Christopher McQuarrie
Christopher McQuarrie (born in
1968 in
Princeton Junction,
NJ) is an
American screenwriter.
Christopher McQuarrie was born and raised in Princeton Junction, New Jersey where he attended high school with director
Bryan Singer and
Ethan Hawke. In lieu of college he took a job working as an assistant teacher at a boarding school in Perth, West Australia and later hitchhiked around the western half of the continent. Returning to the states a year later, he went to work for a detective agency in New Jersey for the next four years. In 1992 he applied to the New York Police Department and was on his way to the academy when former schoolmate Singer offered him the opportunity to write their first feature film,
Public Access, winner of the 1993
Sundance Film Festival's grand jury prize.
Singer and McQuarrie collaborated again on the 1995 film
The Usual Suspects for which McQuarrie received best screenplay awards from
Premiere magazine, The Texas Board of Review, and the Chicago Critics as well as the
Edgar Allan Poe Award, The Independent Spirit Award and the British and American Academy Awards. The film was later included on the New York Times' list of the 1000 greatest films ever made and the character of '
Verbal Kint" was included on AFI's list of the 100 greatest screen characters of all time. (In 2006, the Writer's Guild of America voted Suspects #35 on their list of 101 Greatest Screenplays.)
McQuarrie spent the next several years dividing his time between rewriting studio movies (such as Singer's
X-Men) and developing a screenplay on the life of Alexander the Great (written with
Peter Buchman) for
Martin Scorsese and
Leonardo DiCaprio. (Scorsese and DiCaprio chose to do
The Aviator first, making way for Oliver Stone to produce his version of
Alexander.)
McQuarrie also wrote and directed
The Way of the Gun starring
Benicio Del Toro,
Ryan Phillippe and
James Caan. Despite a desire to move away from the crime genre, it was the only arena in which he could find any creative control. He set out to make a crime film about truly "criminal" criminals â€" a revisionist modern-day Western populated with multi-layered characters whose actions are not motivated by backstories contrived to make them endearing and sympathetic. He also rejected the stylized approach that had come to define the action-crime genre - choosing instead to rely on story and performance. The film failed to live up to the success of McQuarrie's earlier films. McQuarrie joked in interviews that he was going to make a crime film in such a way that no one would ever ask him to make one again.
More recently McQuarrie has developed a script with co-writer
Dylan Kussman about the life of
John Wilkes Booth and The
Stanford Prison Experiment with writer
Tim Talbott.
*1993
Public Access, co-writer with
Bryan Singer*1995
The Usual Suspects*2000
X-Men, co-writer with
David Hayter,
Joss Whedon,
Tom DeSanto*2000
The Way of the Gun, also director
*2006
Killshot, co-writer with
Hossein Amini,
Steve Barancik* McQuarrie, Christopher (1996). "The Usual Suspects". Faber and Faber. ISBN 0571191533.
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