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{{Short description|American screenwriter and director (born 1944)}} |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2021}} |
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{{Infobox actor |
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{{Infobox person |
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| image = Replace this image male.svg <!-- Please do not put a fair-use image here, it will be deleted - see [[WP:NONFREE]] --> |
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| name = John Milius |
| name = John Milius |
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| image = JohnMiliusWikiProfile.jpg |
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| imagesize = |
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| caption = Milius in 1981 |
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| birthdate = {{birth date and age|1944|04|11}} |
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| birth_name = John Frederick Milius |
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| birthplace = [[St. Louis, Missouri]], [[United States|USA]] |
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| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1944|4|11}} |
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| birthname = John Frederick Milius |
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| birth_place = [[St. Louis]], [[Missouri]], U.S. |
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| }} |
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| alma_mater = [[USC School of Cinema-Television]] |
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| occupation = {{hlist|Screenwriter|director}} |
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| years_active = 1966–present |
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| spouse = {{unbulleted list |
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| {{marriage|Renee Fabri|January 7, 1967|January 20, 1978|end=divorced}} |
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| {{marriage|[[Celia Kaye]]|February 26, 1978||end=divorced}} |
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| {{marriage|Elan Oberon|1992|}} |
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}} |
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| children = 3 |
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| awards = [[Bronze Wrangler]] for Theatrical Motion Picture<br />1972 ''[[Jeremiah Johnson (film)|Jeremiah Johnson]]''<br />1993 ''[[Geronimo: An American Legend]]'' |
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}} |
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'''John Frederick Milius''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|m|ɪ|l|i|ə|s}}; born April 11, 1944) is an American screenwriter and film director. He was a writer for the first two ''[[Dirty Harry (film series)|Dirty Harry]]'' films, received an [[Academy Award]] nomination as screenwriter of ''[[Apocalypse Now]]'' (1979), and wrote and directed ''[[The Wind and the Lion]]'' (1975), ''[[Conan the Barbarian (1982 film)|Conan the Barbarian]]'' (1982), and ''[[Red Dawn]]'' (1984). He later served as the co-creator of the [[Primetime Emmy Award]]-winning television series [[Rome (TV series)|''Rome'']] (2005–2007). |
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'''John Frederick Milius''' (born [[April 11]], [[1944]]) is an [[USA|American]] [[screenwriter]], [[Film director|director]], and producer of [[motion pictures]]. He helped write [[Dirty Harry]] and [[Apocalypse Now]] and directed [[Conan the Barbarian]] and [[Red Dawn]]. |
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== Early life and education == |
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==Biography== |
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Milius was born April 11, 1944, in [[St. Louis]], [[Missouri]], the youngest of three children to Elizabeth Marie ({{née}} Roe; 1906–2010) and William Styx Milius (1889–1975), who was a shoe manufacturer.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.filmreference.com/film/15/John-Milius.html |title=John Milius Biography (1944–) |website=Filmreference.com |access-date=October 31, 2012}}</ref> He is [[Jews|Jewish]].<ref name="IGN">{{cite web |author=Ken P. |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2003/05/07/an-interview-with-john-milius |title=An Interview with John Milius|website=IGN |date=May 7, 2003 |access-date=June 7, 2020 |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100608140015/http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/401/401150p8.html |archive-date=June 8, 2010 }}</ref> When Milius was seven, his father sold Milius Shoe Company, which his grandfather George W. Milius had founded in 1923,<ref>{{cite news |title=Jewish Hospital Gets $25,000 Gift |newspaper=[[St. Louis Globe-Democrat]] |date=18 December 1943|page= 3A}}</ref> and retired. He moved the family to [[Bel Air, Los Angeles|Bel Air]], California. <ref>{{cite news |title=William S. Milius Dies |newspaper=[[St. Louis Post-Dispatch]] |date=31 October 1965|page=3E}}</ref> John Milius became an enthusiastic surfer. At 14, his parents sent him to a small private school, the [[Steamboat Mountain School|Lowell Whiteman School]], in the mountains of [[Steamboat Springs, Colorado]], because he "was a juvenile delinquent".<ref name="cnn">{{cite web|last=Patterson|first=Thom|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Movies/03/09/john.milius.movies/index.html|title='Apocalypse' writer: Most scripts today 'are garbage'|website=[[CNN]]|date=March 9, 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140904085326/https://edition.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Movies/03/09/john.milius.movies/index.html|archive-date=September 4, 2014}}</ref> |
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===Career=== |
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A former student at the [[University of Southern California]] [[USC School of Cinema-Television|School of Cinema-Television]], Milius started his movie career in a student film contest in [[1967]], taking first prize for his entry ''Marcello I'm Bored''. Milius wrote, co-wrote or directed the popular and critically acclaimed films ''[[Dirty Harry]]'' (uncredited), ''[[Apocalypse Now]]'', ''[[Big Wednesday]]'', ''[[Dillinger (1973 film)|Dillinger]]'', ''[[The Wind and the Lion]]'', and ''[[Clear and Present Danger (film)|Clear and Present Danger]].'' Milius coined the famous "Go ahead, make my day" line from the ''[[Dirty Harry]]'' movie ''[[Sudden Impact]]'', as well as "Charlie don't surf" and "I love the smell of napalm in the morning" from ''[[Apocalypse Now]]''. Milius is also known as the director of the film ''[[Conan the Barbarian (film)|Conan the Barbarian]]'', which made a star out of then relatively unknown actor and body builder [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]]. Milius also contributed to the famous [[USS Indianapolis (CA-35)|USS Indianapolis]] [[monologue]] for the film ''[[Jaws (film)|Jaws]]'', and suggested to [[Steven Spielberg]] the "bookend" scenes in the military graveyard in [[Normandy]] used at the beginning and end of ''[[Saving Private Ryan]]''. Milius was one of the three creators of the drama series ''[[Rome (TV Series)|Rome]]'' for the [[BBC]] and [[HBO]]. |
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Milius became a voracious reader and started to write short stories: "I had learned very early, to write in almost any style. I could write in fluent [[Hemingway]], or in fluent [[Herman Melville|Melville]], or [[Joseph Conrad|Conrad]], or [[Jack Kerouac]], and whatever."<ref name="IGN" /> He says he was also influenced by the oral story telling of surfers at the time, who had a [[beatnik]] tradition.<ref>Segaloff p 280</ref> |
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Milius is a frequent guest on [[The History Channel]]'s show ''[[Modern Marvels]]''. He appears in episodes that deal with firearms, with the caption "Film-maker/Weapons Expert" or a similar variation. Milius has worked with a number of actors on multiple films, including [[Ben Johnson (actor)|Ben Johnson]], [[Steve Kanaly]], [[Roy Jenson]], [[Geoffrey Lewis]], [[Brian Keith]], and [[Vladek Sheybal]]. |
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"My religion is [[surfing]]", Milius said in 1976, adding that "the other thing that influenced me throughout my youth was my involvement with things Japanese. I studied [[judo]], [[kendo]], and painting. I felt more comfortable with things Japanese and with Japanese people than I did with Europeans ... feudalism in any country, at any period, fascinates me ... I understand the reasoning of people in Asia, it makes sense to me. Zen is very sensible, the whole way of feeling things is logical, whereas many of the Western-motivated things—greed, business sense—I'm not comfortable with, I don't understand their rationale."<ref name="comment" /> |
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Milius directed ''[[Red Dawn]]'', a controversial 1984 film whose premise was a fictional [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] invasion of the [[United States]]. ''Red Dawn'' was in the news in December, [[2003]] in connection with the capture of the former [[Iraq]]i dictator [[Saddam Hussein]]. The American commander of the operation to capture Hussein was a fan of Milius' film, causing him to call the military operation which captured [[Saddam Hussein]] ''[[Operation Red Dawn]]''. He also dubbed the military units who actually captured Hussein "Wolverine One" and "Wolverine Two" after the fictional "Wolverines" unit in ''Red Dawn''. |
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Milius says he attempted to join the [[United States Marine Corps|Marine Corps]] and volunteer for [[Vietnam War]] service in the late 1960s, but was rejected due to a "chronic" and "sometimes disabling" case of mild [[asthma]]. "I'd have given anything to be a Marine", said Milius. "As a surfer I'd spent a lot of time hanging out with the Marines off [[Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton|Pendleton]], and I'd had every intention of joining up ... I was devastated, I felt like I'd been rejected as a human being."<ref name="iraq">{{cite magazine|last=Weschler|first=Lawrence|title=Valkyries over Iraq|magazine=Harper's Magazine|date=November 2005|pages=65–77}}</ref> "It was totally demoralizing", he said later. "I missed going to my war. It probably caused me to be obsessed with war ever since."<ref name="IGN" /> Milius said he was "dying to be able to... go prove myself in battle—the same as all young men long to do, if they are honest with themselves, whether it's right or wrong or even sane, which is a debate that's been going on since we left the caves. Only there was no way I could found my own unit, so I did the second best, which was to write it. Every writer wishes he could actually be doing the thing he writes about."<ref name="iraq" /> He later admitted, "I don't know how well I'd have done. I really wanted a military career, to be a general, but I had a hard time polishing shoes. And marching. I was in the [[Reserve Officers' Training Corps|ROTC]] once, and I hate marching ... I would have been good in the Mexican Army."<ref name="comment" /> |
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Milius insisted that part of his payment for writing ''[[Jeremiah Johnson]]'' be in antique weapons. Milius also considers [[Theodore Roosevelt]] a personal hero, feeling that he can relate to Roosevelt on many levels, such as physical illness and a shared love of firearms and the outdoors. He has made two films featuring Roosevelt: ''[[The Wind and the Lion]]'' (where he was played by [[Brian Keith]]) and the made-for-TV film ''[[Rough Riders (film)|Rough Riders]]'' (where [[Tom Berenger]] took the role). He considered himself too much in awe of Roosevelt to do a full-on biopic of him, but says he hopes to make a third film to complete a Roosevelt trilogy - though with [[Martin Scorsese]]'s upcoming adaptation of ''[[The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt]]'', that seems unlikely. |
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At one stage Milius considered becoming an artist or historian. During a rainy day on a summer vacation in [[Hawaii]] in 1962, he stumbled upon a movie theatre showing a week of [[Akira Kurosawa]] films and fell in love with cinema.<ref>Segaloff p 276-277</ref> |
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Through work on (The) Rough Riders (1997) (TV), he became an instrumental force in causing President Theodore Roosevelt to be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor (posthumously), for acts of conspicuous gallantry while in combat on San Juan Hill.<ref>[http://filmforce.ign.com/articles/401/401150p15.html IGN: An Interview with John Milius<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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Milius studied film at the [[University of Southern California]] [[USC School of Cinematic Arts|School of Cinema-Television]], which he chose because it was an elitist school that trained people for Hollywood.{{sfn|Pye|Myles|1979|p=175}} His classmates included [[George Lucas]], [[Walter Murch]], [[Basil Poledouris]], [[Randal Kleiser]] and [[Donald F. Glut]]. Milius says he was influenced by his teacher, Irwin Blacker: |
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Milius was interviewed in the documentary ''Rated R: Republicans in Hollywood''. |
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<blockquote>He gave you the screenplay form, which I hated so much, and if you made one mistake on the form, you flunked the class. His attitude was that the least you can learn is the form. "I can't grade you on the content. I can't tell you whether this is a better story for you to write than that, you know? And I can't teach you how to write the content, but I can certainly demand that you do it in the proper form." He never talked about character arcs or anything like that; he simply talked about telling a good yarn, telling a good story. He said, "Do whatever you need to do. Be as radical and as outrageous as you can be. Take any kind of approach you want to take. Feel free to flash back, feel free to flash forward, feel free to flash back in the middle of a flashback. Feel free to use narration, all the tools are there for you to use."<ref name="creative"/></blockquote> |
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Milius says his writing style was influenced by two novels in particular, ''[[Moby-Dick]]'' and ''[[On the Road]]'': |
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<blockquote>I think ''Moby Dick'' is the best work of art ever made ... I used to point out the dramatic entrance of characters, how they were threaded through ... ''Moby Dick'' was a perfect screenplay, a perfect example of the kind of drama that I was interested in. Another great influence on me was ... ''On the Road'', which has no tight, linear narrative, but sprawls, following this character. ''Moby Dick'' and ''On the Road'' are completely different kinds of novels, yet they're both extremely disciplined. Nothing happens by accident in either of those two books.<ref name="creative" /></blockquote> |
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Milius reflected his "ambitions stopped at B Westerns ... I thought that was a good life. I never wanted to be [[Hitchcock]] or some big mogul, I didn't want to be [[Louis B. Mayer]]. I wanted to be ... [[Budd Boetticher]] or something ... [[John Ford]]."<ref name="IGN" /> |
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His short films at film school included ''The Reversal of Richard Sun'' (1966), ''Glut'' (1967) and ''Viking Women Don't Care'' (1967). He wrote a documentary, ''The Emperor'' (1967), directed by classmate [[George Lucas]], who also edited an animated short Milius directed called ''[[Marcello, I'm So Bored]]'' (1967) with John Strawbridge. |
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''Marcello'', Milius's thesis film, won best animation at the National Student Film Festival<ref>{{cite news|last=Thomas|first=Kevin|title=Annual Competition: 'A' Grades for Film Festival Students|work=Los Angeles Times| issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |date=January 22, 1968|page=c1}}</ref> and screened around the country in various festivals; it was praised by [[Vincent Canby]] of ''The New York Times''.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Segaloff|first=Nat|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vMI8EAAAQBAJ&dq=%22John+Milius%22+%22thesis+film%22&pg=PT23|title=Big Bad John: The John Milius Interviews|publisher=BearManor Media|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Canby|first=Vincent|title=Honored Student Movies Shown Here|work=New York Times|date=April 18, 1968|issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522| page=58}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Thomas|first=Kevin|title=At Museum of Art: Animated Films Enter the Cinema Limelight|work=Los Angeles Times|issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237|date=May 24, 1968|page=c1}}</ref> Milius received a job offer to work in animation but he turned it down as he could not see himself "sitting there drawing cell after cell."<ref>Segaloff, p. 281.</ref> |
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Milius is currently writing and directing the movie ''Journey of Death'', a western starring [[World Wrestling Entertainment|WWE]] superstar [[Triple H]]. |
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== |
==Career== |
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=== Early === |
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Milius was born in [[St. Louis, Missouri]], the son of Elizabeth ([[married and maiden names|née]] Roe) and William Styx Milius, who was a shoe manufacturer.<ref>http://www.filmreference.com/film/15/John-Milius.html</ref> Milius attempted to join the Marine Corps in the late nineteen-sixties, but was rejected due to chronic [[asthma]]. He ascribes his fascination with guns and the military to this disappointment. While he has been criticized for being "pro-war", Milius claims that he simply finds war fascinating, "like patterns in the weather". |
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Milius's first completed script was ''Los Gringos'' (1968). "It actually wasn't bad", he later said. "It was sort of like ''The Wild Bunch'' ... there was a lot of killing and shooting and riding and dust ... sombreros. ... It was a pretty good idea, actually. It had everything, and it was certainly as original as ''The Wild Bunch'', but it wasn't as skillfully written as later stuff."<ref name="IGN" /> |
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He followed this with ''The Last Resort'' which was optioned by Michael S Laughlin in 1969.<ref name="Resort">{{cite news|last=Martin|first=Betty|title=Movie Call Sheet: 'Barquero' Role to Mathews|work=Los Angeles Times|date=June 14, 1969 | issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |page=a9}}</ref><ref name="IGN" /> Milius says, "Neither of them were ever made, but I was able to option them. I had them rented out for like $5,000 a year."<ref name="diary"/> |
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A self-styled "[[Zen]] [[anarchist]]", Milius is a member of the Board of Directors of the [[National Rifle Association]], an avid [[gun]] collector and a strong opponent of [[gun control]] laws. |
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==== ''The Devil's 8'' ==== |
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His filmmaking idols are [[John Ford]] and [[Akira Kurosawa]]; he has also mentioned [[Sam Peckinpah]], [[Sergio Leone]], [[David Lean]], and his friend and mentor [[John Huston]] as important influences as well. His favorite film is reportedly Lean's ''[[Bridge on the River Kwai]]'', although he has also named ''[[The Seven Samurai]]'', ''[[The Searchers (film)|The Searchers]]'', and ''[[The Battle of Algiers]]'' as such in other interviews. |
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Milius then got a summer job working at the story department of [[American International Pictures]] through a student colleague of his who had begun working there, [[Willard Huyck]]. Huyck and Milius worked at AIP under producer [[Lawrence Gordon (producer)|Larry Gordon]], reading scripts. They eventually collaborated on a rewrite of the screenplay for ''[[The Devil's 8]]'' (1968), an action drama about moonshine drivers which ripped off ''[[The Dirty Dozen]]'' (1968).<ref>Segaloff p 282</ref> |
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Milius's name had been mentioned in a 1968 ''Time'' magazine article about the new generation of Hollywood filmmakers, which also referred to [[George Lucas]] and [[Martin Scorsese]]. This was read by [[Mike Medavoy]], who became Milius's agent. Medavoy called Milius "a badboy mad genius in a teenager's body, but he was a good and fast writer with original ideas."{{sfn|Medavoy|2013|page=6}} |
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==Fictional references== |
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*A fictional version of Milius appears in [[Steve Erickson]]'s novel ''Zeroville'' (2007) as Viking Man. |
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*The character Walter (played by [[John Goodman]]) in [[The Big Lebowski]] is based on Milius. |
