David Webb Peoples (born February 9, 1940) is an American screenwriter who co-wrote Blade Runner (1982), and later wrote Unforgiven (1992), and 12 Monkeys (1995). He has been nominated for Oscar, Golden Globe, and BAFTA awards. He won the best screenplay awards from the L.A. Film Critics (1991) and National Society of Film Critics (1992) for Unforgiven.
Peoples worked as a film editor in the 1970s while writing screenplays[5] but his writing career took off after he was hired as co-writer on Blade Runner by director Ridley Scott to rework the script written by screenwriter and Blade Runner executive producer Hampton Fancher.[6] Following the success of Blade Runner, Peoples worked on Ladyhawke (1985) and Leviathan (1989).[5]
During the 1980s, Peoples wrote a script based on DC Comics' Sgt. Rock series. Arnold Schwarzenegger was picked to play the title role; the project was revived three decades later in 2010 involving Joel Silver and Easy Company, although with the expectation to set the narrative in a place other than the battlefields of World War II to distinguish the project from the earlier script.[7]
Peoples received his greatest recognition for Unforgiven (1992). He had originally written the script in 1976, then entitled The William Munny Killings.[5] Peoples' screwball comedyHero was filmed and released in 1992, the same year as Unforgiven.
In 1998, Soldier was filmed by British director Paul W. S. Anderson, although it was re-written by Anderson.[9]
Filmography
This section needs expansion with: annotations to indicate clearly and consistently, for each work (from Hollywood.com or other sources), the credit or credits he received for the work listed, and to complete the listing to that source. You can help by adding to it. (December 2016)
As of February 2015, Peoples has thirteen writing credits (ten for original screenplays, two for stories, and one for source material), as well as five credits for editing, and three credits for directing.[10]