John Gatins


John Gatins is an American screenwriter, director, and actor. For writing the drama film Flight, he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay.
Gatins made his directorial feature debut by filming his screenplay for Dreamer, and also wrote or co-wrote Coach Carter, Real Steel, Kong: Skull Island and Power Rangers. As an actor, he has collaborated three times with Eddie Murphy, on Norbit, Meet Dave and A Thousand Words.

Early life and education

Gatins was born in Manhattan, New York, where his father worked as a New York City police officer. Later, his family relocated to the Poughkeepsie area, where Gatins went on to attend Arlington High School and Vassar College. He graduated in 1990 with a degree in drama.

Career

After graduation, Gatins moved to Los Angeles with the intention of pursuing acting. His first role was in the low budget 1993 horror film Witchboard 2: The Devil's Doorway, followed by a role in the 1994 movie Pumpkinhead II: Blood Wings. As he won small roles in larger-budget productions, including 1999's Varsity Blues and 2002's Big Fat Liar, Jeremy Kramer, a fellow Vassar grad and employee at Fox, paid him $1,000 to write a teen comedy by the name of Smells Like Teen Suicide. Varsity Blues was directed by Brian Robbins and produced by Michael Tollin, the latter of whom would, in 2001, direct Gatins's first screenplay, a romantic comedy entitled Summer Catch, while Robbins produced it. Tollin returned in 2002 to direct Gatins's second screenplay, a dramedy called Hardball. While continuing to act, Gatins wrote Coach Carter which was released in 2005. The same year, he presented his first directorial effort, Dreamer, which he also wrote.
At the suggestion of Steven Spielberg, Gatins was brought in to work on Real Steel, a science fiction film based on a 1956 Richard Matheson short story. Gatins considered the draft of the screenplay which he received when he began working on the project to be very dark, and he adapted it to focus more on the family aspects, such as the film's father-son relationship, about which he was accustomed to writing in his previous works. Real Steel was released October 7, 2011.
Since 1999, Gatins had been working on Flight, an original screenplay which, by 2009, was 149 pages. Robert Zemeckis picked up the script; and the resulting film, starring Denzel Washington, was released to critical acclaim in 2012. Gatins received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Writing (Original Screenplay) at the 85th Academy Awards for his screenplay.
DreamWorks tapped Gatins to write a sequel to Real Steel before the film was released based on positive test screenings of the movie. He and his brother, George Gatins, also adapted the Electronic Arts videogame series Need for Speed into an eponymous film.
Gatins rewrote Kong: Skull Island for Legendary Pictures and Warner Bros. Pictures. He also rewrote the 2017 Power Rangers reboot film, incorporating aspects from previous drafts by Max Landis, Matt Sazama, Burk Sharpless, Michele Mulroney, and Kieran Mulroney.
In 2022, Gatins and Andrea Berloff have signed a creative partnership with Netflix.

Filmography

Uncredited script revisionsVarsity Blues Behind Enemy Lines Timeline Spectral
Acting roles
YearTitleRoleNotes
1993Witchboard 2: The Devil's DoorwayRussel
1994Pumpkinhead II: Blood WingsYoung Caspar DixonDirect-to-video
1995Leprechaun 3Scott McCoyDirect-to-video
1998Gods and MonstersKid SaylorUncredited
1998Another Day in ParadisePhil
1999Varsity BluesSmiling Man
2001ImpostorPatient-Soldier
2002Big Fat LiarTow Truck Driver
2006The Shaggy DogHomeless Guy
2007NorbitAttendant
2008Meet DaveAir Traffic Controller
2009Harmony and MeHomeless Tom
2010Fred: The MovieCar Wash Clerk #1TV movie
2010TerriersBeach BumEpisode "Hail Mary"
2011Real SteelKingpin
2011Fred 2: Night of the Living FredDishwasher
2012A Thousand WordsValet
2017Crazy Ex-GirlfriendJeff ChanningtonEpisode "Getting Over Jeff"
2019Lying and StealingAton Eisenstadt
2019Frances FergusonWarden

ThanksCiggies Eagle vs Shark Harmony and Me Martha Marcy May Marlene