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Milius began to get writing commissions. He wrote a script entitled ''The Texans'' for [[Albert S. Ruddy|Al Ruddy]] at Paramount, a contemporary version of ''[[Red River (1948 film)|Red River]]'' (1948){{sfn|Medavoy|2013|page=173}} (never made, although [[Sam Peckinpah]] was going to direct it in 1979<ref>{{cite news|last=Thomas|first=Kevin|title=Chow Tells $60 Million Film Schedule|work=Los Angeles Times|date=October 5, 1979| issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |page=f39}}</ref>)— Milius later said it "wasn't very good".<ref name="diary">{{Cite web |url=http://diaryofascreenwriter.blogspot.com.au/2013/05/john-milius-american-outsider.html |title= John Milius: American Outsider| access-date = May 27, 2013 |agency =Creative Screenwriting|date=March–April 2000|volume=7|first1=Erik|last1 =Bauer| first2 = John | last2 = Milius | website = Diary Of A Screenwriter |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140714202108/http://diaryofascreenwriter.blogspot.com.au/2013/05/john-milius-american-outsider.html |archive-date=July 14, 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref> He also wrote an original called ''Truck Driver'' (aka ''The Haul'') which was purchased by Levy-Garner-Laven,<ref name="Haul">{{cite news|last=Martin|first=Betty|title=Movie Call Sheet: 'Big' Role for Carol White|work=Los Angeles Times | issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |date=February 19, 1971|page=i9}}</ref> although that film too was not made. |
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==References== |
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{{reflist}} |
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Milius later said he "didn't do a good job" with these two early scripts "because in both cases I was influenced by the people who had hired me. They said put this in and put that in, and I went along with it. Every time I went along with something in my whole career it usually didn't work. Usually there's a price to pay. You think of selling out, but there is a price to pay. Usually what people want you to do is make it current."<ref name="diary" /> |
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==External links== |
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*[http://www.rottentomatoes.com/p/JohnMilius-1042517/ John Milius' filmography] |
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==== ''Jeremiah Johnson'' ==== |
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*{{imdb name|id=0587518|name=John Milius}} |
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Milius then wrote ''[[Jeremiah Johnson (film)|Jeremiah Johnson]]'', a story loosely based on the life of the [[mountain man]] [[Liver-Eating Johnson]]. |
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Milius later said this was "the real breaking point" where he knew "almost overnight... that I had become a good writer with a voice.": |
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<blockquote>I knew that material. I'd lived in the mountains, I had a trapline, I hunted, and I had a lot of experiences with characters up there. So, it was real easy to write that and there was a humor to it, a kind of bigger-than-life attitude. I was inspired by [[Carl Sandburg]]. I read a lot of his poetry and it's this kind of abrupt description—"a train is coming, thundering steel, where are you going? Wichita." That great kind of feeling that he had, that's what I was trying to do there. I remember there was a great poem about American braggarts. You know, American liars—"I am the ring-tailed cousin to the such and such that ate so and so and I can do this and I can do that better than [[Mike Fink]] the river man ..." I just realized that this was the voice that the script had to have. It was as clear as a bell. I knew that writing was particular to me.<ref name="diary" /></blockquote> |
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Milius sold the script to [[Warner Bros.]] in 1970 for $5,000, going up to $50,000 if it was ever made. Warner Bros. had other writers work on the original script based on ''The Crow Killer''. Milius was also called back to work on it, and his fee grew each time. (He eventually made $90,000 on the film.<ref name="auto">Pye and Myles, p 176</ref>) Eventually, [[Robert Redford]] agreed to play the lead and [[Sydney Pollack]] signed to direct. |
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==== ''Dirty Harry'' and ''Judge Roy Bean'' ==== |
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Milius wrote an uncredited draft of ''[[Dirty Harry]]'' (1971). He says his contribution to the film was "A lot of guns. And the attitude of Dirty Harry, being a cop who was ruthless. I think it's fairly obvious if you look at the rest of my work what parts are mine. The cop being the same as the killer except he has a badge. And being lonely."<ref name="comment" /> ''Dirty Harry'' was an enormous box office hit. |
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George Hamilton hired Milius to rewrite ''[[Evel Knievel (1971 film)|Evel Knievel]]'' (1971), a biopic of the [[Evel Knievel|stunt rider]], at a fee of $1,000 a day. Milius re-did the entire script over seven days.<ref name="auto" /> |
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He wrote an original script, ''[[The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean]]'', about the [[Roy Bean|famous judge]]. He offered it for $150,000 if he could direct, but could find no takers. He sold it to [[First Artists]] for $300,000, then extremely high for a script.<ref name="creative">{{cite web |last1=Bauer |first1=Erik |title="I was never conscious of my screenplays having any acts. It's all bullshit." – John Milius |url=https://www.creativescreenwriting.com/i-was-never-conscious-of-my-screenplays-having-any-acts-its-all-bullshit-john-milius/ |website=Creative Screenwriting |publisher=Creative Screenwriter Productions |access-date=6 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150217235457/https://www.creativescreenwriting.com/i-was-never-conscious-of-my-screenplays-having-any-acts-its-all-bullshit-john-milius/ |archive-date=17 February 2015 |format=Educational, online resource |date=11 February 2015 |quote=After selling his screenplay The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean for $300,000 (an almost unprecedented amount in 1971, especially for a writer whose asking price was $85,000), Milius told Esquire, “I make terrific deals. My hole card on this one was I didn’t particularly want to sell Roy Bean anyway. I had written it for my own pleasure.” But more interesting than the amount of money this script sold for was the emerging writer’s voice within it. |url-status=live}}</ref> Directed by [[John Huston]] and starring [[Paul Newman]], it was a moderate hit, although Milius disliked the final result. "I fought every day", he said. "And I was blooded well. I was treated horribly."<ref>Pye and Myles p 178</ref> More popular was ''Jeremiah Johnson''. |
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Milius did some work with [[David Giler]] on the script which became ''[[The Black Bird]]''.<ref>{{cite news |last=Warga |first=Wayne |author-link=Wayne Warga |date=September 15, 1974 |title=The Spadework Behind a 'Falcon' Remake: Spadework Behind Remake of 'Falcon' – A Remake of 'Falcon' |issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 | work=[[Los Angeles Times]] |page=q1}}</ref> |
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By now Milius was one of the most sought after screenwriters in Hollywood, seen as a colorful character with a talent for lively interviews. His self-styled "Zen Anarchist"/"American samurai" persona made him stand out in Hollywood.<ref>{{cite news|title=What's So Super About This Superdirector?|first=Stephen|last=Farber|work=The New York Times|date=September 16, 1973| issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522 |page= 135}}</ref> For instance, he rewrote ''Dirty Harry'' only on the condition that he be given an expensive gun.<ref>{{cite news |last=Attanasio |first=Paul |author-link1=Paul Attanasio |date=March 3, 1985 |title=Hollywood's Script Door: Tom Mankiewicz, Tonic for Ailing Screenplays – The Script Doctor | issn = 0190-8286 | oclc = 2269358 |newspaper=[[The Washington Post]] |page=G1}}</ref> He was also one of the inspirations for the character of John Milner in the enormously successful ''[[American Graffiti]]'' (1973).<ref name="comment" /> Milius said of this film, "I guess he [Lucas] saw me in that light because I was a surfer going past my time."<ref>Milius |p. 123</ref> |
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He also wrote the first draft of the ''Dirty Harry'' sequel, ''[[Magnum Force]]'' (1973).<ref>{{cite news|title=Movie Call Sheet: McCarthy, Raquel to Costar in 'Bomber'|newspaper= Los Angeles Times|date=April 26, 1972| issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |page=h12}}</ref> Milius later said "I don't like ''Magnum Force''. Of all the films I had anything to do with, I like it least. They changed a lot of things in a cheap and distasteful manner."<ref name="comment" /> It was however successful at the box office. |
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==== ''Dillinger'' ==== |
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Milius wanted to move behind the camera. "Being a director is the only way anyone will listen to you in Hollywood", he said. "It's the next best thing to being a star."<ref>{{cite news|title=Focus on Filmland: Young Screenwriters, New Hollywood Breed, Zoom to Superstardom They Receive Up to $400,000 For Scripts and the Right To Direct Own Material Crisp Nostalgia or Rehash? Focus of Filmland: Screenwriters Are Zooming to New Superstardom|first=Earl C.|last=Gottschalk Jr|newspaper=Wall Street Journal|date=July 31, 1975|page= 1}}</ref> |
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Gangster films were popular at the time and [[American International Pictures|AIP]] offered him the chance to direct one if he would write it for a fraction of his regular fee.<ref>{{cite news|title=The dime-store way to make movies-and money|first=Aljean|last= Harmetz|newspaper= New York Times|date=August 4, 1974| issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522 |page= 202}}</ref><ref name="IGN" /> Milius agreed and wrote and directed ''[[Dillinger (1973 film)|Dillinger]]'' (1973). "I deliberately chose Dillinger because he was a pure criminal", said Milius. "Robbing banks to right social wrongs did not come into it."<ref>Milius p. 173</ref> |
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The movie was moderately successful and launched Milius's directing career. He worked on the script for a TV sequel, ''[[Melvin Purvis: G-Man]]'' (1974), a pilot for a proposed series about [[Melvin Purvis]] (there was a second TV movie, but no series), but did not like the director, [[Dan Curtis]], or the experience of working for TV.<ref name="comment" /> |
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Contemporary film critics grouped Milius in with the emerging "movie brats" generation of filmmakers that also including Lucas, Coppola, [[Terrence Malick]], and Scorsese.<ref>{{cite news|title=Alumni of Film School Now 'Star' as Directors: 24,000 Students On '10. Best' Lists Wayne vs. Godard A Different Mood'|first=Paul|last=Gardner|newspaper=New York Times|date=January 30, 1974| issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522 |page=24}}</ref> |
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In 1974, [[David Picker]] announced he would produce ''Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail'' directed by Milius and written by [[Winfred Blevins]], about [[Theodore Roosevelt]]. The film was never made.<ref name="Ranch">{{cite news|title=Warner's to Distribute Films of David Picker|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=November 21, 1974| issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 | page= h23}}</ref> Neither was ''The Life and Times of Joe McCarthy'', a proposed biopic about the [[Joseph McCarthy|famous anti-Communist Senator]], which Milius declared interest in making.<ref name="McCarthy">{{cite news|last=Weiler|first=A.H.|title=News of the Screen: Life and Times Of Joe McCarthy|work=New York Times |date=October 13, 1974| issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522 |page=78}}</ref> |
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==== ''The Wind and the Lion'' ==== |
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Milius next wrote and directed the popular adventure film ''[[The Wind and the Lion]]'' (1975), which starred [[Sean Connery]] and [[Candice Bergen]]. He later said he felt this was his first "real" movie.<ref>{{cite book|page=175|title=Film Directors on Directing|first=John|last=Gallagher|publisher=ABC-Clio|date=1989}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title='Wind and the Lion'--a look behind MGM epic: Comments from its 'superstars' and its writer-director Deliberate distortion? False image?|author=Sterritt, David |work=The Christian Science Monitor|date=July 28, 1975|page=26}}</ref> |
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He intended to follow this with ''Give Your Heart to the Hawks'', a story about mountain man [[Jedediah Smith]] in the 1820s based on the novel by Winfred Blevins<ref name="hawks">{{cite news|last=Murphy|first=Mary|title=Movie Call Sheet: Milius Tackles a New Mountain|work=Los Angeles Times| issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 | date=June 11, 1975|page=e20}}</ref> "It's my interpretation of Jedediah Smith, which might not be exactly historical", said Milius. "It'll be about exploration, about the need to see what's over the next ridge and what that does, what price you pay, to find out. Like Dirty Harry, Smith is a classic lone man, with a searing loneliness about him. A leader of men is always alone."<ref name="comment" /> It was never made; neither was ''Man-Eaters of Kumoan'' (1976) based on book by [[Jim Corbett]] about a tiger hunter in India which Milius worked on.<ref name="comment" /> |
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For several years, he developed with [[Stanley Kubrick]] an adaptation of ''Night Drop'' by [[S. L. A. Marshall]]. "We talked about it for years and years and worked on it for a long time, but we never did it."<ref name="CS">{{cite web|last=Bauer|first=Erik|url=http://www.creativescreenwriting.com/interviews/milius4,19,00.html|title=Don't Tread on Me: An Interview with John Milius|website=Creative Screenwriting|date=March-April 2000|access-date=October 11, 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20020211235101/http://www.creativescreenwriting.com/interviews/milius4,19,00.html|archive-date=February 11, 2002}}</ref> |
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Milius did come close to making ''[[Extreme Prejudice (film)|Extreme Prejudice]]'', based on his script, in 1976. However he decided to make ''Big Wednesday'' instead; ''Extreme Prejudice'' would be made a decade later, much rewritten, and directed by [[Walter Hill]]. |
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==== ''Big Wednesday'' and the A Team ==== |
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In 1975, Milius formed his own production company, The A Team, with [[Buzz Feitshans]], who had edited ''Dillinger''. They had a five-year deal with Warner Bros.. Milius said, "Our motto is Civitas Sine Prudentia, which really translates to Social Irresponsibility; I believe in it. It's refreshing, it's liberating. Americans are basically socially irresponsible ... Who else would have invented the atomic bomb quite the same way? The Nazis would have invented it with the desire to conquer the world; we were the only people that could have invented it with the desire not to conquer the world"<ref name="comment">{{cite news|title=Stoked|last=Thompson|first= Richard|newspaper= Film Comment 12.4|date=July 1976|pages= 10–21}}</ref> |
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Its first production was an autobiographical surfing picture, ''[[Big Wednesday]]'' (1978),<ref>{{cite news |last1=Rafferty |first1=Terrence |title=Oh, Kahuna, What Became Of That Endless Summer? |work=New York Times |date=1 May 2011 |location=ProQuest Historical Newspapers New York Times (1923-) |page=MT3 |issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522| quote=By the time Milius made his sprawling, tortured surf epic...the skies had darkened considerably...}}</ref> which he called "a surfing ''[[How Green Was My Valley]]''".<ref name="comment" /> This was a major commercial disappointment although it has gone on to be a cult film.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Dixon |first1=Chris |title=Hanging 10 On Screen With Real Surfers |work=New York Times |date=21 October 2012 |location=ProQuest Historical Newspapers: The New York Times (1923-) |page=AR16|issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522 |quote=A box office dud, it finally resonated a decade later (when it reached VHS)...Milius's own life as a surfer and the real surf experience of Jan-Michael Vincent, William Katt, and Gary Busey gave the film is authenticity. Riding Giants writer Sam George said in a phone interview we quoted Speilberg as saying "Milius let his eccentric love of surfing...get in the way of ...storytelling."}}</ref> Milius's friendship with George Lucas saw him given a percentage of the profits for ''[[Star Wars]]'', which Mike Medavoy estimated earned Milius $1.5 million—in exchange Milius gave Lucas a percentage of the profits for ''Big Wednesday'' which amounted to virtually nothing.<ref>Medavoy p. 8</ref> |
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In 1979, Milius said "the ultimate aim of the A Team is that it will become a company that makes lots of projects. I shall be the figurehead and the father figure and take a percentage and I won't have to do anything except go off and direct my movie once every three years."<ref>Pye and Myles p. 186</ref> |
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The A Team made a number of movies not directed by Milius. Notably, they produced the first three films from [[Robert Zemeckis]] and [[Bob Gale]]: ''[[I Wanna Hold Your Hand (film)|I Wanna Hold Your Hand]]'', ''[[1941 (film)|1941]]'' (directed by [[Steven Spielberg]]), and ''[[Used Cars]]''.<ref>{{cite news|last=Pollock|first=Dale|title=Zemeckis Puts His Heart and Soul in 'Romancing the Stone'|work=Los Angeles Times| issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |date=March 29, 1984|page= m1}}</ref> He also produced ''Hardcore'', directed by friend [[Paul Schrader]]. |
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Schrader once described Milius's writing as containing too many good lines and scenes. He says [[Warren Beatty]] once "told John something I've been telling him too: 'You come too soon and you come too often.'... He's so full of juice he just can't stop coming, rather than holding back and tightening the situation and building characters. That releasing diffuses the energy, the characters are too broad because they never have time to build up the inner strength."<ref>{{cite journal|title=Screen Writer Tax Driver's Paul Schrader|author2=Thompson, Richard|author1= Schrader, Paul|publisher= Film Society of Lincoln Center|newspaper= Film Comment|volume=12 |issue=2 |location=JSTOR|date=March 1976|page= 16 }}</ref> |
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==== ''Apocalypse Now'' ==== |
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Milius says he was offered $17,000 to rewrite ''[[Skin Game]]'' (1971) but then [[Francis Ford Coppola]] made a competing offer of $15,000 for Milius to write ''Apocalypse Now''.<ref name="IGN" /> ''Apocalypse Now'' was an adaptation of ''[[Heart of Darkness]]'' set in the Vietnam War<ref>{{cite news |last1=Vitello |first1=Paul |title=Robert Rheault, Green Beret Ensnared in Vietnam Murder Case, Dies at 87 |work=New York Times (NYT) |date=2 November 2013 |location=ProQuest Historical Newspapers: The (1923 -) |page=D7 |issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522| quote=Milius told the NYT in 1977 that he had based the Marlon Brando character...the Green Beret colonel...on both...Kurtz from Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and Col Rheault.}}</ref> which George Lucas intended to direct as a follow-up to his first feature ''[[THX 1138]]'' (1971).<ref>{{cite news|title=Movies Leaving 'Hollywood' Behind: Studio System Passe Film Forges Ahead |author= Gussow, Mel|date=May 27, 1970|work=New York Times| issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522 | page=36}}</ref> Milius says Coppola: |
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<blockquote>Offered that wonderful fork in the road where I could go do my own thing rather than just rewrite some piece of crap that would probably be rewritten by somebody else. That was the most important decision I made in my life as a writer. That sort of steered me onto the path of doing my own work and being a little more like a novelist ... I tackled an unpopular subject that no one was going to make a movie about where the chances were really slim that I could pull it off. There was no book, nothing but me and the blank page. And that was wonderful because I had followed my heart. One of the nicest times in my life was writing ''Apocalypse Now.''<ref name="diary" /></blockquote> |
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The commercial failure of ''THX 1138'' delayed production plans for ''Apocalypse Now''. Milius later said of the ''Apocalypse Now'' script, "No one would touch it because of the Vietnam War. Everyone loved it, it did more for my career than any other script because it was always considered a work of genius; from the minute it came out, it really stirred people up. It's a good script, it's certainly no work of genius. It churns people up, and that's what they think works of genius are supposed to do."<ref name="comment" /> |
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However, the following year saw the release of ''[[Apocalypse Now]]'', directed by Francis Ford Coppola. Coppola rewrote the script, which Milius disliked. "He wanted to ruin it, liberalize it, and turn it into ''[[Hair (musical)|Hair]]''", said Milius in 1976. "He sees himself as a great humanitarian, an enlightened soul who will tell you such wonderful things as he does at the end of ''[[Godfather 2]]'' -- that crime doesn't pay ... Talent-wise, he's no John Ford; character-wise, he's no Steve Spielberg. Francis can't stand to have any other creative influence around ... Francis Coppola has this compelling desire to save humanity when the man is a raving fascist, the [[Bay Area]] [[Mussolini]]."<ref name="comment" /> |
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The film was released in 1979 to great acclaim. |
