Dan O'Bannon (1946-2009) RIP

Dan O'Bannon, the sci-fi and horror screenwriter behind some of the genres' most recognisable titles, has died in Los Angeles following a short illness. He was 63.
A USC graduate in the same year as John Carpenter, O'Bannon was instrumental in Carpenter's cracking (and crackpot) first feature Dark Star, serving as co-writer, FX supervisor, production designer and editor, and playing Sgt Pinback (who turns out not to be Sgt Pinback at all). O'Bannon is the one who chases the beachball alien all over the spaceship; an idea that would sort of resurface later...
O'Bannon did some FX work on Star Wars in 1977, but is best known for kickstarting a different franchise. While authorship of Alien as we know it today is down to a number of people, there's no question that O'Bannon's Star Beast screenplay set the ball rolling, and he brought many of his colleagues from Alejandro Jodorowsky's aborted Dune to the project. The rest is movie history.
He wrote Blue Thunder and Life Force, and had two cracks at Philip K Dick, adapting We Can Remember It For You Wholesale and Second Variety into Total Recall and Screamers. Some say his Moebius-illustrated Heavy Metal comic The Long Tomorrow was a big visual influence on Blade Runner.
His Soft Landing and B-17 segments of the 1981 Heavy Metal movie were well-received, And he directed twice, fronting the fondly-remembered George Romero knock-off/parody Return of the Living Dead in 1985, and The Resurrected in 1992: an adaptation of HP Lovecraft's The Case of Charles Dexter Ward.
His screenplays were often reworked, much to his chagrin (particularly Blue Thunder, which lost most of its politics) but his legacy is without doubt. Just like Pinback, he had something of value to contribute to this mission.
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Comments
The man is a legend and will be missed.
moooooore fresh braaaaaaiiiiins
ALIENS as well
rip spaceman
As a teenager I almost got my right arm to Schwarzenegger proportions from a regular diet of Lifeforce.
Seriously though, legend who will be missed in the film industry.
Yeah, she did get her kit off quick, and for the rest of the movie!
NSFW
That was/is one seriously fine female!!! ;-)
still not bad to look at now either .....
You PEDANT!
Me and my mate was watching it for the 1st time, way back when, and wondered why there was so many glass corridors everywhere for no reason whats-so-ever. Till near the end when they all exploded everywhere in slow motion from millions of camera angles!
Ah, that's why!
I only seen Dark Star for the first time a couple of months back...excellent film!