Peter Hyams (born July 26, 1943) is an American
screenwriter,
director and
cinematographer, probably best known for
directing the 1984 sci-fi adventure
2010 (the sequel to
Stanley Kubrick's
2001: A Space Odyssey),
Capricorn One, the comic book
adaptation
Timecop and the
Arnold Schwarzenegger horror/action
blockbuster
End of
Days.
Biography
Family
Hyams was
born in New York City, New York, the son of Ruth Hurok and Barry
Hyams, who was a theatrical producer and publicist on Broadway
. His
maternal grandfather was
Sol Hurok, the
Russian
Jewish impresario. His stepfather was
blacklisted Arthur
Lief. His sister is
casting director Nessa
Hyams.
Career
Studied
Art and
Music at Hunter College and
Syracuse University, before working as producer/anchorman for a
Chicago TV station. He has described himself as "one of the very
few writer/directors of major films who also photographs his own
pictures". During his time with CBS (where he worked from 1964 to
1970), he began to shoot
documentary
films. Hyams moved to Los Angeles in 1970 and sold his first
screenplay,
T.R. Baskin, to
Paramount Pictures in 1971.
Hyams worked in television through the early to mid-1970s. His
first major film was
Capricorn
One (1978), a critically-acclaimed conspiracy thriller
about a faked mission to Mars. This was followed by the less
successful
Hanover Street
(1979) which starred
Harrison Ford,
and the sci-fi cult classic
Outland (1981), which starred
Sean Connery in a 'High Noon' scenario set on
Io, one of Jupiter's moons. In 1983, he
produced, directed, and wrote the screenplay for
2010 (1984), collaborating closely with
author
Arthur C. Clarke (
2010).
Hyams also co-authored with Clarke
The Odyssey File: The Making
of 2010, published 1985, a collection of their
email correspondence which illustrates their
fascination with the then pioneering medium and its use for them to
communicate on an almost daily basis at the time of planning and
production of the film.
Other movies Hyams has directed/photographed include:
The Star Chamber (1983),
Running Scared (1986),
The Presidio (1988),
Narrow Margin (1990),
Stay Tuned (1992),
Timecop (1994),
The Relic (1997), and
End of Days (1999). In addition, Hyams also
directed various episodes of Steven Spielberg's television show,
Amazing
Stories, executive produced the 1980s cult kids movie,
The Monster Squad (1986),
and co-wrote the screenplay for the Charles Bronson thriller,
Telefon (1977). Since the
mid-1980s, Hyams has directed several Hollywood-based movies with
varying degrees of commercial and critical success.
His two most recent films are
The
Musketeer (2001) and
A Sound of Thunder (2005).
The Musketeer (2001) was a
minor box office success in the United States. But
A Sound of Thunder (2005),
which faced many troubles during its production (including the
bankruptcy of the original production company during
post-production), performed particularly badly at the box office
worldwide.
In 2007, it was reported that he would direct the remake of his own
Capricorn One, instead he
directed the remake of the
1956
film noir Beyond a Reasonable Doubt
starring
Michael Douglas, which is
slated to open in 2009.He also elaborated the cinematography of his
son John's effort,
Universal Soldier:
Regeneration, the third official
Universal Soldier sequel starring
Jean-Claude Van Damme and
Dolph Lundgren.
Personal life
On December 19, 1964 he married George-Ann Spota, with whom he has
three children.
Trademark
Hyams is well known for acting as his own cinematographer on the
movies he directs.
As a reference to his wife's family, there's a minor character
named Spota in all his movies .
Filmography
| film (as director) |
released |
box office |
|
adjusted |
annual ranking |
| A Sound of
Thunder |
May 15, 2005 |
$1,901,000 |
|
|
$2mio |
|
217 |
| The Musketeer |
September 9, 2001 |
$27,054,000 |
|
|
$33mio |
|
87 |
| End of
Days |
November 24, 1999 |
$66,890,000 |
|
|
$91mio |
|
36 |
| The Relic |
January 10, 1997 |
$33,957,000 |
|
|
$51mio |
|
65 |
| Sudden Death |
October 26, 1995 |
$20,215,000 |
|
|
$32mio |
|
104 |
| Timecop |
September 16, 1994 |
$44,854,000 |
|
|
$75mio |
|
|
| Stay Tuned |
August 14, 1992 |
$10,737,000 |
|
|
$18mio |
|
|
| Narrow Margin |
September 21, 1990 |
$10,874,000 |
|
|
$18mio |
|
|
| The Presidio |
June 10, 1988 |
$20,037,000 |
|
|
$34mio |
|
|
| Running
Scared |
June 27, 1986 |
$38,501,000 |
|
|
$71mio |
|
|
| 2010 |
December 7, 1984 |
$41,000,000 |
|
|
$81mio |
|
|
| The Star Chamber |
August 5, 1983 |
$5,600,000 |
|
|
$12mio |
|
|
| Outland |
May 22, 1981 |
~$18–20mio |
|
|
~$43–49 |
|
|
| Hanover
Street |
May 18, 1979 |
$3,000,000 |
|
|
$8mio |
|
|
| Capricorn One |
June 1978 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Peeper |
1975 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Busting |
February 1974 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Our Time |
1974 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Additionally he directed in 1972 the TV movies
Goodnight, My Love and
Rolling Man.
Notes
External links