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Milius's old agent, Mike Medavoy, helped establish [[Orion Pictures]] in 1978 and one of their first movies was going to be ''East of Suez'', written and directed by Milius.<ref name="Suez">{{cite news|title=Travolta the Producer Signs 2-Film Pact: Percentage of 'Fever'|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1978/03/29/archives/travolta-the-producer-signs-2film-pact-percentage-of-fever.html|issn=0362-4331|oclc=1645522|first=Aljean|last=Harmetz|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=March 29, 1978|page=c21}}</ref> It was not made. |
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Spielberg said in 1978 that Milius was key to the group of young filmmakers known as the [[New Hollywood]], which included himself, Lucas, and Coppola: |
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<blockquote>John is our Scoutmaster. He's the one who will tell you to go on a trip and only take enough food, enough water for one day, and make you stay out longer than that. He's the one who says, "Be a man. I don't want to see any tears." He's a terrific raconteur, a wonderful story teller. John has more life than all the rest of us put together.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{cite news|title=The New New Wave of Film Makers: A Young Group of Writer-Directors Has Moved Into Positions of Power in Hollywood|first=Robert|last= Lindsey|newspaper= New York Times |issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522|date=28 May 1978|page= SM3}}</ref></blockquote> |
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([[Quentin Tarantino]] said he could imagine the film ''[[Deliverance]]'' being about "Hollywood filmmakers: you can imagine Spielberg, Lucas, and Scorsese as the husbands. And you can really imagine John Milius as Lewis."<ref>{{cite web|website=New Beverly Cinema|first=Quentin|last=Tarantino|title=Deliverance|url=https://thenewbev.com/tarantinos-reviews/deliverance/|date=April 23, 2020}}</ref>) |
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==== 1980s ==== |
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In 1982, Milius directorial effort ''[[Conan the Barbarian (1982 film)|Conan the Barbarian]]'' was released, based on the fantasy novel by the same name. The film is credited for turning its lead, [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]], into a star.<ref>{{cite news|last=Pollock|first=Dale|title=Milius: Might Makes a Rite | issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |work=Los Angeles Times|date=May 14, 1982|page=h1}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Dargis |first1=Manohla |title=Keep Hold of Your Head, Lest He Lop It Off With the Others |work=New York Times |date=19 August 2011 |location= ProQuest Historical Newspapers: New York Times (1923-) |page=C4| issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522| quote="from an Oliver Stone screenplay that Milius retooled, opens with a quote from Nietzsche and grows more lugubriously overblown from there...}}</ref> Milius was interested in the project since the late 1970s. While he was about to get hired for scripting duties, he had to pass due to his commitment to ''Big Wednesday''. Instead, [[Oliver Stone]] was hired to write the project. Eventually, producer [[Dino De Laurentiis]] with whom Milius had contractual obligations joined the project. Milius returned to the project as its director re-working Stone's script. Upon its release the film was popular.<ref>{{Cite web |title=AFI{{!}}Catalog |url=https://catalog.afi.com/Film/56748-CONAN-THEBARBARIAN?sid=35458ee7-dd1b-4cb0-817c-2bc3cffa708c&sr=11.378897&cp=1&pos=0 |access-date=2023-06-04 |website=catalog.afi.com}}</ref> The film was the 15th highest grossing film in the USA that year, making $39,565,475 domestically.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Domestic Box Office For 1982 |url=https://www.boxofficemojo.com/year/1982/ |access-date=2023-06-04 |website=Box Office Mojo}}</ref> |
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In 1983, he was among the producers of [[Ted Kotcheff]]'s ''[[Uncommon Valor]],''<ref>{{Cite web |title=AFI{{!}}Catalog |url=https://catalog.afi.com/Film/58156-UNCOMMON-VALOR?cxt=filmography |access-date=2023-06-05 |website=catalog.afi.com}}</ref> and credited as a "spiritual adviser" in the action film ''[[Lone Wolf McQuade]]''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=AFI{{!}}Catalog |url=https://catalog.afi.com/Film/67307-LONE-WOLF-MCQUADE?cxt=filmography |access-date=2023-06-05 |website=catalog.afi.com}}</ref> |
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In 1984, he directed the popular action film, ''[[Red Dawn]].''<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Miller |first1=John J. |title=A dawn of awareness |journal=National Review |date=December 3, 2012 |volume=64 |issue=22 |page=53 | issn =0028-0038 |ref=Gale Document Number: GALE A308883572 |location=Gale General OneFile, New York City |quote=Red Dawn was a summertime success, kicking Ghostbusters from the No. 1 spot at the box office and going on to gross more than $35 million. Its youthful cast seems familiar today, but back then its members were virtual unknowns: Patrick Swayze had top billing, joined by Jennifer Grey, Charlie Sheen, and Lea Thompson. They played teenagers who head to the hills following the Soviet attack, forming a resistance group that wages guerrilla warfare against Communist aggressors.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=O'Connell |first1=Aaron B. |title=Guns, Violence, and the 'Red Dawn' Films |journal=The Chronicle of Higher Education |date=11 January 2013 |volume=59 |issue=18 |ref=Gale Document Number: GALE A314249416 |location=Gale General OneFile |quote=On July 19, 1984, the producers of Red Dawn had a problem. In less than a month, they were due to release the director John Milius's pro-gun, survivalist action film depicting a Communist invasion of the United States, and the theatrical trailer and movie posters – both of which featured Soviet troops in or near a McDonald's restaurant – were already completed. But those materials now had to be changed because the previous day, a well-armed paranoid survivalist named James Oliver Huberty had entered a McDonald's in San Ysidro, Calif., and killed 21 people (including five children) with an Uzi submachine gun. The movie's marketing team recalled some of the posters and removed the McDonald's scene from the trailer. (The opening scene, in which the invaders gun down kids in a school, was left intact.) Red Dawn went on to become a cult classic and helped lead a generation of young men – yours truly included – into the military.}}</ref> The film is about a Russian invasion in the United States, and a rogue commando group of teenagers standing up to the invaders. Some critics perceived it to be "warmongering propaganda" while Milius said it was "anti-war".<ref>{{Cite web |title=AFI{{!}}Catalog |url=https://catalog.afi.com/Film/68267-RED-DAWN?cxt=filmography |access-date=2023-06-04 |website=catalog.afi.com}}</ref> The film was the 19th highest grossing film in the USA that year, making $38,376,497 domestically.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Domestic Box Office For 1984 |url=https://www.boxofficemojo.com/year/1984/ |access-date=2023-06-04 |website=Box Office Mojo}}</ref> |
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He wrote and directed an episode for ''[[The Twilight Zone (1985 TV series)|The New Twilight Zone]]'' (1985) and a story of his, "Viking Bikers from Hell", was used in an episode of ''[[Miami Vice]]'' ([[List of Miami Vice episodes#Season 3 (1986–87)|season 3]], episode 22). |
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In 1986, it was reported that he was writing the script for ''[[Fatal Beauty]]'' which he hoped to direct with [[Cher]];<ref name="fatal">{{cite news|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-07-27-ca-1280-story.html|title=Dirty Harriet | issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=July 27, 1986}}</ref> the film was made by [[Tom Holland (filmmaker)|Tom Holland]] and starred [[Whoopi Goldberg]]. |
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There was some talk that he would direct a movie for [[HBO]], ''Capone'', but it was not made.<ref name="Capone">{{cite news|title=Outtakes: The Sequel Mob Mentality|last=Modderno|first= Craig|issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 | newspaper= Los Angeles Times|date= June 21, 1987|page= K84}}</ref> |
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In the late 1980s Milius wrote and directed a [[Pacific War]] adventure film ''[[Farewell to the King]]'' (1989).<ref>{{cite news |last1=Scott |first1=Vernon |title=Milius in Borneo |work=UPI Archive: Entertainment |agency=United Press International |date=14 August 1987 |ref=Gale Document Number: GALE A445673379 |location=Gale General OneFile |quote='When I direct a film in a place like Sarawak, it is my only opportunity to play General MacArthur,' he said. 'I enjoy working out all the logistical problems. When emergencies arise – and you can't call the studio for immediate repairs or equipment – you make do. You improvise, and almost always that helps a film.}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Culhane |first1=John |title=Film; In Borneo's Wilds, Legend Takes Root |work=The New York Times |date=26 February 1989 |issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522| ref=Gale Document Number: GALE A175637654 |location=Gale General OneFile |quote=To John Milius, the kinds of stories we tell about ourselves, our own ongoing legends of ourselves, are actually how we measure the greatness of our aspirations. ''That's what Learoyd does for the tribe,'' he says. ''He takes them, he gives them a legend - all of them. He gives them a history; he makes them a strong people. Even though he's gone, they have the legend''.}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Canby |first1=Vincemt |title=Review/Film; Nick Nolte As a King, Self-Made |work=The New York Times |date=3 March 1989 |issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522|ref=Gale Document Number: GALE A175655819 |location=Gale General OneFile |quote=Mr. Milius's source material is a novel by Pierre Schoendoerffer, France's incurably right-wing romantic who, in 1977, wrote and directed the memorable ''Crabe Tambour,'' adapted from his own novel. Unlike some of Mr. Milius's earlier films (including ''Red Dawn''), ''Farewell to the King'' cannot be faulted for its politics - it hasn't any.}}</ref> This flopped at the box office. In 1989, he tried to get funding for adaptations of [[Allan W. Eckert]]'s "The Frontiersmen: A Narrative", about settling the [[Ohio Country|Ohio River Valley]], and "Half of the Sky", about a [[Rocky Mountains]] explorer.<ref name=":89">{{cite news|title=A rebel adapts John Milius will meet Hollywood halfway|last=Thompson|first= Anne|newspaper= Chicago Tribune|location = ProQuest Central Document ID 282718567|date=February 16, 1989| issn = 1085-6706 |oclc = 7960243 |page= 12}}</ref> |
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[[Sean Connery]] was hired to star in the film ''[[The Hunt for Red October (film)|The Hunt for Red October]]'' for producer [[Mace Neufeld]], based on the [[Tom Clancy]]'s [[The Hunt for Red October|novel of the same name]]. Connery thought the script was "too American" and insisted Neufeld hire John Milius to rewrite the Russian sequences. Connery thought with Milius, he could "get a different sort of image, different speech patterns."<ref>{{cite news|title=Portrait of the star as perfectionist|first=Peter|last= Goddard|newspaper= Toronto Star|date= February 17, 1990|page= F1}}</ref> |
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Neufeld then hired Milius to write and direct ''[[Flight of the Intruder]]'', based on the book by [[Stephen Coonts]]. It too was not a financial success. |
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"I think the culture had changed and that is why my films were less accepted", he reflected later. "I still think those are also great films, ''Farewell to the King'' especially."<ref name="crave" /> |
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=== Later === |
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==== 1990s: screenwriting, cable TV ==== |
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In 1992, Milius claimed that he was blacklisted for his conservative beliefs in liberal Hollywood, saying that his flops were not as forgiven as those from more leftist directors. "It weighs ten times heavier against me", he said. "If you don't share the politically correct vision, then you are an outlaw, you are hunted and there is a price on your head, and if they catch you they will hang you."<ref>{{cite news|title=Hidden Hollywood: Political conservatives in the film industry say they are out of fashion. Many choose silence. |first=Alessandra|last=Stanley| issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522|newspaper=New York Times|date=May 31, 1992|page= V1}}</ref> |
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The film of ''Hunt for the Red October'' had been a big success, however, and Milius remained in high demand as a screenwriter: he did several drafts of another Clancy adaptation, ''[[Clear and Present Danger (film)|Clear and Present Danger]]'' (1994), which was another hit. |
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Milius worked on a number on unfilmed scripts, including ''Bad Iron'', a biker movie written by Kent Anderson, which he intended to produce.<ref name="Bad">{{cite news|title=O'Malley & Gratteau|newspaper=Chicago Tribune|date=May 3, 1990|issn = 1085-6706 |oclc = 7960243 | page= D28}}</ref> He was going to direct a film about [[Alexander the Great]] starring [[Jean-Claude Van Damme]] but that was put on hold when a [[miniseries]] on the same topic was made by Italian TV.<ref name="Alex1">{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-01-28-ca-1134-story.html| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190427210817/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-01-28-ca-1134-story.html | archive-date = April 27, 2019 | first = Kirk | last = Honeycutt|title=Jean-Claude Van Damme, the Belgian-born martial-arts champ...|date=January 28, 1990|issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |website=[[Los Angeles Times]]|access-date=April 27, 2019}}</ref><ref name="Alex2">{{cite news|last1=Beck|first1=Marilyn|last2=Jenel Smith|first2=Stacy|title=Landon writing new TV movie to introduce another series: [1* Edition]|work=The Province |quote = ProQuest Central document ID 267381536| location =[[Vancouver, BC]]|issn = 0839-3311 |date=September 20, 1990|page=61}}</ref> He wrote ''[[Harlot's Ghost]]'', for Francis Ford Coppola, based on a novel by [[Norman Mailer]]; Milius described it as "a cross between ''[[The Godfather]]'' and ''Apocalypse Now.'' It's about families and duplicity and danger, but this time provoked by the government."<ref name="Ghost">{{cite news|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-12-15-ca-932-story.html|title=1,334 Pages Too Much? Mailer's CIA Novel Is Coppola's Movie by Milius| issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |last=Goldstein|first=Patrick|newspaper= Los Angeles Times|date=December 15, 1991|page= N29}}</ref> |
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He adapted the [[Sgt. Rock]] comics for producer [[Joel Silver]], with either [[Renny Harlin]] and [[Paul Verhoeven]] attached at certain points respectively. And also wrote a version of ''Die Hard 3'', co-written with Barry Beckerman.<ref name="Hard">{{cite news|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1992-11-01-ca-1596-story.html|title='Die Hard 3' Blown Out of the Water by 'Siege'|last=Wells|first= Jeffrey|issn = 0458-3035 | oclc = 3638237 |newspaper= Los Angeles Times|date=November 1, 1992|page= F16}}</ref> In the early 1990s he wrote ''Texas Rangers'', about the establishment of that organization, for [[Frank Price]] at Columbia. He hoped to direct the film, but could not raise the funding.<ref name="diary"/> |
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In 1993, he replaced [[Andrei Konchalovsky]] as director on ''The Northmen'' for [[Morgan Creek Entertainment Group|Morgan Creek Productions]], about an English monk who gets captured by a band of Vikings. "This was inevitable", Milius said of his directing a Viking film. "I've been a practicing pagan for a long time. ''Conan the Barbarian'' was really a Viking movie but it was disguised."<ref name="Northmen2">{{cite news|title=Conan director hits film Valhalla after nabbing Viking flick| quote = [[ProQuest]] Central document ID 267466689 |newspaper=The Province|date=April 16, 1993|location =Vancouver, BC |issn = 0839-3311| page= B7}}</ref> However, financing fell through. He was going to direct an adaptation of [[Tom Clancy]]'s novel ''[[Without Remorse]]'' with [[Gary Sinise]] and [[Laurence Fishburne]], but the project folded in 1995, two weeks before shooting was to commence due to the financial collapse of [[Savoy Pictures]].<ref name="Clancy2">{{cite news|url=https://variety.com/1995/scene/markets-festivals/savoy-without-remorse-99129181/|title=Savoy Without 'Remorse'|first=Anita M.|last=Busch|issn = 0042-2738 |oclc = 810134503| newspaper=Variety|publisher= Reed Elsevier| date=November 5, 1995}}</ref> |
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A Milius script that was filmed was his biopic of [[Geronimo]], ''[[Geronimo: An American Legend]]'', for Walter Hill. |
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He also directed two films for cable: ''Motorcycle Gang'' (1994) and ''[[Rough Riders (miniseries)|Rough Riders]]'' (1997). |
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==== 2000s ==== |
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In 2000, Milius was hired to work as a creative consultant with the [[Institute for Creative Technologies]] to pre-visualize the challenges to peace that America will face and the advanced virtual reality technologies necessary to train U.S. troops for the future. "Through his enormous body of work, John has shown a deep understanding of the human condition and the ways that conflict can be resolved", said ICT executive director Richard Lindheim. "Furthermore our efforts will benefit greatly from his vision of the world in the near future, and the techniques and procedures that will be needed to maintain security."<ref>{{cite news|title=John Milius to Serve as Creative Consultant With Institute for Creative Technologies|newspaper=PR Newswire |date=June 12, 2000|page= 1}}</ref> |
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That year he also wrote two biopics: ''Le May'' for Robert Zemeckis, about [[Curtis LeMay]];<ref name = "Maverick"/> and ''Manila John'', about [[John Basilone]], which he was going to make for HBO. Warner Bros. wanted him to update ''[[Dirty Harry (film series)|Dirty Harry]]'' and he wanted them to fund a version of ''[[The Iliad]]''; there was also talk he would make ''The Alamo'' for HBO.<ref name="CS"/> |
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In the early 2000s he worked on ''King Conan: Crown of Iron'' (2001−02), a sequel to ''Conan the Barbarian''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.geeksofdoom.com/2012/10/26/arnold-schwarzenegger-set-to-return-as-the-cimmerian-warrior-in-the-legend-of-conan |title=Arnold Schwarzenegger Set To Return As The Cimmerian Warrior In 'The Legend Of Conan' |website=Geeksofdoom.com |date=October 26, 2012 |access-date=September 10, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/5-things-you-might-not-know-about-john-milius-conan-the-barbarian-20120514 |title=5 Things You Might Not Know About John Milius' 'Conan The Barbarian |first = Oliver | last = Lyttelton |website= The Playlist|publisher = Blogs.indiewire.com |date=May 14, 2012|access-date=September 10, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160203193840/http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/5-things-you-might-not-know-about-john-milius-conan-the-barbarian-20120514 |archive-date=February 3, 2016 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Later, in 2019 Arnold Schwarzenegger met with Milius to discuss the status of the project. "We're on the same page," he said. "We both want to get it done."<ref>{{cite web|last=Dick|first=Jeremy|url=https://movieweb.com/king-conan-talks-arnold-schwarzenegger-john-millius/|title=Schwarzenegger Talks King Conan Script with Original Director John Milius|website=MovieWeb|date=August 22, 2019|access-date=October 11, 2024}}</ref> |
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He also developed ''Jornada del Muerto'' (''Journey of Death'') (2003), a biker film starring [[Triple H]]<ref name="Jornada">{{cite web|url=https://www.upi.com/Entertainment_News/2003/09/16/Triple-H-has-two-film-roles/38311063734280/|title=Triple H has two film roles|publisher = News World Communications | website=UPI|access-date=April 27, 2019}}</ref> and wrote a pilot for a TV show for UPN, ''Delta'', about a military special ops team that takes on terrorists.<ref name="Delta">{{cite news|url=https://variety.com/2002/scene/markets-festivals/a-list-will-fuel-upn-dramas-1117877204/|title=A-list will fuel UPN dramas |issn = 0042-2738 |oclc = 810134503|first=Josef|last=Adalian |newspaper=Variety|publisher = Reed Elsevier| date=December 9, 2002}}</ref> None of these movies were made.<ref name="diary"/> |
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''[[Texas Rangers (film)|Texas Rangers]]'' (2001) was eventually made, though Milius stated that his script was substantially rewritten. |
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==== Financial difficulties ==== |
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Milius suffered a major financial reversal in the late 1990s and early 2000s when his accountant embezzled from him an estimated $3 million.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://variety.com/2003/biz/markets-festivals/police-charge-milius-accountant-1117896563/ |title=Police charge Milius' accountant |first=Stephanie |last=Horst |magazine=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]] |date=December 3, 2003 |issn = 0042-2738 |oclc = 810134503 |access-date=November 21, 2018 |publisher= Reed Elsevier}}</ref> |
