- Geboren am
- Verstorben17. Dezember 2009 · Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA (Morbus Crohn)
- GeburtsnameDaniel Thomas O'Bannon
- Größe1,68 m
- Dan O'Bannon wurde am 30 September 1946 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA geboren. Er war Autor und Schauspieler, bekannt für Alien: Das unheimliche Wesen aus einer fremden Welt (1979), Dark Star - Finsterer Stern (1974) und Aliens: Die Rückkehr (1986). Er war mit Diane O'Bannon verheiratet. Er starb am 17 Dezember 2009 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
- EhepartnerDiane O'Bannon(18. Januar 1986 - 17. Dezember 2009) (er verstorben, 1 Kind)
- O'Bannon and John Carpenter attended USC together; the result of their meeting each other in college was the low-budget cult science-fiction parody Dark Star - Finsterer Stern (1974), which started out as a student movie and was eventually expanded into a theatrical feature.
- O'Bannon was reputed to suffer debilitating stress-induced stomach aches (which some detractors attributed to hypochondria). Upon his death, Diane O'Bannon revealed that her husband had been managing Crohn's Disease for about thirty years.
- Dan O'Bannon had been working on the screenplay for Screamers - Tödliche Schreie (1995) as early as 1981. The October 10, 1984, draft credits Michael Campus as co-writer. It is unknown whether Campus also intended to direct.
- He was considered one of the most brilliant, if volcanic, alumni of the USC film school.
- Has one son, Adam.
- [talking about Total Recall - die totale erinnerung (1990)] Verhoeven has moments. He's talented and he does have some grand sci-fi visual things to see from time to time, but he's a very flawed director and Total Recall had a lot of pitfalls for him and he fell in most of them. In particular, whenever he started to flounder and didn't know what to do, he would start throwing in violence. He'd say bring in all the rubber body parts and the blood hoses and everything and we'll start ripping people to shreds and squirt blood everywhere. And he'd keep shooting that until he overcame his nerves and got his feet on the ground and would start directing in some reasonable way again. So you'd end up with these intermittent scenes of absurdly excessive maimings at sort of intervals, and usually what he was substituting for were scenes that involved humor in the original [script]. And I realized, 'Oh, he's not good at humor. He doesn't know how to tell a joke onscreen.' Too bad, because some of the important stuff he did very well on Total Recall. It had grand moments.
- The one that was certainly best directed, far and away above the rest, was Alien. Ridley Scott's directorial thing there was absolutely wonderful. I haven't had another director equal it.
- [talking about Lifeforce - Die tödliche Bedrohung (1985)] The performances too could have been computer generated, it probably would have been a great improvement. We had the one and only Tobe Hooper at the helm which is approximately like having Bozo the Clown at the helm.
- It's been said over and over again by writers of scary stories that a writer can't scare a reader unless that writer scares himself or herself first. So, you can't excite anyone in the audience unless you're excited writing the script! You're taking yourself for a ride before you take the audience for a ride!
- With "Alien", I figured out quite simply that, as an audience member, what you DON'T see scares you more than what you see. In horror films, the scares that really grab the audience and build the tension for them don't come from the monster jumping out of the shadows! The terror comes from the slow times in between those pay-off scenes in which the characters are talking and planning -- waiting for something to jump out at them!
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