| Return shipping will be paid by | Seller |
|---|---|
| All returns accepted | Returns Accepted |
| Item must be returned within | 30 Days |
| Refund will be given as | Money Back |
| Industry | Movies |
| Signed | No |
| Object Type | Script |
| Original/Reproduction | Original |
| Country/Region of Manufacture | United States |
Check the listing for details. Rare 1972 First Dan O'Bannon ('Alien') Script The Devil In Mexico Leather Bound. Listed at 1149.95 USD. The Devil In Mexico, revision - 1972: Original Story and Screenplayby Dan O'Bannon 1972 revised script, C. Whittaker, Ltd. (Los Angeles, California), 9 3/4 x 11 inches tall burgundy leather hardcover, gilt lettering to front cover, four raised bands and gilt ruling and lettering to spine, white moire pastedowns and endpapers, typescript printed only on recto side of each leaf, illustrated with black-and-white photographs of the Madero Revolution, [5], 190 pp. Very slight soiling and rubbing to covers. Minor marginal staining to moire endpapers. Otherwise, a very good copy - clean, bright and unmarked, and splendidly bound - of this rare screenplay with a fascinating and extensive backstory. Unpublished, with no listing in OCLC or other indices. Note that this is a heavy and oversized book, so additional postage will be required for international or priority orders. The never-produced first script of legendary American film screenwriter and director Dan O'Bannon (1946-2009), who is perhaps best known for writing the 1979 sci-fi horror classic film, Alien, and for writing and directing the 1985 cult horror comedy The Return of the Living Dead. Not long after he began at USC film school in 1968, O'Bannon began passing around his first iteration of The Devil in Mexico, which centers on the disappearance of writer Ambrose Bierce (The Devil's Dictionary) into Mexico during the Revolution of 1917. Eventually the script found its way into the hands of Orson Welles, who encouraged O'Bannon. “I had in mind it would be directed by David Lean,” Dan later recalled. “Orson Welles did see it, liked it, and passed it around, but nothing came of it.” William Froug (1922-2013), a TV writer and producer whose credits included The Twilight Zone and Gilligan’s Island, also read and was impressed with the script, which he eventually reworked as this 1972 revision, which he shopped to producers, according to Froug in his 2005 autobiography, How I Escaped from Gilligan's Island (Univ. of Wisconsin Press). The script was picked up by actor, filmmaker and writer Peter Ustinov (1921-2004), but the movie was never made. This revised script was captioned as the property of Christian Whittaker "With the single exception of his command of the English language, the character of Pancho Villa as depicted in this screenplay is as truthful as history permits." - Dan O'Bannon, in his author's note preceding the script. After a 20-movie filmography spanning 1969-2012, in 2013 he released Dan O'Bannon's Guide to Screenplay Structure, co-written with Matt R. Lohr. O'Bannon died from complications of Crohn's disease in Los Angeles on December 17, 2009. He credited his experiences with Crohn's for inspiring the chest-bursting scene from Alien.