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He tried to get a job as a staff writer on the TV show ''[[Deadwood (TV series)|Deadwood]]''; showrunner [[David Milch]] was reluctant as he did not consider Milius a staff writer. Milius pleaded that he needed the money in order to pay for his son's tuition at law school, so Milch simply paid the fees. Milius's career recovered when he helped create the [[BBC]]/HBO television series ''[[Rome (TV series)|Rome]]'', which allowed him to repay Milch. |
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He wrote some pilots which did not go to series—''Dodge City'' (circa 2005)—a Western series for CBS,<ref name="Dodge">{{cite web |url=http://www.moviesonline.ca/movienews_3929.html |title=New Conan Movie Has a Director! |work=Movies Online |date=March 2005 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140715000213/http://www.moviesonline.ca/movienews_3929.html |archive-date=July 15, 2014 |access-date=July 10, 2014}}</ref> and ''Saigon Bureau'' (2008)—about the AIP Bureau of [[Photojournalism|photojournalists]] in the [[Vietnam War]], a collaboration with [[Chris Noth]] based on the book ''Requiem''.<ref name="Saigon">{{cite web |url=http://www.broadway.com/buzz/11269/chris-noth/ |title=Chris Noth |first=Kathy |last=Henderson |work=[[Broadway.com]] |date=November 10, 2008 |access-date=July 10, 2014}}</ref> He also wrote a script about the [[Battle of Chosin Reservoir]] in the [[Korean War]], ''The Chosin Few'' for Mark Cuban's 2929 Entertainment,<ref name="Chosin">{{cite journal |last1=McClintock |first1=Pamela |title=Milius 'Chosen' for Korean War drama |journal=Daily Variety |date=19 October 2006 |volume=293 |issue=14 |page=5 | url = https://variety.com/2006/film/markets-festivals/milius-military-tale-1117952181/|archive-date = 27 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220627173054/https://variety.com/2006/film/markets-festivals/milius-military-tale-1117952181/ |access-date=27 June 2022 |publisher=Reed Elsevier |location=Los Angeles |issn=0042-2738 |oclc=810134503}}</ref> and ''The Iron Horsemen'', a motorcycle feature.<ref name="Horsemen">{{cite news |title=Despite hits, this filmmaker was never seen as big kahuna |last=Garcia |first=Chris |newspaper=[[Austin American-Statesman]] |issn = 1553-8451 |date=October 9, 2007 |page=E.1}}</ref> |
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==== Health problems ==== |
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In 2010 Milius was working on a new project, a film biography of [[Genghis Khan]],<ref name="cnn" /> and a proposed TV series called ''Pharaoh'', set during the reign of Queen [[Hatshepsut]],<ref name="Pharaoh">{{cite news |url=https://variety.com/2010/scene/markets-festivals/milius-moves-back-in-time-with-pharaoh-1118017488/ |magazine=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]] |title=Milius moves back in time with 'Pharaoh'. |first1=John |last1=Hopewell |first2=Elsa |last2=Keslassy |issn = 0042-2738 |oclc = 810134503 |date=April 9, 2010 |publisher= Reed Elsevier Inc. |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120214121413/http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118017488?refCatId=19 |archive-date=February 14, 2012 |url-status=live |access-date=November 21, 2018}}</ref> when he had a stroke. For a while he was unable to speak or move, but ultimately he recovered. |
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==== Video games ==== |
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In March 2011, Milius was a story consultant for the video game ''[[Homefront (video game)|Homefront]]''<ref>{{cite news |last1=Schiesel |first1=Seth |title=Defending America, the Underdog |work=New York Times |date=25 March 2011 |location=ProQuest Historical Newspapers New York Times (1923-) |page=C1|issn = 0362-4331|oclc =1645522| quote=Homefront conveys a chilling, gripping, not entirely ludicrous version of America's fall...as a provocative, emotionally involving and politically relevant creative experience, it is vital. Were it a film, it might already be a topic of national discussion}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Good |first=Owen |title=Red Dawn's Writer Didn't Actually Write Homefront's Script, Say Ex-Developers |url=http://kotaku.com/5924277/red-dawns-writer-didnt-actually-write-homefronts-script-say-ex+developers |work=[[Kotaku]] |date=August 7, 2012 |access-date=November 21, 2018 |publisher=[[Gizmodo Media Group]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://g4tv.com/thefeed/blog/post/695910/apocalypse-now-and-red-dawn-scribe-john-milius-writing-thqs-homefront.html |title='Apocalypse Now' And 'Red Dawn' Scribe John Milius Writing THQ's 'Homefront' |work=[[G4tv]] |first=Jake |last=Gaskill |date=May 27, 2009 |access-date=November 21, 2018 |publisher=[[NBCUniversal]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120723010456/http://www.g4tv.com/thefeed/blog/post/695910/apocalypse-now-and-red-dawn-scribe-john-milius-writing-thqs-homefront/ |archive-date=July 23, 2012}}</ref> about a North Korean conquest of America. |
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== Influence == |
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Milius has long claimed to be an outsider in Hollywood. In 2001 he stated: |
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<blockquote>I've always been considered a nut. They kind of tolerate me. It's certainly affected me. I've been blacklisted for a large part of my career because of my politics—as surely as any writer was blacklisted back in the 1950s. It's just that my politics are from the other side, and Hollywood always veers left.<ref name="guardian">{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2001/nov/08/artsfeatures |title=Go ahead, pinko liberals, make my day |last=D'Arcy |first=David |date=November 8, 2001 |newspaper=[[The Guardian]] |access-date=21 November 2018}}</ref></blockquote> |
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He wrote a number of iconic film lines such as "Charlie don't surf" and "I love the smell of napalm in the morning", from ''Apocalypse Now'', and the famous [[Harry Callahan (character)|Harry Callahan]] one-liners delivered by [[Clint Eastwood]], including "[[Go ahead, make my day]]" and "Ask yourself one question, 'Do I feel lucky?' Well, do you, punk?" Milius also had a hand in the {{USS|Indianapolis|CA-35|6}} monologue in the film ''[[Jaws (film)|Jaws]]'';<ref name="ReferenceA" /> the sequence was performed by [[Robert Shaw (actor)|Robert Shaw]]. When Spielberg asked him to contribute to the screenplay for ''[[Saving Private Ryan]]'', Milius suggested the opening and closing scenes at [[Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial|Normandy cemetery]] where Ryan, now an elderly hero of World War II, in a moment of [[survivor guilt]], asks his wife "Did I live a good life?"<ref name="guardian" /> |
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After his work on ''Rough Riders'' (1997), Milius became an instrumental force in lobbying Congress to award President [[Theodore Roosevelt]] the [[Medal of Honor]] (posthumously), for acts of conspicuous gallantry while in the [[Battle of San Juan Hill]].<ref name="IGN" /> Milius made two films featuring Roosevelt: ''[[The Wind and the Lion]]'' (where he was played by [[Brian Keith]]) and the made-for-TV film ''Rough Riders'' (where [[Tom Berenger]] took the role). |
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The character of John Milner from the 1973 George Lucas film ''[[American Graffiti]]'' was inspired in part by Milius, who was a good friend of Lucas while they were at USC film school. Likewise, the character Walter Sobchak in the 1998 film ''[[The Big Lebowski]]'' (portrayed by [[John Goodman]]) was partly inspired by Milius, a friend of [[The Coen Brothers]]. The novella ''Blind Jozef Pronek and Dead Souls'' by [[Aleksandar Hemon]] features an episode with Milius, who is described as "sitting at a desk sucking on a cigar as long as a walking stick". |
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Milius was also instrumental during the startup of the UFC ([[Ultimate Fighting Championship]]) organization: it was his idea to use the octagon-shaped cage, and his association with UFC helped provide interest and investors to the startup UFC.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.mmamemories.com/2008/01/05/a-man-named-milius-and-his-imprint-on-the-ufc.html |title=A Man Named Milius, and His Imprint on The UFC |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100409025642/http://www.mmamemories.com/2008/01/05/a-man-named-milius-and-his-imprint-on-the-ufc.html |archive-date=April 9, 2010 |date=January 5, 2008 |access-date=November 21, 2018 |work=MMA Memories}}</ref> |
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In 2013, a documentary about his life and career, titled ''[[Milius (film)|Milius]]'', was released.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.aintitcool.com/node/61479 |title=Quint says the SXSW 2013 documentary about John MILIUS is what is best in life! |work=[[Ain't It Cool News]] |date=March 15, 2013 |access-date=May 2, 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.austinchronicle.com/blogs/screens/2013-03-05/deconstructing-john-milius/ |title=SXSW Film explores wild life of a Hollywood iconoclast |first=Shawn |last=Badgley |newspaper=[[Austin Chronicle]] |date=March 5, 2013 |access-date=May 2, 2013}}</ref> |
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Writer Nat Segaloff called Milius: |
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<blockquote>The best writer of the so-called USC Mafia, a tight-knit group that resuscitated—some say homogenised American cinema in the 1970s ... Raised on Ford, Hawks, Lean and Kurosawa, shaped by filmmakers as disparate as [[Fellini]] and [[Delmer Daves]], Milius favours history books over comic books, character over special effects, and heroes with roots in reality, time, place and customs. Milius' stories reflect his own deeply held ethic, which embraces the values of tradition, adventure, spiritualism, honour and an intense loyalty to friends ... Although he privately chafes at his public image as a gun-toting, liberal baiting provocateur, he allows himself to be painted as such, at times even holding the brush. He plays the Hollywood game like a pro, yet sticks to his own rules; he is a romantic filmmaker who avoids love scenes; his movies contain violence, yet no death in them is without meaning.<ref>Segaloff p 275-276</ref></blockquote> |
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Milius himself once said: |
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<blockquote>Never compromise excellence. To write for someone else is the biggest mistake that any writer makes. You should be your biggest competitor, your biggest critic, your biggest fan, because you don't know what anybody else thinks. How arrogant it is to assume that you know the market, that you know what's popular today—only Steven Spielberg knows what's popular today. Only Steven Spielberg will ever know what's popular. So leave it to him. He's the only one in the history of man who has ever figured that out. Write what you want to see. Because if you don't, you're not going to have any true passion in it, and it's not going to be done with any true artistry.<ref name="diary"/></blockquote> |
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[[Triple H]], Retired [[WWE]] wrestler and current Head of Creative for WWE cites Milius as an inspiration in how to tell a compelling story within a wrestling match without having to rely on over-the-top action, as he stated that Milius didn’t rely on action in his work to tell a compelling story to the audience.{{citation needed|date=December 2023}} |
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A character in the [[2023 in film|2023 film]] ''[[Rebel Moon]]'' is named after Milius as an homage from the film's co-writers [[Kurt Johnstad]] and [[Zack Snyder]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/2023/film/news/rebel-moon-ending-sequel-part-2-1235848821/|title='Rebel Moon' Writer Explains That Cliffhanger Ending and Confronts the Bad Reviews: 'This Isn't an IP. This Is an Original Story'|last=Brew|first=Caroline|website=Variety|date=December 23, 2023|access-date=December 25, 2023|language=en-us|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231223160042/https://variety.com/2023/film/news/rebel-moon-ending-sequel-part-2-1235848821/|archive-date=December 23, 2023|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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== Awards and honors == |
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For writing the ''Apocalypse Now'' screenplay, Milius and Francis Ford Coppola were nominated for the [[Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay]], and the [[Writers Guild of America Award]] for [[Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Screenplay|Best Drama Written Directly for the Screen]] (Though the film was an adaptation of ''[[Heart of Darkness]]'', the [[Writers Guild of America|Writers Guild]] considered it an original screenplay.). |
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In 2007, Milius was the recipient of the [[Austin Film Festival]]'s Distinguished Screenwriter Award. In his acceptance speech, he said that his favorites of his films were ''The Wind and the Lion'', ''Big Wednesday'', and ''Conan''.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.austinfilmfestival.com/new/node/493 |work=[[Austin Film Festival]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090924125606/http://www.austinfilmfestival.com/new/node/493 |archive-date=September 24, 2009 |title=OLIVER STONE, JOHN MILIUS To Be Honored At 14th Annual Austin Film Festival |date=July 4, 2007 |access-date=November 21, 2018}}</ref> |
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== Personal life == |
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Milius has been married three times.<ref>{{IMDb name|587518|section=bio}}</ref> He has two children with his first wife, Ethan Jedediah and Marco Alexander,<ref>{{cite journal |title=John Milius |journal=Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television |date=2005 |volume=59 |issue=Gale In Context: Biography |publisher=Cengage |location=Gale Document Number: GALE K1609018615 |eissn=0749-064X |oclc=11078702}}</ref> Renee Fabri (m. January 7, 1967), and one child, [[Amanda Milius]],<ref>{{cite web |title=All champion women |url=https://www.iwf.org/people/amanda-milius/ |website=Independent Women's Forum |access-date=12 July 2022 |location=Winchester VA |date=27 December 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211227175108/https://www.iwf.org/people/amanda-milius/ |archive-date=December 27, 2021 |url-status=live }}</ref> with his second wife, [[Celia Kaye]] (m. February 26, 1978). Amanda is the director of the 2020 documentary ''The Plot Against the President''.<ref>{{cite news |website = Fox News |last1=Flood |first1=Brian |title=Plot Against the President' filmmaker says media largely to blame for attempt to link Trump campaign, Russia |url=https://www.foxnews.com/media/plot-against-the-president-filmmaker-says-media-largely-to-blame-for-attempt-to-link-trump-campaign-russia | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20201111230324/https://www.foxnews.com/media/plot-against-the-president-filmmaker-says-media-largely-to-blame-for-attempt-to-link-trump-campaign-russia | archive-date = November 11, 2020 |access-date=November 29, 2020 |date=October 28, 2020}}</ref> His current marriage (since 1992) is to actress Elan Oberon. |
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Milius was a passionate surfer for much of his life but gave it up when he turned fifty.<ref name="crave">{{cite news|url=http://www.craveonline.com.au/film/interviews/625751-exclusive-interview-john-milius-on-milius|title=Exclusive Interview: John Milius on 'Milius'|website=Craveonline.com.au|date=January 6, 2014|access-date=July 10, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140714210132/http://www.craveonline.com.au/film/interviews/625751-exclusive-interview-john-milius-on-milius|archive-date=July 14, 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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=== Views === |
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Milius is a self-proclaimed "[[Zen]] [[Anarchism|anarchist]]", but he also publicly aligns himself with [[Conservatism in the United States|conservative]] factions in Hollywood and he was interviewed in the [[documentary]] ''[[Rated R: Republicans in Hollywood]]''. He has also been consultant to a military think tank, the [[Institute for Creative Technologies]].<ref name="guardian" /> Milius said: |
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<blockquote>I'm not a reactionary—I'm just a right-wing extremist so far beyond the [[Christian Identity]] people like that and stuff, that they can't even imagine. I'm so far beyond that I'm a [[Maoism|Maoist]]. I'm an anarchist. I've always been an anarchist. Any true, real right-winger if he goes far enough hates all form of government, because government should be done to cattle and not human beings.<ref>White, Allen, & Milius, John. ( 8 March 1999). [https://filmthreat.com/uncategorized/joy-in-the-struggle-a-look-at-john-milius/ Joy in the Struggle: A Look at John Milius] ''Film Threat''. (Interview) accessed 5 January 2012.</ref></blockquote> |
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Milius has endorsed [[minimum wage]] laws and [[conscription]].<ref name=Walker> {{cite web|first = Jesse| last = Walker |url=https://reason.com/2014/06/05/john-milius-hollywood-maverick/|title=John Milius, Hollywood Maverick|date=June 5, 2014|website=Reason.com |oclc = 818916200 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190427210815/https://reason.com/2014/06/05/john-milius-hollywood-maverick/ |archive-date =April 27, 2019 |access-date=April 27, 2019}}</ref> Milius was also quoted as saying that "it might not have been bad for this country" if [[Douglas MacArthur]] had "crossed the Mississippi like Caesar crossed the Rubicon and proclaimed himself Emperor Douglas the First."<ref name=Walker /> For years, Milius was a member of the board of directors of the [[National Rifle Association of America]] (NRA),<ref name = Maverick>{{cite news |last1=Meroney |first1=John |title=Milius the Moviemaking Maverick |work=The American Enterprise (TAE)|volume=11 |issue=5 |date=July 2000 |ref=Gale Document Number: GALE A63502698 |location=Gale General OneFile |page=50| issn = 1047-3572 |quote=In the 1980s, when filmies seemed more troubled by Ronald Reagan describing the Soviet Union as an "evil empire" than by actual Soviet expansionism, dovish propaganda movies like The Day After and Testament were being churned out by most of the industry. John Milius, however, was busy making Red Dawn, a picture about how a Soviet invasion and occupation of the U.S. plays out in the heartland.}}</ref> where he was a leader (with [[Charlton Heston]]) in resisting a takeover attempt by advocates of the so-called [[American militia movement|Militia Movement]].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/magazine/the-nras-call-to-arms/2013/01/08/b6ad87a4-59a5-11e2-9fa9-5fbdc9530eb9_story.html|title=The NRA's Call to Arms|newspaper=Washington Post |format = Magazine |first = Michael | date = August 6, 2000 | last = Powell | issn = 0190-8286 | oclc = 2269358 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140413194053/https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/magazine/the-nras-call-to-arms/2013/01/08/b6ad87a4-59a5-11e2-9fa9-5fbdc9530eb9_story.html | archive-date = April 13, 2014 |access-date=April 27, 2019}}</ref> |
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"I'd like to be [[Jack Hawkins]] in ''[[The Bridge on the River Kwai|Bridge on the River Kwai]]''", said Milius. "I call myself romantic. I believe in a lot of 19th-century ideals: chivalry, honor, loyalty, romantic love."<ref>{{cite news|title=Hollywood and vines: Nick Nolte and director John Milius know it's a jungle out there|last=Thompson|first= Douglas| issn = 1085-6706 |oclc = 7960243 |newspaper= Chicago Tribune|date= January 17, 1988|page= K14}}</ref> |
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In 2009, Milius signed a [[2009 Roman Polanski Petition|petition in support of Roman Polanski]], who had been detained while traveling to a film festival in relation to his 1977 [[Roman Polanski sexual abuse case|sexual abuse charges]], which the petition argued would undermine the tradition of film festivals as a place for works to be shown "freely and safely", and that arresting filmmakers traveling to neutral countries could open the door "for actions of which no-one can know the effects."<ref>{{Cite web |date=2012-06-04 |title=Le cinéma soutient Roman Polanski / Petition for Roman Polanski - SACD |url=http://www.sacd.fr/Le-cinema-soutient-Roman-Polanski-Petition-for-Roman-Polanski.1340.0.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120604100742/http://www.sacd.fr/Le-cinema-soutient-Roman-Polanski-Petition-for-Roman-Polanski.1340.0.html |archive-date=2012-06-04 |access-date=2022-04-20 |website=archive.ph}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Shoard |first1=Catherine |author2=Agencies |date=September 29, 2009 |title=Release Polanski, demands petition by film industry luminaries |newspaper=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2009/sep/29/roman-polanski-petition |url-status=live |access-date=June 12, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190628013652/https://www.theguardian.com/film/2009/sep/29/roman-polanski-petition |archive-date=June 28, 2019}}</ref> |
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== Filmography == |
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=== Feature films === |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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| 1969 |
|||
