily re-written by producers Walter Hill and David Giler, but in the end Dan O'Bannon received sole screenwriting credit, while O'Bannon and Shusett shared story credit.
Off the success of Alien, Shusett wrote or co-wrote the horror films Phobia (1980), Dead & Buried (1981), and The Final Terror (1983). During the decade, he formed a new writing partnership with Steven Pressfield.[3] Together they wrote the monster adventure film King Kong Lives (1986), the Steven Seagal film Above the Law (1988), and the sci-fi action film Freejack (1992). They were uncredited script doctors on Seagal's next film Hard to Kill (1990).[4]
Shusett (with Dan O'Bannon) was the writer and producer of the 1990 Arnold Schwarzenegger film Total Recall, a project he had begun 16 years prior. He began writing a sequel film, based on Philip K. Dick's short story "The Minority Report," which would eventually become the standalone 2002 film Minority Report. Shusett received an executive-producer credit.
Shusett and O'Bannon received story credits for Alien vs. Predator, as the film incorporated unused elements from their original 1979 screenplay.[5] [6] He likewise received a story credit for the 2012 remake of Total Recall.
1974 | W | Richard Quine | ||||
1979 | Alien | Ridley Scott | ||||
1980 | Phobia | John Huston | ||||
1981 | Dead & Buried | Gary Sherman | ||||
1983 | The Final Terror | Andrew Davis | ||||
1986 | King Kong Lives | John Guillermin | ||||
1988 | Above the Law | Andrew Davis | ||||
1990 | Total Recall | Paul Verhoeven | ||||
Hard to Kill | Bruce Malmuth | Uncredited revisions | ||||
1992 | Alien 3 | David Fincher | ||||
Freejack | Geoff Murphy | |||||
1997 | Bleeders | Peter Svatek | ||||
Alien Resurrection | Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |||||
2002 | Minority Report | Steven Spielberg | ||||
2004 | Alien vs. Predator | Paul W. S. Anderson | ||||
2007 | Greg Strause Colin Strause | |||||
2012 | Total Recall | Len Wiseman | ||||
2012 | Prometheus | Ridley Scott | ||||
2017 | ||||||
2024 | Fede Álvarez |