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Scott Alexander


Marx Brothers, The (2005) (announced)
Pacifier, The (2005) (post-production)
Agent Cody Banks (2003)
Screwed (2000)
Man on the Moon (1999)
That Darn Cat (1997)
People vs. Larry Flynt, The (1996)
Ed Wood (1994)
Trap, The (1991/I) (TV)
Problem Child 2 (1991)
Problem Child (1990)
"Tales from the Crypt" (1989) TV Series
"Monsters" (1988) TV Series

This screenwriter and his partner, Larry Karaszewski, struggled through several unsuccessful projects before hitting gold with self-described "weirdo biopics" of director Ed Wood Jr. and porn king Larry Flynt.

Born and raised in Southern California, Scott Alexander began shooting Super-8mm films as a teenager, becoming in his own words, the "Joseph Levine-Ed Wood of Palisades High". While attending film school at USC, he met Karaszewski whom he discovered also shared his love for low rent horror films like those of Herschell Gordon Lewis. While an undergrad, Alexander began a script about porn publisher Larry Flynt but it was a senior project written in tandem with Karaszewski that helped them become established in the industry. Within two weeks of graduating in 1986, the pair sold their first spec screenplay, a crime comedy called "Homewreckers", to 20th Century-Fox for $300,000. Although it was never made, it provided a calling card for the duo. In the meantime, Alexander wrote and directed an episode of the syndicated series "Monsters" (1988), and did some directing for Nickelodeon and MTV. The writing partners then sold Universal a script for a dark "Bad Seed" comedy. The result, however, was "Problem Child" (1990), re-written by others into a cloying and critically-panned film. The two reluctantly agreed to co-write the sequel, imaginatively called "Problem Child 2" (1991), which turned out to be even worse.

While there were other projects that didn't reach fruition or went through the Hollywood mill of rewrites, Alexander and Karaszewski turned their focus to the man generally considered as one of the world's worst directors. The result was "Ed Wood" (1994), an odd, touching and warped biopic directed with care by Tim Burton. Their script managed to both laugh at and with Wood and also depicted a haunting Bela Lugosi (played by Martin Landau in an Oscar-winning turn). Burton asked them to work on his next feature, the big-budget "Mars Attacks!" (1996), but their efforts went unrecognized when the Writers Guild denied them credit.

With the critical success of "Ed Wood", though, the duo was able to sell an even more subversive biopic, "The People vs. Larry Flynt" (1996), produced by Oliver Stone and directed by Milos Forman. Described by the writers as "Frank Capra with porn," the film took an outrageously vile character and made him a hero of sorts. As in "Ed Wood", the script provided strong roles for Woody Harrelson (as Flynt), Courtney Love (as Flynt's wife, Althea) and Edward Norton (as Flynt's attorney). Alexander and Karaszewski reportedly also did uncredited rewrites on the Alicia Silverstone vehicle "Excess Baggage" while others rewrote their script of the Disney remake "That Darn Cat" (both 1997). The duo went on to co-write and co-direct the Norm McDonald comedy "Screwed" (2000), which spent more than two years in post-production and underwent several name changes. The end results, though, failed to impress critics or audiences. Alexander and Karaszewski, however, enjoyed kudos for their script "Man on the Moon" (1999), which Milos Forman directed. Another in their series of biographical dramas about eccentric characters--in this case comedian Andy Kaufman--the film proved their strengths perhaps lay in that genre. As such, the pair have been attached to film versions of the lives of other showbiz oddballs ranging from Liberace to Groucho Marx to the disco group, the Village People.

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