| ''[[The Devil's 8]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1971 |
|||
| ''[[Evel Knievel (1971 film)|Evel Knievel]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="2"|1972 |
|||
| ''[[The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''[[Jeremiah Johnson (film)|Jeremiah Johnson]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="2"|1973 |
|||
| ''[[Magnum Force]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''[[Dillinger (1973 film)|Dillinger]]'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1975 |
|||
| ''[[The Wind and the Lion]]'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1978 |
|||
| ''[[Big Wednesday]]'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1979 |
|||
| ''[[Apocalypse Now]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1982 |
|||
| ''[[Conan the Barbarian (1982 film)|Conan the Barbarian]]'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1984 |
|||
| ''[[Red Dawn]]'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1987 |
|||
| ''[[Extreme Prejudice (film)|Extreme Prejudice]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Partial|Story}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1989 |
|||
| ''[[Farewell to the King]]'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1991 |
|||
| ''[[Flight of the Intruder]]'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1993 |
|||
| ''[[Geronimo: An American Legend]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1994 |
|||
| ''[[Clear and Present Danger (film)|Clear and Present Danger]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2001 |
|||
| ''[[Texas Rangers (film)|Texas Rangers]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
|} |
|||
'''Uncredited script revisions''' |
|||
* ''[[Dirty Harry]]'' (1971) |
|||
* ''[[Jaws (film)|Jaws]]'' (1975) |
|||
* ''[[The Black Bird]]'' (1975) |
|||
* ''[[Uncommon Valor]]'' (1983) (Also producer) |
|||
* ''[[Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom]]'' (1984) |
|||
* ''[[The Hunt for Red October (film)|The Hunt for Red October]]'' (1990) |
|||
* ''[[Eraser (film)|Eraser]]'' (1996) |
|||
* ''[[Saving Private Ryan]]'' (1998) |
|||
* ''[[Behind Enemy Lines (2001 film)|Behind Enemy Lines]]'' (2001) |
|||
'''Executive producer''' |
|||
* ''[[I Wanna Hold Your Hand (film)|I Wanna Hold Your Hand]]'' (1978) |
|||
* ''[[Hardcore (1979 film)|Hardcore]]'' (1979) |
|||
* ''[[1941 (film)|1941]]'' (1979) (Also story writer) |
|||
* ''[[Used Cars]]'' (1980) |
|||
=== Short films === |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
! Year |
|||
! Title |
|||
! Director |
|||
! Writer |
|||
! Notes |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="2"|1966 |
|||
| ''The Reversal of Richard Sun'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''[[Marcello, I'm So Bored]]'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| Co-directed with John Strawbridge |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="2"|1967 |
|||
| ''Glut'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''[[The Emperor (film)|The Emperor]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
|} |
|||
''' Acting credits ''' |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
! Year |
|||
! Title |
|||
! Role |
|||
! Notes |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1966 |
|||
| ''The Reversal of Richard Sun'' |
|||
| The Chauffeur |
|||
| Short film |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1973 |
|||
| ''[[Deadhead Miles]]'' |
|||
| State Trooper |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="2"|1975 |
|||
| ''[[The Wind and the Lion]]'' |
|||
| The One-Armed Military Advisor |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''[[Crazy Mama]]'' |
|||
| Cop |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1978 |
|||
| ''[[Big Wednesday]]'' |
|||
| Marijuana Dealer in Tijuana |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1982 |
|||
| ''[[Conan the Barbarian (1982 film)|Conan the Barbarian]]'' |
|||
| Foodseller in the Old City |
|||
| Deleted scene |
|||
|- |
|||
|} |
|||
=== Television === |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
! Year |
|||
! Title |
|||
! Director |
|||
! Writer |
|||
! Producer |
|||
! Creator |
|||
! Notes |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1985 |
|||
| ''[[The Twilight Zone (1985 TV series)|The Twilight Zone]]'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| Episode: "[[Opening Day (The Twilight Zone)|Opening Day]]" (S1 E10c) |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1987 |
|||
| ''[[Miami Vice]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Partial|Story}} |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| Episode: "Viking Bikers from Hell" (S3 E22) |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2005 |
|||
| ''[[Rome (TV series)|Rome]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| Episode: "Egeria" (S1 E6) |
|||
|- |
|||
|} |
|||
'''TV movies''' |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
! Year |
|||
! Title |
|||
! Director |
|||
! Writer |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1974 |
|||
| ''[[Melvin Purvis: G-Man]]'' |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1994 |
|||
| ''[[Motorcycle Gang (1994 film)|Motorcycle Gang]]'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{No}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1997 |
|||
| ''[[Rough Riders (miniseries)|Rough Riders]]'' |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
| {{Yes}} |
|||
|- |
|||
|} |
|||
=== Unrealized projects === |
|||
{|class="wikitable plainrowheaders" |
|||
|- |
|||
!scope="col"| Year |
|||
!scope="col"| Title and description |
|||
!scope="col"| {{Tooltip|Ref(s)|Reference}} |
|||
|- |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="3" | 1960s |
|||
|An untitled romantic [[war film]] set during the [[battle of Dien Bien Phu]] |
|||
| rowspan="2" | <ref name="IGN" /> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Los Gringos'', a [[Western film|Western]] described as being similar to ''[[The Wild Bunch]]'' |
|||
|- |
|||
|''The Last Resort'' |
|||
|<ref name="Resort"/><ref name="IGN" /> |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="11" | 1970s |
|||
|''The Texans'', a "contemporary version of ''[[Red River (1948 film)|Red River]]''" |
|||
|<ref name="diary"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''The Haul'', a film about a truck driver |
|||
|<ref name="Haul"/><ref name="IGN" /> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail'', a [[Biographical film|biopic]] written by [[Winfred Blevins]] about [[Theodore Roosevelt]] |
|||
|<ref name="Ranch"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''The Life and Times of Joe McCarthy'', a biopic about anti-Communist Senator [[Joseph McCarthy]] |
|||
|<ref name="McCarthy"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''[[Taxi Driver]]'' |
|||
|<ref>{{cite web|last=Butters|first=Tim|url=https://www.looper.com/1016894/the-untold-truth-of-taxi-driver/|title=The Untold Truth Of Taxi Driver|website=[[Looper (website)|Looper]]|date=September 20, 2022|access-date=December 9, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A film adaptation of [[Winfred Blevins]]' novel ''Give Your Heart to the Hawks'' |
|||
|<ref name="hawks"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A film adaptation of [[Jim Corbett]]'s novel ''Man-Eaters of Kumoan'' |
|||
|<ref name="comment" /> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A film adaptation of [[S. L. A. Marshall]]'s novel ''Night Drop'' for [[Stanley Kubrick]] |
|||
|<ref name="CS"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''[[Extreme Prejudice (film)|Extreme Prejudice]]'' |
|||
|<ref>{{cite web|url=https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/57616|title=AFI|Catalog - Extreme Prejudice|website=[[AFI Catalog of Feature Films]]|access-date=November 4, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|An unused version of ''[[Firepower (film)|Firepower]]'', initially conceived as a ''[[Dirty Harry (film series)|Dirty Harry]]'' film |
|||
|<ref>{{cite web|url=https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/56766|title=AFI|Catalog - Firepower|website=[[AFI Catalog of Feature Films]]|access-date=October 16, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''East of Suez'' |
|||
|<ref name="Suez"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="7" | 1980s |
|||
|An unused draft of ''[[The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2]]'' for [[Tobe Hooper]] |
|||
|<ref>{{cite video|last=Ary|first=John|url=https://youtube.com/watch?v=HeSwdk06-EU&si=NjHaW5Juu9774FCG|title=Tobe Hooper Interview|publisher=[[Ain't It Cool News]]|via=[[YouTube]]|date=January 8, 2013|access-date=October 31, 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=de Voogd|first=Barend|url=https://www.flashbackfiles.com/tobe-hooper-interview-1|title=Tobe Hooper interview (1) — THE FLASHBACK FILES|website=The Flashback Files|year=2015|access-date=October 31, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|An untitled "semi-political fantasy thriller" script for [[Jonathan Demme]] |
|||
|<ref>{{cite news|last=Hinson|first=Hal|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/style/1984/04/22/master-of-the-chance-encounter/b6e8adbb-7324-47c1-b8eb-dab8048e1daf/|title=Master of The Chance Encounter|newspaper=[[The Washington Post]]|date=April 21, 1984|access-date=June 14, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''[[Fatal Beauty]]'' starring [[Cher]] |
|||
|<ref name="fatal"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/57618|title=AFI|Catalog - Fatal Beauty|website=[[AFI Catalog of Feature Films]]|access-date=October 16, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Capone'', a biopic of mobster [[Al Capone]] |
|||
|<ref name="Capone"/><ref>{{cite news|last=Bates|first=James|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-11-24-fi-24313-story.html|title=Westgate Found Gold in Al Capone's, Titanic's Vaults : Firm's Top Production Is TV Ratings|newspaper=[[Los Angeles Times]]|date=November 24, 1987|access-date=October 22, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A film adaptation of [[Allan W. Eckert]]'s novel ''The Frontiersmen'' |
|||
| rowspan="2" | <ref name=":89"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Half of the Sky'', a film about a [[Rocky Mountains]] explorer |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Leningrad: The 900 Days'', a script for [[Sergio Leone]] |
|||
|<ref name="Interview 1999">{{cite web|last=White|first=Allen|url=https://uncleanarts.com/interview-john-milius/|title=Interview: Director John Milius|date=1999}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="15" | 1990s |
|||
|''Alexander the Great'', a biopic about [[Alexander the Great|Alexander III of Macedon]] starring [[Jean-Claude Van Damme]] |
|||
|<ref name="Alex1"/><ref name="Alex2"/><ref name="Interview 1999"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Bad Iron'', a biker film written by Kent Anderson |
|||
|<ref name="Bad"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A film adaptation of [[Norman Mailer]]'s novel ''[[Harlot's Ghost]]'' for [[Francis Ford Coppola]] |
|||
|<ref name="Ghost"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|An unused draft of ''[[Die Hard with a Vengeance|Die Hard 3]]'', co-written with Barry Beckerman |
|||
|<ref name="Hard"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''[[Texas Rangers (film)|The Texas Rangers]]'' starring [[Tommy Lee Jones]] |
|||
|<ref name="Hard"/><ref name="diary"/><ref name="CS"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A film adaptation of the [[Sgt. Rock]] comics for [[Renny Harlin]] or [[Paul Verhoeven]] |
|||
|<ref name="Northmen">{{cite magazine|last=Frook|first=John Evan|url=https://variety.com/1993/film/news/milius-to-direct-mc-s-northmen-105849/|title=Milius to direct MC's 'Northmen'|magazine=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|date=April 13, 1993|access-date=October 16, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''The Northmen'', a film about an English monk who gets captured by a band of [[Vikings]] |
|||
|<ref name="Northmen"/><ref name="Northmen2"/><ref name="IGN" /> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Mistress of the Seas'', a script for [[Jean-Jacques Annaud]] |
|||
|<ref>{{cite web|last=Chaillet|first=Jean-Paul|url=https://goldenglobes.com/articles/filmmakers-autobiographies-jean-jacques-annaud-life-cinema/|title=Filmmakers' Autobiographies: Jean-Jacques Annaud: "A Life for the Cinema"|website=[[Golden Globe Awards]]|date=July 5, 2021|access-date=October 16, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Daniel Boone'', a biopic of [[Daniel Boone]] |
|||
|<ref>{{cite news|last=Liebenson|first=Donald|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/for-the-oscar-winning-producer-of-rocky-and-raging-bull-hollywood-is-anything-but-predictable/2019/05/10/5cb30504-726b-11e9-9f06-5fc2ee80027a_story.html|title=For the Oscar-winning producer of 'Rocky' and 'Raging Bull,' Hollywood is anything but predictable|newspaper=[[The Washington Post]]|date=May 12, 2019|access-date=October 20, 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://txst.locate.ebsco.com/instances/8ba1c3b1-f6d1-533d-b04a-1a8cc1f57bee?option=subject&query=Feature%20films|title=Daniel Boone : screenplay / by John Milius.|website=Texas State University Libraries|access-date=October 20, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''The Vikings'' |
|||
|<ref name="IGN" /> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A film adaptation of [[Tom Clancy]]'s novel ''[[The Cardinal of the Kremlin]]'' |
|||
|<ref name="Clancy">{{cite magazine|author=Variety Staff|url=https://variety.com/1995/more/news/clancy-milius-military-minds-without-remorse-99129875/|title=Clancy, Milius: military minds 'Without Remorse'|magazine=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|date=August 7, 1995|access-date=October 21, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A film adaptation of [[Tom Clancy]]'s novel ''[[Without Remorse]]'' starring [[Gary Sinise]] and [[Laurence Fishburne]] |
|||
|<ref name="Clancy"/><ref name="Clancy2"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|An unused draft of ''The Conquest of Mexico'' for [[Werner Herzog]] |
|||
|<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hollywoodfiveo.com/archive/issue2/cinema/herzog.html|title=Werner Herzog's Hollywood|website=Hollywood Five-O|date=Fall 2002}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A film adaptation of [[Gabriel García Márquez]]'s novel ''[[The General in His Labyrinth]]'' for [[Francis Ford Coppola]] |
|||
| rowspan="2" | <ref name="Interview 1999"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A biopic of [[Napoleon Bonaparte]] for [[Francis Ford Coppola]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="16" | 2000s |
|||
|''LeMay'', a biopic of [[United States Air Force|U.S. Air Force]] [[General (United States)|general]] [[Curtis LeMay]] for [[Robert Zemeckis]] |
|||
| rowspan="2" | <ref name="CS"/><ref name="IGN" /> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Manila John'', a biopic of war hero [[John Basilone]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|A reboot of the [[Dirty Harry (film series)|''Dirty Harry'' film series]] |
|||
| rowspan="3" | <ref name="CS"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A film adaptation of [[Homer]]'s the ''[[Iliad]]'' |
|||
|- |
|||
|''The Alamo'' |
|||
|- |
|||
|''King Conan: Crown of Iron'', a sequel to his film ''[[Conan the Barbarian]]'' |
|||
|<ref>{{cite magazine|last=Fleming|first=Michael|url=https://variety.com/2000/film/news/milius-to-pen-helm-wb-s-conan-1117788858/|title=Milius to pen, helm WB's 'Conan'|magazine=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|date=November 6, 2000|access-date=October 22, 2024}}</ref><ref name="IGN" /><ref name="catching">{{cite magazine|last=LaPorte|first=Nicole|url=https://variety.com/2003/film/news/catching-up-with-john-milius-1117897439/|title=Catching up with John Milius|magazine=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|date=December 21, 2003|access-date=October 22, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|An untitled Western script set in post-revolution [[Mexico]] for [[Mike Newell (director)|Mike Newell]] |
|||
|<ref>{{cite web|author=Stax|url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2002/02/22/newell-milius-head-west|title=Newell & Milius Head West|website=[[IGN]]|date=February 22, 2002|access-date=October 22, 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|last=Speier|first=Michael|url=https://variety.com/2005/film/markets-festivals/newell-floats-to-oater-1117925953/|title=Newell floats to oater|magazine=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|date=July 14, 2005|access-date=October 22, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Delta'', a TV pilot about the special ops team [[Delta Force]] that joins forces with the [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]] to take on terrorists |
|||
|<ref name="Delta"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''The Son Tay Raid'', a film about a raid during the [[Vietnam War]] to rescue POWs |
|||
|<ref name="IGN" /><ref name="catching"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|A biopic about the young life of [[Theodore Roosevelt]] |
|||
|<ref name="IGN" /> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Jornada del Muerte'', modern-day "motor cycle Western" set in the Southwest starring [[Triple H]] |
|||
|<ref name="Jornada"/><ref name="catching"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Dodge City'', a Western series |
|||
|<ref name="Dodge"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''The Chosin Few'', a film about the [[Battle of Chosin Reservoir]] |
|||
|<ref name="Chosin"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''The Iron Horsemen'', a biker film |
|||
|<ref name="Horsemen"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Saigon Bureau'', a TV pilot adaptation of ''Requiem'' starring [[Chris Noth]] |
|||
|<ref name="Saigon"/> |
|||
|- |
|||
|''Genghis Khan'', a biopic of [[Genghis Khan]] starring [[Mickey Rourke]] |
|||
|<ref name="cnn"/><ref>{{cite news|url=http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment_movies_blog/2010/04/mickey-rourke-as-genghis-khan.html|title=Mickey Rourke as Genghis Khan?|newspaper=[[Orlando Sentinel]]|date=April 22, 2010|access-date=October 16, 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121102190326/http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment_movies_blog/2010/04/mickey-rourke-as-genghis-khan.html|archive-date=November 2, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Kit|first=Borys|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/rza-direct-genghis-khan-biopic-376173/|title=RZA to Direct Genghis Khan Biopic and Action Thriller 'No Man's Land' (Exclusive)|website=[[The Hollywood Reporter]]|date=October 29, 2012|access-date=October 16, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="1" | 2010s |
|||
|''Pharaoh'', a TV pilot set in ancient [[Egypt]] |
|||
|<ref name="Pharaoh"/> |
|||
|} |
|||
== Bibliography == |
|||
*''The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean'' (1972) – based on his script |
|||
*''The Wind and the Lion'' (1975) – based on his script |
|||
*''Homefront: The Voice of Freedom'' (2011) – based on the video game |
|||
== References == |
|||
{{Reflist}} |
|||
== Further reading == |
|||
* {{cite journal |last1=Kauffman |first1=Bill |title=John Milius: A Real Wolverine |website=theamericanconservative.com |date=5 June 2014 |url=https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/john-milius-a-real-wolverine/ |access-date=24 June 2022| archive-date = 27 April 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190427210836/https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/john-milius-a-real-wolverine/ |publisher=The American Conservative |location=Washington |issn=1540-966X}} |
|||
* {{cite book |last1=Medavoy |first1=Mike |title=You're Only as Good as Your Next One: 100 Great Films, 100 Good Films, and 100 for which I Should be Shot |date=2013 |publisher=Atria |isbn=9780743400558}} |
|||
* {{cite book|title=The movie brats: how the film generation took over Hollywood|url=https://archive.org/details/moviebratshowfil00pyem|url-access=registration|last1=Pye|first1= Michael|last2=Myles|first2= Lynda|year= 1979|oclc = 4497621 | isbn = 0030426715 |publisher=Holt, Rinehart, and Winston }} |
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* {{cite book |last1=Segaloff |first1=Nat|last2 = Milius | first2 = John |editor1-last=McGilligan |editor1-first=Patrick |title=Backstory 4 : interviews with screenwriters of the 1970s and 1980s |date=2006 |location=University of Michigan. |publisher=Scholarly Publishing Office |chapter=John Milius : the good fights |oclc=758444323 }} |
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== External links == |
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*{{IMDb name|587518|John Milius}} |
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*{{Rotten Tomatoes person|john_milius}} |
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*[http://www.focorevistadecinema.com.br/FOCO5/index.htm Foco – Revista de Cinema, special edition devoted to John Milius] |
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Latest revision as of 00:25, 25 December 2024
John Milius | |
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Born | John Frederick Milius April 11, 1944 |
Alma mater | USC School of Cinema-Television |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1966–present |
Spouses |
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Children | 3 |
Awards | Bronze Wrangler for Theatrical Motion Picture 1972 Jeremiah Johnson 1993 Geronimo: An American Legend |
John Frederick Milius (/ˈmɪliəs/; born April 11, 1944) is an American screenwriter and film director. He was a writer for the first two Dirty Harry films, received an Academy Award nomination as screenwriter of Apocalypse Now (1979), and wrote and directed The Wind and the Lion (1975), Conan the Barbarian (1982), and Red Dawn (1984). He later served as the co-creator of the Primetime Emmy Award-winning television series Rome (2005–2007).
