Career Highlights: Unforgiven, Blade Runner, 12 Monkeys
First Major Screen Credit: Who Are The DeBolts? (And Where Did They Get 19 Kids?) (1977)
Biography
The screenplays of scenarist David Peoples are noted for their lack of moral absolutes as can be seen in his script for The Unforgiven, a Clint Eastwood Western that has been credited with helping to bring back the genre. Peoples wrote the script in 1976, but it was not produced until the early '90s. Before becoming a screenwriter, Peoples obtained an English degree from the University of California, Berkeley. In 1982, Peoples co-wrote the script for the cult favorite Blade Runner and penned only two more scripts before having success with The Unforgiven. Later that year, Peoples also wrote the fascinating character study of a reclusive reprobate who saves people from a burning jet and then sees a handsome, opportunistic junkman get all the credit, in Hero. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Peoples first entered the industry as a film editor, and started writing screenplays during this time, but his writing career began when he was hired as co-writer on the cult-classic Blade Runner after director Ridley Scott and screenwriter Hampton Fancher separated over creative differences. Following that film's critical success, Peoples was hired by studios to work on films including Ladyhawke, Leviathan, and an unproduced attempt at adapting the Sgt. Rock comic series for Arnold Schwarzenegger.
A number of Peoples' original screenplays were sold during the 1980s, many undergoing lengthy studio development periods before seeing production: among them, Unforgiven, Soldier, and The Blood of Heroes. The latter film was the first to go before the cameras, directed by Peoples himself and starring Rutger Hauer.
Peoples received his highest accolades for Unforgiven, a script first written in 1976 (as The William Munny Killings). The film had a lengthy gestation and did not see theaters until 1992. Peoples received Oscar, Golden Globe and British Academy nominations, and won L.A. Film Critics (1991) and National Society of Film Critics (1992) awards for best screenplay. Because of the success of Unforgiven, Peoples is sometimes credited for revitalizing the Western genre, as well as Clint Eastwood's career.[citation needed]
Released in the same year as Unforgiven, Peoples' screwball comedy Hero was based on an idea by producer Laura Ziskin and her husband, screenwriter Alvin Sargent.
Later in 1992, Peoples began work (in collaboration with wife Janet Peoples) on Twelve Monkeys (1995), a time-warp action/psychodrama inspired by Chris Marker's experimental short film La Jetée. The film was directed by Terry Gilliam and was successful both critically and commercially.
In 1998, Soldier was belatedly filmed by British director Paul W. S. Anderson, albeit on a reduced budget and with additional rewriting by Anderson.