Early life and education
[edit]Milius was born April 11, 1944, in St. Louis, Missouri, the youngest of three children to Elizabeth Marie (née Roe; 1906–2010) and William Styx Milius (1889–1975), who was a shoe manufacturer.[1] He is Jewish.[2] When Milius was seven, his father sold Milius Shoe Company, which his grandfather George W. Milius had founded in 1923,[3] and retired. He moved the family to Bel Air, California. [4] John Milius became an enthusiastic surfer. At 14, his parents sent him to a small private school, the Lowell Whiteman School, in the mountains of Steamboat Springs, Colorado, because he "was a juvenile delinquent".[5]
Milius became a voracious reader and started to write short stories: "I had learned very early, to write in almost any style. I could write in fluent Hemingway, or in fluent Melville, or Conrad, or Jack Kerouac, and whatever."[2] He says he was also influenced by the oral story telling of surfers at the time, who had a beatnik tradition.[6]
"My religion is surfing", Milius said in 1976, adding that "the other thing that influenced me throughout my youth was my involvement with things Japanese. I studied judo, kendo, and painting. I felt more comfortable with things Japanese and with Japanese people than I did with Europeans ... feudalism in any country, at any period, fascinates me ... I understand the reasoning of people in Asia, it makes sense to me. Zen is very sensible, the whole way of feeling things is logical, whereas many of the Western-motivated things—greed, business sense—I'm not comfortable with, I don't understand their rationale."[7]
Milius says he attempted to join the Marine Corps and volunteer for Vietnam War service in the late 1960s, but was rejected due to a "chronic" and "sometimes disabling" case of mild asthma. "I'd have given anything to be a Marine", said Milius. "As a surfer I'd spent a lot of time hanging out with the Marines off Pendleton, and I'd had every intention of joining up ... I was devastated, I felt like I'd been rejected as a human being."[8] "It was totally demoralizing", he said later. "I missed going to my war. It probably caused me to be obsessed with war ever since."[2] Milius said he was "dying to be able to... go prove myself in battle—the same as all young men long to do, if they are honest with themselves, whether it's right or wrong or even sane, which is a debate that's been going on since we left the caves. Only there was no way I could found my own unit, so I did the second best, which was to write it. Every writer wishes he could actually be doing the thing he writes about."[8] He later admitted, "I don't know how well I'd have done. I really wanted a military career, to be a general, but I had a hard time polishing shoes. And marching. I was in the ROTC once, and I hate marching ... I would have been good in the Mexican Army."[7]
At one stage Milius considered becoming an artist or historian. During a rainy day on a summer vacation in Hawaii in 1962, he stumbled upon a movie theatre showing a week of Akira Kurosawa films and fell in love with cinema.[9]
Milius studied film at the University of Southern California School of Cinema-Television, which he chose because it was an elitist school that trained people for Hollywood.[10] His classmates included George Lucas, Walter Murch, Basil Poledouris, Randal Kleiser and Donald F. Glut. Milius says he was influenced by his teacher, Irwin Blacker:
He gave you the screenplay form, which I hated so much, and if you made one mistake on the form, you flunked the class. His attitude was that the least you can learn is the form. "I can't grade you on the content. I can't tell you whether this is a better story for you to write than that, you know? And I can't teach you how to write the content, but I can certainly demand that you do it in the proper form." He never talked about character arcs or anything like that; he simply talked about telling a good yarn, telling a good story. He said, "Do whatever you need to do. Be as radical and as outrageous as you can be. Take any kind of approach you want to take. Feel free to flash back, feel free to flash forward, feel free to flash back in the middle of a flashback. Feel free to use narration, all the tools are there for you to use."[11]
Milius says his writing style was influenced by two novels in particular, Moby-Dick and On the Road:
I think Moby Dick is the best work of art ever made ... I used to point out the dramatic entrance of characters, how they were threaded through ... Moby Dick was a perfect screenplay, a perfect example of the kind of drama that I was interested in. Another great influence on me was ... On the Road, which has no tight, linear narrative, but sprawls, following this character. Moby Dick and On the Road are completely different kinds of novels, yet they're both extremely disciplined. Nothing happens by accident in either of those two books.[11]
Milius reflected his "ambitions stopped at B Westerns ... I thought that was a good life. I never wanted to be Hitchcock or some big mogul, I didn't want to be Louis B. Mayer. I wanted to be ... Budd Boetticher or something ... John Ford."[2] His short films at film school included The Reversal of Richard Sun (1966), Glut (1967) and Viking Women Don't Care (1967). He wrote a documentary, The Emperor (1967), directed by classmate George Lucas, who also edited an animated short Milius directed called Marcello, I'm So Bored (1967) with John Strawbridge.
Marcello, Milius's thesis film, won best animation at the National Student Film Festival[12] and screened around the country in various festivals; it was praised by Vincent Canby of The New York Times.[13][14][15] Milius received a job offer to work in animation but he turned it down as he could not see himself "sitting there drawing cell after cell."[16]
Career
[edit]Early
[edit]Milius's first completed script was Los Gringos (1968). "It actually wasn't bad", he later said. "It was sort of like The Wild Bunch ... there was a lot of killing and shooting and riding and dust ... sombreros. ... It was a pretty good idea, actually. It had everything, and it was certainly as original as The Wild Bunch, but it wasn't as skillfully written as later stuff."[2]
He followed this with The Last Resort which was optioned by Michael S Laughlin in 1969.[17][2] Milius says, "Neither of them were ever made, but I was able to option them. I had them rented out for like $5,000 a year."[18]
The Devil's 8
[edit]Milius then got a summer job working at the story department of American International Pictures through a student colleague of his who had begun working there, Willard Huyck. Huyck and Milius worked at AIP under producer Larry Gordon, reading scripts. They eventually collaborated on a rewrite of the screenplay for The Devil's 8 (1968), an action drama about moonshine drivers which ripped off The Dirty Dozen (1968).[19]
Milius's name had been mentioned in a 1968 Time magazine article about the new generation of Hollywood filmmakers, which also referred to George Lucas and Martin Scorsese. This was read by Mike Medavoy, who became Milius's agent. Medavoy called Milius "a badboy mad genius in a teenager's body, but he was a good and fast writer with original ideas."[20]
Milius began to get writing commissions. He wrote a script entitled The Texans for Al Ruddy at Paramount, a contemporary version of Red River (1948)[21] (never made, although Sam Peckinpah was going to direct it in 1979[22])— Milius later said it "wasn't very good".[18] He also wrote an original called Truck Driver (aka The Haul) which was purchased by Levy-Garner-Laven,[23] although that film too was not made.
Milius later said he "didn't do a good job" with these two early scripts "because in both cases I was influenced by the people who had hired me. They said put this in and put that in, and I went along with it. Every time I went along with something in my whole career it usually didn't work. Usually there's a price to pay. You think of selling out, but there is a price to pay. Usually what people want you to do is make it current."[18]
Jeremiah Johnson
[edit]Milius then wrote Jeremiah Johnson, a story loosely based on the life of the mountain man Liver-Eating Johnson.
Milius later said this was "the real breaking point" where he knew "almost overnight... that I had become a good writer with a voice.":
I knew that material. I'd lived in the mountains, I had a trapline, I hunted, and I had a lot of experiences with characters up there. So, it was real easy to write that and there was a humor to it, a kind of bigger-than-life attitude. I was inspired by Carl Sandburg. I read a lot of his poetry and it's this kind of abrupt description—"a train is coming, thundering steel, where are you going? Wichita." That great kind of feeling that he had, that's what I was trying to do there. I remember there was a great poem about American braggarts. You know, American liars—"I am the ring-tailed cousin to the such and such that ate so and so and I can do this and I can do that better than Mike Fink the river man ..." I just realized that this was the voice that the script had to have. It was as clear as a bell. I knew that writing was particular to me.[18]
Milius sold the script to Warner Bros. in 1970 for $5,000, going up to $50,000 if it was ever made. Warner Bros. had other writers work on the original script based on The Crow Killer. Milius was also called back to work on it, and his fee grew each time. (He eventually made $90,000 on the film.[24]) Eventually, Robert Redford agreed to play the lead and Sydney Pollack signed to direct.
Dirty Harry and Judge Roy Bean
[edit]Milius wrote an uncredited draft of Dirty Harry (1971). He says his contribution to the film was "A lot of guns. And the attitude of Dirty Harry, being a cop who was ruthless. I think it's fairly obvious if you look at the rest of my work what parts are mine. The cop being the same as the killer except he has a badge. And being lonely."[7] Dirty Harry was an enormous box office hit.
George Hamilton hired Milius to rewrite Evel Knievel (1971), a biopic of the stunt rider, at a fee of $1,000 a day. Milius re-did the entire script over seven days.[24]
He wrote an original script, The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean, about the famous judge. He offered it for $150,000 if he could direct, but could find no takers. He sold it to First Artists for $300,000, then extremely high for a script.[11] Directed by John Huston and starring Paul Newman, it was a moderate hit, although Milius disliked the final result. "I fought every day", he said. "And I was blooded well. I was treated horribly."[25] More popular was Jeremiah Johnson.
Milius did some work with David Giler on the script which became The Black Bird.[26]
By now Milius was one of the most sought after screenwriters in Hollywood, seen as a colorful character with a talent for lively interviews. His self-styled "Zen Anarchist"/"American samurai" persona made him stand out in Hollywood.[27] For instance, he rewrote Dirty Harry only on the condition that he be given an expensive gun.[28] He was also one of the inspirations for the character of John Milner in the enormously successful American Graffiti (1973).[7] Milius said of this film, "I guess he [Lucas] saw me in that light because I was a surfer going past my time."[29]
He also wrote the first draft of the Dirty Harry sequel, Magnum Force (1973).[30] Milius later said "I don't like Magnum Force. Of all the films I had anything to do with, I like it least. They changed a lot of things in a cheap and distasteful manner."[7] It was however successful at the box office.
Dillinger
[edit]Milius wanted to move behind the camera. "Being a director is the only way anyone will listen to you in Hollywood", he said. "It's the next best thing to being a star."[31]
Gangster films were popular at the time and AIP offered him the chance to direct one if he would write it for a fraction of his regular fee.[32][2] Milius agreed and wrote and directed Dillinger (1973). "I deliberately chose Dillinger because he was a pure criminal", said Milius. "Robbing banks to right social wrongs did not come into it."[33]
The movie was moderately successful and launched Milius's directing career. He worked on the script for a TV sequel, Melvin Purvis: G-Man (1974), a pilot for a proposed series about Melvin Purvis (there was a second TV movie, but no series), but did not like the director, Dan Curtis, or the experience of working for TV.[7]
Contemporary film critics grouped Milius in with the emerging "movie brats" generation of filmmakers that also including Lucas, Coppola, Terrence Malick, and Scorsese.[34]
In 1974, David Picker announced he would produce Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail directed by Milius and written by Winfred Blevins, about Theodore Roosevelt. The film was never made.[35] Neither was The Life and Times of Joe McCarthy, a proposed biopic about the famous anti-Communist Senator, which Milius declared interest in making.[36]
The Wind and the Lion
[edit]Milius next wrote and directed the popular adventure film The Wind and the Lion (1975), which starred Sean Connery and Candice Bergen. He later said he felt this was his first "real" movie.[37][38]
He intended to follow this with Give Your Heart to the Hawks, a story about mountain man Jedediah Smith in the 1820s based on the novel by Winfred Blevins[39] "It's my interpretation of Jedediah Smith, which might not be exactly historical", said Milius. "It'll be about exploration, about the need to see what's over the next ridge and what that does, what price you pay, to find out. Like Dirty Harry, Smith is a classic lone man, with a searing loneliness about him. A leader of men is always alone."[7] It was never made; neither was Man-Eaters of Kumoan (1976) based on book by Jim Corbett about a tiger hunter in India which Milius worked on.[7]
For several years, he developed with Stanley Kubrick an adaptation of Night Drop by S. L. A. Marshall. "We talked about it for years and years and worked on it for a long time, but we never did it."[40]
Milius did come close to making Extreme Prejudice, based on his script, in 1976. However he decided to make Big Wednesday instead; Extreme Prejudice would be made a decade later, much rewritten, and directed by Walter Hill.
Big Wednesday and the A Team
[edit]In 1975, Milius formed his own production company, The A Team, with Buzz Feitshans, who had edited Dillinger. They had a five-year deal with Warner Bros.. Milius said, "Our motto is Civitas Sine Prudentia, which really translates to Social Irresponsibility; I believe in it. It's refreshing, it's liberating. Americans are basically socially irresponsible ... Who else would have invented the atomic bomb quite the same way? The Nazis would have invented it with the desire to conquer the world; we were the only people that could have invented it with the desire not to conquer the world"[7]
Its first production was an autobiographical surfing picture, Big Wednesday (1978),[41] which he called "a surfing How Green Was My Valley".[7] This was a major commercial disappointment although it has gone on to be a cult film.[42] Milius's friendship with George Lucas saw him given a percentage of the profits for Star Wars, which Mike Medavoy estimated earned Milius $1.5 million—in exchange Milius gave Lucas a percentage of the profits for Big Wednesday which amounted to virtually nothing.[43]
In 1979, Milius said "the ultimate aim of the A Team is that it will become a company that makes lots of projects. I shall be the figurehead and the father figure and take a percentage and I won't have to do anything except go off and direct my movie once every three years."[44]
The A Team made a number of movies not directed by Milius. Notably, they produced the first three films from Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale: I Wanna Hold Your Hand, 1941 (directed by Steven Spielberg), and Used Cars.[45] He also produced Hardcore, directed by friend Paul Schrader.
Schrader once described Milius's writing as containing too many good lines and scenes. He says Warren Beatty once "told John something I've been telling him too: 'You come too soon and you come too often.'... He's so full of juice he just can't stop coming, rather than holding back and tightening the situation and building characters. That releasing diffuses the energy, the characters are too broad because they never have time to build up the inner strength."[46]
Apocalypse Now
[edit]Milius says he was offered $17,000 to rewrite Skin Game (1971) but then Francis Ford Coppola made a competing offer of $15,000 for Milius to write Apocalypse Now.[2] Apocalypse Now was an adaptation of Heart of Darkness set in the Vietnam War[47] which George Lucas intended to direct as a follow-up to his first feature THX 1138 (1971).[48] Milius says Coppola:
Offered that wonderful fork in the road where I could go do my own thing rather than just rewrite some piece of crap that would probably be rewritten by somebody else. That was the most important decision I made in my life as a writer. That sort of steered me onto the path of doing my own work and being a little more like a novelist ... I tackled an unpopular subject that no one was going to make a movie about where the chances were really slim that I could pull it off. There was no book, nothing but me and the blank page. And that was wonderful because I had followed my heart. One of the nicest times in my life was writing Apocalypse Now.[18]
The commercial failure of THX 1138 delayed production plans for Apocalypse Now. Milius later said of the Apocalypse Now script, "No one would touch it because of the Vietnam War. Everyone loved it, it did more for my career than any other script because it was always considered a work of genius; from the minute it came out, it really stirred people up. It's a good script, it's certainly no work of genius. It churns people up, and that's what they think works of genius are supposed to do."[7]
However, the following year saw the release of Apocalypse Now, directed by Francis Ford Coppola. Coppola rewrote the script, which Milius disliked. "He wanted to ruin it, liberalize it, and turn it into Hair", said Milius in 1976. "He sees himself as a great humanitarian, an enlightened soul who will tell you such wonderful things as he does at the end of Godfather 2 -- that crime doesn't pay ... Talent-wise, he's no John Ford; character-wise, he's no Steve Spielberg. Francis can't stand to have any other creative influence around ... Francis Coppola has this compelling desire to save humanity when the man is a raving fascist, the Bay Area Mussolini."[7]
The film was released in 1979 to great acclaim.
Milius's old agent, Mike Medavoy, helped establish Orion Pictures in 1978 and one of their first movies was going to be East of Suez, written and directed by Milius.[49] It was not made.
Spielberg said in 1978 that Milius was key to the group of young filmmakers known as the New Hollywood, which included himself, Lucas, and Coppola:
John is our Scoutmaster. He's the one who will tell you to go on a trip and only take enough food, enough water for one day, and make you stay out longer than that. He's the one who says, "Be a man. I don't want to see any tears." He's a terrific raconteur, a wonderful story teller. John has more life than all the rest of us put together.[50]
(Quentin Tarantino said he could imagine the film Deliverance being about "Hollywood filmmakers: you can imagine Spielberg, Lucas, and Scorsese as the husbands. And you can really imagine John Milius as Lewis."[51])
1980s
[edit]In 1982, Milius directorial effort Conan the Barbarian was released, based on the fantasy novel by the same name. The film is credited for turning its lead, Arnold Schwarzenegger, into a star.[52][53] Milius was interested in the project since the late 1970s. While he was about to get hired for scripting duties, he had to pass due to his commitment to Big Wednesday. Instead, Oliver Stone was hired to write the project. Eventually, producer Dino De Laurentiis with whom Milius had contractual obligations joined the project. Milius returned to the project as its director re-working Stone's script. Upon its release the film was popular.[54] The film was the 15th highest grossing film in the USA that year, making $39,565,475 domestically.[55]
In 1983, he was among the producers of Ted Kotcheff's Uncommon Valor,[56] and credited as a "spiritual adviser" in the action film Lone Wolf McQuade.[57]
In 1984, he directed the popular action film, Red Dawn.[58][59] The film is about a Russian invasion in the United States, and a rogue commando group of teenagers standing up to the invaders. Some critics perceived it to be "warmongering propaganda" while Milius said it was "anti-war".[60] The film was the 19th highest grossing film in the USA that year, making $38,376,497 domestically.[61]
He wrote and directed an episode for The New Twilight Zone (1985) and a story of his, "Viking Bikers from Hell", was used in an episode of Miami Vice (season 3, episode 22).
In 1986, it was reported that he was writing the script for Fatal Beauty which he hoped to direct with Cher;[62] the film was made by Tom Holland and starred Whoopi Goldberg.
There was some talk that he would direct a movie for HBO, Capone, but it was not made.[63]
In the late 1980s Milius wrote and directed a Pacific War adventure film Farewell to the King (1989).[64][65][66] This flopped at the box office. In 1989, he tried to get funding for adaptations of Allan W. Eckert's "The Frontiersmen: A Narrative", about settling the Ohio River Valley, and "Half of the Sky", about a Rocky Mountains explorer.[67]
Sean Connery was hired to star in the film The Hunt for Red October for producer Mace Neufeld, based on the Tom Clancy's novel of the same name. Connery thought the script was "too American" and insisted Neufeld hire John Milius to rewrite the Russian sequences. Connery thought with Milius, he could "get a different sort of image, different speech patterns."[68]
Neufeld then hired Milius to write and direct Flight of the Intruder, based on the book by Stephen Coonts. It too was not a financial success.
"I think the culture had changed and that is why my films were less accepted", he reflected later. "I still think those are also great films, Farewell to the King especially."[69]
Later
[edit]1990s: screenwriting, cable TV
[edit]In 1992, Milius claimed that he was blacklisted for his conservative beliefs in liberal Hollywood, saying that his flops were not as forgiven as those from more leftist directors. "It weighs ten times heavier against me", he said. "If you don't share the politically correct vision, then you are an outlaw, you are hunted and there is a price on your head, and if they catch you they will hang you."[70]
The film of Hunt for the Red October had been a big success, however, and Milius remained in high demand as a screenwriter: he did several drafts of another Clancy adaptation, Clear and Present Danger (1994), which was another hit.
Milius worked on a number on unfilmed scripts, including Bad Iron, a biker movie written by Kent Anderson, which he intended to produce.[71] He was going to direct a film about Alexander the Great starring Jean-Claude Van Damme but that was put on hold when a miniseries on the same topic was made by Italian TV.[72][73] He wrote Harlot's Ghost, for Francis Ford Coppola, based on a novel by Norman Mailer; Milius described it as "a cross between The Godfather and Apocalypse Now. It's about families and duplicity and danger, but this time provoked by the government."[74]
He adapted the Sgt. Rock comics for producer Joel Silver, with either Renny Harlin and Paul Verhoeven attached at certain points respectively. And also wrote a version of Die Hard 3, co-written with Barry Beckerman.[75] In the early 1990s he wrote Texas Rangers, about the establishment of that organization, for Frank Price at Columbia. He hoped to direct the film, but could not raise the funding.[18]
In 1993, he replaced Andrei Konchalovsky as director on The Northmen for Morgan Creek Productions, about an English monk who gets captured by a band of Vikings. "This was inevitable", Milius said of his directing a Viking film. "I've been a practicing pagan for a long time. Conan the Barbarian was really a Viking movie but it was disguised."[76] However, financing fell through. He was going to direct an adaptation of Tom Clancy's novel Without Remorse with Gary Sinise and Laurence Fishburne, but the project folded in 1995, two weeks before shooting was to commence due to the financial collapse of Savoy Pictures.[77]
A Milius script that was filmed was his biopic of Geronimo, Geronimo: An American Legend, for Walter Hill.
He also directed two films for cable: Motorcycle Gang (1994) and Rough Riders (1997).
2000s
[edit]In 2000, Milius was hired to work as a creative consultant with the Institute for Creative Technologies to pre-visualize the challenges to peace that America will face and the advanced virtual reality technologies necessary to train U.S. troops for the future. "Through his enormous body of work, John has shown a deep understanding of the human condition and the ways that conflict can be resolved", said ICT executive director Richard Lindheim. "Furthermore our efforts will benefit greatly from his vision of the world in the near future, and the techniques and procedures that will be needed to maintain security."[78]
That year he also wrote two biopics: Le May for Robert Zemeckis, about Curtis LeMay;[79] and Manila John, about John Basilone, which he was going to make for HBO. Warner Bros. wanted him to update Dirty Harry and he wanted them to fund a version of The Iliad; there was also talk he would make The Alamo for HBO.[40]
In the early 2000s he worked on King Conan: Crown of Iron (2001−02), a sequel to Conan the Barbarian.[80][81] Later, in 2019 Arnold Schwarzenegger met with Milius to discuss the status of the project. "We're on the same page," he said. "We both want to get it done."[82]
He also developed Jornada del Muerto (Journey of Death) (2003), a biker film starring Triple H[83] and wrote a pilot for a TV show for UPN, Delta, about a military special ops team that takes on terrorists.[84] None of these movies were made.[18]
Texas Rangers (2001) was eventually made, though Milius stated that his script was substantially rewritten.
Financial difficulties
[edit]Milius suffered a major financial reversal in the late 1990s and early 2000s when his accountant embezzled from him an estimated $3 million.[85]
He tried to get a job as a staff writer on the TV show Deadwood; showrunner David Milch was reluctant as he did not consider Milius a staff writer. Milius pleaded that he needed the money in order to pay for his son's tuition at law school, so Milch simply paid the fees. Milius's career recovered when he helped create the BBC/HBO television series Rome, which allowed him to repay Milch.
He wrote some pilots which did not go to series—Dodge City (circa 2005)—a Western series for CBS,[86] and Saigon Bureau (2008)—about the AIP Bureau of photojournalists in the Vietnam War, a collaboration with Chris Noth based on the book Requiem.[87] He also wrote a script about the Battle of Chosin Reservoir in the Korean War, The Chosin Few for Mark Cuban's 2929 Entertainment,[88] and The Iron Horsemen, a motorcycle feature.[89]
Health problems
[edit]In 2010 Milius was working on a new project, a film biography of Genghis Khan,[5] and a proposed TV series called Pharaoh, set during the reign of Queen Hatshepsut,[90] when he had a stroke. For a while he was unable to speak or move, but ultimately he recovered.
Video games
[edit]In March 2011, Milius was a story consultant for the video game Homefront[91][92][93] about a North Korean conquest of America.
Influence
[edit]Milius has long claimed to be an outsider in Hollywood. In 2001 he stated:
I've always been considered a nut. They kind of tolerate me. It's certainly affected me. I've been blacklisted for a large part of my career because of my politics—as surely as any writer was blacklisted back in the 1950s. It's just that my politics are from the other side, and Hollywood always veers left.[94]
He wrote a number of iconic film lines such as "Charlie don't surf" and "I love the smell of napalm in the morning", from Apocalypse Now, and the famous Harry Callahan one-liners delivered by Clint Eastwood, including "Go ahead, make my day" and "Ask yourself one question, 'Do I feel lucky?' Well, do you, punk?" Milius also had a hand in the USS Indianapolis monologue in the film Jaws;[50] the sequence was performed by Robert Shaw. When Spielberg asked him to contribute to the screenplay for Saving Private Ryan, Milius suggested the opening and closing scenes at Normandy cemetery where Ryan, now an elderly hero of World War II, in a moment of survivor guilt, asks his wife "Did I live a good life?"[94]
After his work on Rough Riders (1997), Milius became an instrumental force in lobbying Congress to award President Theodore Roosevelt the Medal of Honor (posthumously), for acts of conspicuous gallantry while in the Battle of San Juan Hill.[2] Milius made two films featuring Roosevelt: The Wind and the Lion (where he was played by Brian Keith) and the made-for-TV film Rough Riders (where Tom Berenger took the role).
The character of John Milner from the 1973 George Lucas film American Graffiti was inspired in part by Milius, who was a good friend of Lucas while they were at USC film school. Likewise, the character Walter Sobchak in the 1998 film The Big Lebowski (portrayed by John Goodman) was partly inspired by Milius, a friend of The Coen Brothers. The novella Blind Jozef Pronek and Dead Souls by Aleksandar Hemon features an episode with Milius, who is described as "sitting at a desk sucking on a cigar as long as a walking stick".
Milius was also instrumental during the startup of the UFC (Ultimate Fighting Championship) organization: it was his idea to use the octagon-shaped cage, and his association with UFC helped provide interest and investors to the startup UFC.[95]
In 2013, a documentary about his life and career, titled Milius, was released.[96][97]
Writer Nat Segaloff called Milius:
The best writer of the so-called USC Mafia, a tight-knit group that resuscitated—some say homogenised American cinema in the 1970s ... Raised on Ford, Hawks, Lean and Kurosawa, shaped by filmmakers as disparate as Fellini and Delmer Daves, Milius favours history books over comic books, character over special effects, and heroes with roots in reality, time, place and customs. Milius' stories reflect his own deeply held ethic, which embraces the values of tradition, adventure, spiritualism, honour and an intense loyalty to friends ... Although he privately chafes at his public image as a gun-toting, liberal baiting provocateur, he allows himself to be painted as such, at times even holding the brush. He plays the Hollywood game like a pro, yet sticks to his own rules; he is a romantic filmmaker who avoids love scenes; his movies contain violence, yet no death in them is without meaning.[98]
Milius himself once said:
Never compromise excellence. To write for someone else is the biggest mistake that any writer makes. You should be your biggest competitor, your biggest critic, your biggest fan, because you don't know what anybody else thinks. How arrogant it is to assume that you know the market, that you know what's popular today—only Steven Spielberg knows what's popular today. Only Steven Spielberg will ever know what's popular. So leave it to him. He's the only one in the history of man who has ever figured that out. Write what you want to see. Because if you don't, you're not going to have any true passion in it, and it's not going to be done with any true artistry.[18]
Triple H, Retired WWE wrestler and current Head of Creative for WWE cites Milius as an inspiration in how to tell a compelling story within a wrestling match without having to rely on over-the-top action, as he stated that Milius didn’t rely on action in his work to tell a compelling story to the audience.[citation needed]
A character in the 2023 film Rebel Moon is named after Milius as an homage from the film's co-writers Kurt Johnstad and Zack Snyder.[99]
Awards and honors
[edit]For writing the Apocalypse Now screenplay, Milius and Francis Ford Coppola were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, and the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Drama Written Directly for the Screen (Though the film was an adaptation of Heart of Darkness, the Writers Guild considered it an original screenplay.).
In 2007, Milius was the recipient of the Austin Film Festival's Distinguished Screenwriter Award. In his acceptance speech, he said that his favorites of his films were The Wind and the Lion, Big Wednesday, and Conan.[100]
Personal life
[edit]Milius has been married three times.[101] He has two children with his first wife, Ethan Jedediah and Marco Alexander,[102] Renee Fabri (m. January 7, 1967), and one child, Amanda Milius,[103] with his second wife, Celia Kaye (m. February 26, 1978). Amanda is the director of the 2020 documentary The Plot Against the President.[104] His current marriage (since 1992) is to actress Elan Oberon.
Milius was a passionate surfer for much of his life but gave it up when he turned fifty.[69]
Views
[edit]Milius is a self-proclaimed "Zen anarchist", but he also publicly aligns himself with conservative factions in Hollywood and he was interviewed in the documentary Rated R: Republicans in Hollywood. He has also been consultant to a military think tank, the Institute for Creative Technologies.[94] Milius said:
I'm not a reactionary—I'm just a right-wing extremist so far beyond the Christian Identity people like that and stuff, that they can't even imagine. I'm so far beyond that I'm a Maoist. I'm an anarchist. I've always been an anarchist. Any true, real right-winger if he goes far enough hates all form of government, because government should be done to cattle and not human beings.[105]
Milius has endorsed minimum wage laws and conscription.[106] Milius was also quoted as saying that "it might not have been bad for this country" if Douglas MacArthur had "crossed the Mississippi like Caesar crossed the Rubicon and proclaimed himself Emperor Douglas the First."[106] For years, Milius was a member of the board of directors of the National Rifle Association of America (NRA),[79] where he was a leader (with Charlton Heston) in resisting a takeover attempt by advocates of the so-called Militia Movement.[107]
"I'd like to be Jack Hawkins in Bridge on the River Kwai", said Milius. "I call myself romantic. I believe in a lot of 19th-century ideals: chivalry, honor, loyalty, romantic love."[108]
In 2009, Milius signed a petition in support of Roman Polanski, who had been detained while traveling to a film festival in relation to his 1977 sexual abuse charges, which the petition argued would undermine the tradition of film festivals as a place for works to be shown "freely and safely", and that arresting filmmakers traveling to neutral countries could open the door "for actions of which no-one can know the effects."[109][110]
Filmography
[edit]Feature films
[edit]Year | Title | Director | Writer |
---|---|---|---|
1969 | The Devil's 8 | No | Yes |
1971 | Evel Knievel | No | Yes |
1972 | The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean | No | Yes |
Jeremiah Johnson | No | Yes | |
1973 | Magnum Force | No | Yes |
Dillinger | Yes | Yes | |
1975 | The Wind and the Lion | Yes | Yes |
1978 | Big Wednesday | Yes | Yes |
1979 | Apocalypse Now | No | Yes |
1982 | Conan the Barbarian | Yes | Yes |
1984 | Red Dawn | Yes | Yes |
1987 | Extreme Prejudice | No | Story |
1989 | Farewell to the King | Yes | Yes |
1991 | Flight of the Intruder | Yes | No |
1993 | Geronimo: An American Legend | No | Yes |
1994 | Clear and Present Danger | No | Yes |
2001 | Texas Rangers | No | Yes |
Uncredited script revisions
- Dirty Harry (1971)
- Jaws (1975)
- The Black Bird (1975)
- Uncommon Valor (1983) (Also producer)
- Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)
- The Hunt for Red October (1990)
- Eraser (1996)
- Saving Private Ryan (1998)
- Behind Enemy Lines (2001)
Executive producer
- I Wanna Hold Your Hand (1978)
- Hardcore (1979)
- 1941 (1979) (Also story writer)
- Used Cars (1980)
Short films
[edit]Year | Title | Director | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1966 | The Reversal of Richard Sun | Yes | No | |
Marcello, I'm So Bored | Yes | No | Co-directed with John Strawbridge | |
1967 | Glut | No | Yes | |
The Emperor | No | Yes |
Acting credits
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1966 | The Reversal of Richard Sun | The Chauffeur | Short film |
1973 | Deadhead Miles | State Trooper | |
1975 | The Wind and the Lion | The One-Armed Military Advisor | |
Crazy Mama | Cop | ||
1978 | Big Wednesday | Marijuana Dealer in Tijuana | |
1982 | Conan the Barbarian | Foodseller in the Old City | Deleted scene |
Television
[edit]Year | Title | Director | Writer | Producer | Creator | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1985 | The Twilight Zone | Yes | No | No | No | Episode: "Opening Day" (S1 E10c) |
1987 | Miami Vice | No | Story | No | No | Episode: "Viking Bikers from Hell" (S3 E22) |
2005 | Rome | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Episode: "Egeria" (S1 E6) |
TV movies
Year | Title | Director | Writer |
---|---|---|---|
1974 | Melvin Purvis: G-Man | No | Yes |
1994 | Motorcycle Gang | Yes | No |
1997 | Rough Riders | Yes | Yes |
Unrealized projects
[edit]Year | Title and description | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|
1960s | An untitled romantic war film set during the battle of Dien Bien Phu | [2] |
Los Gringos, a Western described as being similar to The Wild Bunch | ||
The Last Resort | [17][2] | |
1970s | The Texans, a "contemporary version of Red River" | [18] |
The Haul, a film about a truck driver | [23][2] | |
Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail, a biopic written by Winfred Blevins about Theodore Roosevelt | [35] | |
The Life and Times of Joe McCarthy, a biopic about anti-Communist Senator Joseph McCarthy | [36] | |
Taxi Driver | [111] | |
A film adaptation of Winfred Blevins' novel Give Your Heart to the Hawks | [39] | |
A film adaptation of Jim Corbett's novel Man-Eaters of Kumoan | [7] | |
A film adaptation of S. L. A. Marshall's novel Night Drop for Stanley Kubrick | [40] | |
Extreme Prejudice | [112] | |
An unused version of Firepower, initially conceived as a Dirty Harry film | [113] | |
East of Suez | [49] | |
1980s | An unused draft of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 for Tobe Hooper | [114][115] |
An untitled "semi-political fantasy thriller" script for Jonathan Demme | [116] | |
Fatal Beauty starring Cher | [62][117] | |
Capone, a biopic of mobster Al Capone | [63][118] | |
A film adaptation of Allan W. Eckert's novel The Frontiersmen | [67] | |
Half of the Sky, a film about a Rocky Mountains explorer | ||
Leningrad: The 900 Days, a script for Sergio Leone | [119] | |
1990s | Alexander the Great, a biopic about Alexander III of Macedon starring Jean-Claude Van Damme | [72][73][119] |
Bad Iron, a biker film written by Kent Anderson | [71] | |
A film adaptation of Norman Mailer's novel Harlot's Ghost for Francis Ford Coppola | [74] | |
An unused draft of Die Hard 3, co-written with Barry Beckerman | [75] | |
The Texas Rangers starring Tommy Lee Jones | [75][18][40] | |
A film adaptation of the Sgt. Rock comics for Renny Harlin or Paul Verhoeven | [120] | |
The Northmen, a film about an English monk who gets captured by a band of Vikings | [120][76][2] | |
Mistress of the Seas, a script for Jean-Jacques Annaud | [121] | |
Daniel Boone, a biopic of Daniel Boone | [122][123] | |
The Vikings | [2] | |
A film adaptation of Tom Clancy's novel The Cardinal of the Kremlin | [124] | |
A film adaptation of Tom Clancy's novel Without Remorse starring Gary Sinise and Laurence Fishburne | [124][77] | |
An unused draft of The Conquest of Mexico for Werner Herzog | [125] | |
A film adaptation of Gabriel García Márquez's novel The General in His Labyrinth for Francis Ford Coppola | [119] | |
A biopic of Napoleon Bonaparte for Francis Ford Coppola | ||
2000s | LeMay, a biopic of U.S. Air Force general Curtis LeMay for Robert Zemeckis | [40][2] |
Manila John, a biopic of war hero John Basilone | ||
A reboot of the Dirty Harry film series | [40] | |
A film adaptation of Homer's the Iliad | ||
The Alamo | ||
King Conan: Crown of Iron, a sequel to his film Conan the Barbarian | [126][2][127] | |
An untitled Western script set in post-revolution Mexico for Mike Newell | [128][129] | |
Delta, a TV pilot about the special ops team Delta Force that joins forces with the CIA to take on terrorists | [84] | |
The Son Tay Raid, a film about a raid during the Vietnam War to rescue POWs | [2][127] | |
A biopic about the young life of Theodore Roosevelt | [2] | |
Jornada del Muerte, modern-day "motor cycle Western" set in the Southwest starring Triple H | [83][127] | |
Dodge City, a Western series | [86] | |
The Chosin Few, a film about the Battle of Chosin Reservoir | [88] | |
The Iron Horsemen, a biker film | [89] | |
Saigon Bureau, a TV pilot adaptation of Requiem starring Chris Noth | [87] | |
Genghis Khan, a biopic of Genghis Khan starring Mickey Rourke | [5][130][131] | |
2010s | Pharaoh, a TV pilot set in ancient Egypt | [90] |
Bibliography
[edit]- The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972) – based on his script
- The Wind and the Lion (1975) – based on his script
- Homefront: The Voice of Freedom (2011) – based on the video game
References
[edit]- ^ "John Milius Biography (1944–)". Filmreference.com. Retrieved October 31, 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Ken P. (May 7, 2003). "An Interview with John Milius". IGN. Archived from the original on June 8, 2010. Retrieved June 7, 2020.
- ^ "Jewish Hospital Gets $25,000 Gift". St. Louis Globe-Democrat. December 18, 1943. p. 3A.
- ^ "William S. Milius Dies". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. October 31, 1965. p. 3E.
- ^ a b c Patterson, Thom (March 9, 2009). "'Apocalypse' writer: Most scripts today 'are garbage'". CNN. Archived from the original on September 4, 2014.
- ^ Segaloff p 280
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Thompson, Richard (July 1976). "Stoked". Film Comment 12.4. pp. 10–21.
- ^ a b Weschler, Lawrence (November 2005). "Valkyries over Iraq". Harper's Magazine. pp. 65–77.
- ^ Segaloff p 276-277
- ^ Pye & Myles 1979, p. 175.
- ^ a b c Bauer, Erik (February 11, 2015). ""I was never conscious of my screenplays having any acts. It's all bullshit." – John Milius" (Educational, online resource). Creative Screenwriting. Creative Screenwriter Productions. Archived from the original on February 17, 2015. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
After selling his screenplay The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean for $300,000 (an almost unprecedented amount in 1971, especially for a writer whose asking price was $85,000), Milius told Esquire, "I make terrific deals. My hole card on this one was I didn't particularly want to sell Roy Bean anyway. I had written it for my own pleasure." But more interesting than the amount of money this script sold for was the emerging writer's voice within it.
- ^ Thomas, Kevin (January 22, 1968). "Annual Competition: 'A' Grades for Film Festival Students". Los Angeles Times. p. c1. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ Segaloff, Nat. Big Bad John: The John Milius Interviews. BearManor Media.
- ^ Canby, Vincent (April 18, 1968). "Honored Student Movies Shown Here". New York Times. p. 58. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
- ^ Thomas, Kevin (May 24, 1968). "At Museum of Art: Animated Films Enter the Cinema Limelight". Los Angeles Times. p. c1. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ Segaloff, p. 281.
- ^ a b Martin, Betty (June 14, 1969). "Movie Call Sheet: 'Barquero' Role to Mathews". Los Angeles Times. p. a9. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Bauer, Erik; Milius, John (March–April 2000). "John Milius: American Outsider". Diary Of A Screenwriter. Creative Screenwriting. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
- ^ Segaloff p 282
- ^ Medavoy 2013, p. 6.
- ^ Medavoy 2013, p. 173.
- ^ Thomas, Kevin (October 5, 1979). "Chow Tells $60 Million Film Schedule". Los Angeles Times. p. f39. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ a b Martin, Betty (February 19, 1971). "Movie Call Sheet: 'Big' Role for Carol White". Los Angeles Times. p. i9. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ a b Pye and Myles, p 176
- ^ Pye and Myles p 178
- ^ Warga, Wayne (September 15, 1974). "The Spadework Behind a 'Falcon' Remake: Spadework Behind Remake of 'Falcon' – A Remake of 'Falcon'". Los Angeles Times. p. q1. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ Farber, Stephen (September 16, 1973). "What's So Super About This Superdirector?". The New York Times. p. 135. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
- ^ Attanasio, Paul (March 3, 1985). "Hollywood's Script Door: Tom Mankiewicz, Tonic for Ailing Screenplays – The Script Doctor". The Washington Post. p. G1. ISSN 0190-8286. OCLC 2269358.
- ^ Milius |p. 123
- ^ "Movie Call Sheet: McCarthy, Raquel to Costar in 'Bomber'". Los Angeles Times. April 26, 1972. p. h12. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ Gottschalk Jr, Earl C. (July 31, 1975). "Focus on Filmland: Young Screenwriters, New Hollywood Breed, Zoom to Superstardom They Receive Up to $400,000 For Scripts and the Right To Direct Own Material Crisp Nostalgia or Rehash? Focus of Filmland: Screenwriters Are Zooming to New Superstardom". Wall Street Journal. p. 1.
- ^ Harmetz, Aljean (August 4, 1974). "The dime-store way to make movies-and money". New York Times. p. 202. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
- ^ Milius p. 173
- ^ Gardner, Paul (January 30, 1974). "Alumni of Film School Now 'Star' as Directors: 24,000 Students On '10. Best' Lists Wayne vs. Godard A Different Mood'". New York Times. p. 24. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
- ^ a b "Warner's to Distribute Films of David Picker". Los Angeles Times. November 21, 1974. p. h23. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ a b Weiler, A.H. (October 13, 1974). "News of the Screen: Life and Times Of Joe McCarthy". New York Times. p. 78. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
- ^ Gallagher, John (1989). Film Directors on Directing. ABC-Clio. p. 175.
- ^ Sterritt, David (July 28, 1975). "'Wind and the Lion'--a look behind MGM epic: Comments from its 'superstars' and its writer-director Deliberate distortion? False image?". The Christian Science Monitor. p. 26.
- ^ a b Murphy, Mary (June 11, 1975). "Movie Call Sheet: Milius Tackles a New Mountain". Los Angeles Times. p. e20. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ a b c d e f Bauer, Erik (March–April 2000). "Don't Tread on Me: An Interview with John Milius". Creative Screenwriting. Archived from the original on February 11, 2002. Retrieved October 11, 2024.
- ^ Rafferty, Terrence (May 1, 2011). "Oh, Kahuna, What Became Of That Endless Summer?". New York Times. ProQuest Historical Newspapers New York Times (1923-). p. MT3. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
By the time Milius made his sprawling, tortured surf epic...the skies had darkened considerably...
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ Dixon, Chris (October 21, 2012). "Hanging 10 On Screen With Real Surfers". New York Times. ProQuest Historical Newspapers: The New York Times (1923-). p. AR16. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
A box office dud, it finally resonated a decade later (when it reached VHS)...Milius's own life as a surfer and the real surf experience of Jan-Michael Vincent, William Katt, and Gary Busey gave the film is authenticity. Riding Giants writer Sam George said in a phone interview we quoted Speilberg as saying "Milius let his eccentric love of surfing...get in the way of ...storytelling."
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ Medavoy p. 8
- ^ Pye and Myles p. 186
- ^ Pollock, Dale (March 29, 1984). "Zemeckis Puts His Heart and Soul in 'Romancing the Stone'". Los Angeles Times. p. m1. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ Schrader, Paul; Thompson, Richard (March 1976). "Screen Writer Tax Driver's Paul Schrader". Film Comment. 12 (2). JSTOR: Film Society of Lincoln Center: 16.
- ^ Vitello, Paul (November 2, 2013). "Robert Rheault, Green Beret Ensnared in Vietnam Murder Case, Dies at 87". New York Times (NYT). ProQuest Historical Newspapers: The (1923 -). p. D7. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
Milius told the NYT in 1977 that he had based the Marlon Brando character...the Green Beret colonel...on both...Kurtz from Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and Col Rheault.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ Gussow, Mel (May 27, 1970). "Movies Leaving 'Hollywood' Behind: Studio System Passe Film Forges Ahead". New York Times. p. 36. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
- ^ a b Harmetz, Aljean (March 29, 1978). "Travolta the Producer Signs 2-Film Pact: Percentage of 'Fever'". The New York Times. p. c21. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
- ^ a b Lindsey, Robert (May 28, 1978). "The New New Wave of Film Makers: A Young Group of Writer-Directors Has Moved Into Positions of Power in Hollywood". New York Times. p. SM3. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
- ^ Tarantino, Quentin (April 23, 2020). "Deliverance". New Beverly Cinema.
- ^ Pollock, Dale (May 14, 1982). "Milius: Might Makes a Rite". Los Angeles Times. p. h1. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ Dargis, Manohla (August 19, 2011). "Keep Hold of Your Head, Lest He Lop It Off With the Others". New York Times. ProQuest Historical Newspapers: New York Times (1923-). p. C4. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
"from an Oliver Stone screenplay that Milius retooled, opens with a quote from Nietzsche and grows more lugubriously overblown from there...
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved June 4, 2023.
- ^ "Domestic Box Office For 1982". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved June 4, 2023.
- ^ "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved June 5, 2023.
- ^ "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved June 5, 2023.
- ^ Miller, John J. (December 3, 2012). "A dawn of awareness". National Review. 64 (22). Gale General OneFile, New York City: 53. ISSN 0028-0038.
Red Dawn was a summertime success, kicking Ghostbusters from the No. 1 spot at the box office and going on to gross more than $35 million. Its youthful cast seems familiar today, but back then its members were virtual unknowns: Patrick Swayze had top billing, joined by Jennifer Grey, Charlie Sheen, and Lea Thompson. They played teenagers who head to the hills following the Soviet attack, forming a resistance group that wages guerrilla warfare against Communist aggressors.
- ^ O'Connell, Aaron B. (January 11, 2013). "Guns, Violence, and the 'Red Dawn' Films". The Chronicle of Higher Education. 59 (18). Gale General OneFile.
On July 19, 1984, the producers of Red Dawn had a problem. In less than a month, they were due to release the director John Milius's pro-gun, survivalist action film depicting a Communist invasion of the United States, and the theatrical trailer and movie posters – both of which featured Soviet troops in or near a McDonald's restaurant – were already completed. But those materials now had to be changed because the previous day, a well-armed paranoid survivalist named James Oliver Huberty had entered a McDonald's in San Ysidro, Calif., and killed 21 people (including five children) with an Uzi submachine gun. The movie's marketing team recalled some of the posters and removed the McDonald's scene from the trailer. (The opening scene, in which the invaders gun down kids in a school, was left intact.) Red Dawn went on to become a cult classic and helped lead a generation of young men – yours truly included – into the military.
- ^ "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved June 4, 2023.
- ^ "Domestic Box Office For 1984". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved June 4, 2023.
- ^ a b "Dirty Harriet". Los Angeles Times. July 27, 1986. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ a b Modderno, Craig (June 21, 1987). "Outtakes: The Sequel Mob Mentality". Los Angeles Times. p. K84. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ Scott, Vernon (August 14, 1987). "Milius in Borneo". UPI Archive: Entertainment. Gale General OneFile. United Press International.
'When I direct a film in a place like Sarawak, it is my only opportunity to play General MacArthur,' he said. 'I enjoy working out all the logistical problems. When emergencies arise – and you can't call the studio for immediate repairs or equipment – you make do. You improvise, and almost always that helps a film.
- ^ Culhane, John (February 26, 1989). "Film; In Borneo's Wilds, Legend Takes Root". The New York Times. Gale General OneFile. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
To John Milius, the kinds of stories we tell about ourselves, our own ongoing legends of ourselves, are actually how we measure the greatness of our aspirations. That's what Learoyd does for the tribe, he says. He takes them, he gives them a legend - all of them. He gives them a history; he makes them a strong people. Even though he's gone, they have the legend.
- ^ Canby, Vincemt (March 3, 1989). "Review/Film; Nick Nolte As a King, Self-Made". The New York Times. Gale General OneFile. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
Mr. Milius's source material is a novel by Pierre Schoendoerffer, France's incurably right-wing romantic who, in 1977, wrote and directed the memorable Crabe Tambour, adapted from his own novel. Unlike some of Mr. Milius's earlier films (including Red Dawn), Farewell to the King cannot be faulted for its politics - it hasn't any.
- ^ a b Thompson, Anne (February 16, 1989). "A rebel adapts John Milius will meet Hollywood halfway". Chicago Tribune. ProQuest Central Document ID 282718567. p. 12. ISSN 1085-6706. OCLC 7960243.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ Goddard, Peter (February 17, 1990). "Portrait of the star as perfectionist". Toronto Star. p. F1.
- ^ a b "Exclusive Interview: John Milius on 'Milius'". Craveonline.com.au. January 6, 2014. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved July 10, 2014.
- ^ Stanley, Alessandra (May 31, 1992). "Hidden Hollywood: Political conservatives in the film industry say they are out of fashion. Many choose silence". New York Times. p. V1. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522.
- ^ a b "O'Malley & Gratteau". Chicago Tribune. May 3, 1990. p. D28. ISSN 1085-6706. OCLC 7960243.
- ^ a b Honeycutt, Kirk (January 28, 1990). "Jean-Claude Van Damme, the Belgian-born martial-arts champ..." Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237. Archived from the original on April 27, 2019. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
- ^ a b Beck, Marilyn; Jenel Smith, Stacy (September 20, 1990). "Landon writing new TV movie to introduce another series: [1* Edition]". The Province. Vancouver, BC. p. 61. ISSN 0839-3311.
ProQuest Central document ID 267381536
- ^ a b Goldstein, Patrick (December 15, 1991). "1,334 Pages Too Much? Mailer's CIA Novel Is Coppola's Movie by Milius". Los Angeles Times. p. N29. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
- ^ a b c Wells, Jeffrey (November 1, 1992). "'Die Hard 3' Blown Out of the Water by 'Siege'". Los Angeles Times. p. F16. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237.
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In the 1980s, when filmies seemed more troubled by Ronald Reagan describing the Soviet Union as an "evil empire" than by actual Soviet expansionism, dovish propaganda movies like The Day After and Testament were being churned out by most of the industry. John Milius, however, was busy making Red Dawn, a picture about how a Soviet invasion and occupation of the U.S. plays out in the heartland.
- ^ "Arnold Schwarzenegger Set To Return As The Cimmerian Warrior In 'The Legend Of Conan'". Geeksofdoom.com. October 26, 2012. Retrieved September 10, 2015.
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- ^ Horst, Stephanie (December 3, 2003). "Police charge Milius' accountant". Variety. Reed Elsevier. ISSN 0042-2738. OCLC 810134503. Retrieved November 21, 2018.
- ^ a b "New Conan Movie Has a Director!". Movies Online. March 2005. Archived from the original on July 15, 2014. Retrieved July 10, 2014.
- ^ a b Henderson, Kathy (November 10, 2008). "Chris Noth". Broadway.com. Retrieved July 10, 2014.
- ^ a b McClintock, Pamela (October 19, 2006). "Milius 'Chosen' for Korean War drama". Daily Variety. 293 (14). Los Angeles: Reed Elsevier: 5. ISSN 0042-2738. OCLC 810134503. Archived from the original on June 27, 2022. Retrieved June 27, 2022.
- ^ a b Garcia, Chris (October 9, 2007). "Despite hits, this filmmaker was never seen as big kahuna". Austin American-Statesman. p. E.1. ISSN 1553-8451.
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Homefront conveys a chilling, gripping, not entirely ludicrous version of America's fall...as a provocative, emotionally involving and politically relevant creative experience, it is vital. Were it a film, it might already be a topic of national discussion
{{cite news}}
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- ^ Segaloff p 275-276
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- ^ Biography for John Milius at IMDb
- ^ "John Milius". Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television. 59 (Gale In Context: Biography). Gale Document Number: GALE K1609018615: Cengage. 2005. eISSN 0749-064X. OCLC 11078702.
{{cite journal}}
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Further reading
[edit]- Kauffman, Bill (June 5, 2014). "John Milius: A Real Wolverine". theamericanconservative.com. Washington: The American Conservative. ISSN 1540-966X. Archived from the original on April 27, 2019. Retrieved June 24, 2022.
- Medavoy, Mike (2013). You're Only as Good as Your Next One: 100 Great Films, 100 Good Films, and 100 for which I Should be Shot. Atria. ISBN 9780743400558.
- Pye, Michael; Myles, Lynda (1979). The movie brats: how the film generation took over Hollywood. Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. ISBN 0030426715. OCLC 4497621.
- Segaloff, Nat; Milius, John (2006). "John Milius : the good fights". In McGilligan, Patrick (ed.). Backstory 4 : interviews with screenwriters of the 1970s and 1980s. University of Michigan.: Scholarly Publishing Office. OCLC 758444323.
External links
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