W.R. Burnett

Description:

One of the most influential writers in screen history, W. R. Burnett has contributed countless classic moments in cinema.

Born in Springfield, Ohio, in 1899. By the time he left in 1927, he'd written over a hundred short stories and five novels, all unpublished. At 28, he left a civil service job he'd held for years and moved to Chicago where he found a job as a night-clerk in a seedy hotel. He found himself associating with a cornucopia of characters straight from the mean streets of Chicago -- prize-fighters, hoodlums, hustlers, and hobos. They inspired Little Caesar (novel 1929, film 1931) -- its overnight success landed him a job as a Hollywood screenwriter. Little Caesar (1931) became a classic movie, produced by First National Pictures (Warners) and starring then unknown Edward G. Robinson. The Al Capone theme was one he returned to in 1932 with Scarface (1932).

Burnett kept busy, producing a novel or more a year and turning most into screenplays (some as many as three times). Thematically Burnett was similar to Hammett and James M. Cain but his contrasting of the corruption and corrosion of the city with the better life his characters yearned for, represented by the paradise of the pastoral, was fresh and original. He portrayed characters who have, for one reason or another, fallen into a life of crime. Once sucked into this life they've been unable to climb out. They get one last shot at salvation but the oppressive system closes in and denies redemption.

Burnett's characters exist in world of twilight morality -- virtue can come from gangsters and criminals, malice from guardians and protectors. Above all, all of his characters were human -- this could be their undoing. In High Sierra (1941), Humphrey Bogart's Roy Earle plays a hard-bitten criminal who rejects his life of crime to help a crippled girl. In The Asphalt Jungle (1950), the most perfectly masterminded plot falls apart as each character reveals a weakness. Bruce Crowther wrote that Burnett's screenplays, "while still ostensibly in the cops versus gangsters mold, blur the conventional boundaries of the day." In The Beast of the City (1932), the police take the law into their own hands when the criminals walk free on a legal loophole presaging Dirty Harry (1971) by almost 40 years.

Burnett worked with many of the greats in acting and directing -- to name a few and certainly not all: John Huston, John Ford, Howard Hawks, Nicholas Ray and Michael Cimino, Humphrey Bogart, Ida Lupino, Paul Muni, Frank Sinatra, Marilyn Monroe, Steve McQueen, and Clint Eastwood. He was Oscar nominated for his scripts for Wake Island (1942), and The Great Escape (1963), in addition to his film work he wrote scripts for television and radio. In later years with his vision declining, he stopped writing and turned to promoting his earlier work. In his career, he achieved huge popularity in Europe where his anti-hero ideology was enthusiastically embraced. He died in 1982 aged 82.

Overview

Birthday November 25, 1899
Born In Springfield, Ohio, USA
Alternative names W. R. Burnett , William R. Burnett , James Updyke
Spouse/Ex- Whitney Forbes Johnston 1943 - April 25, 1982 (his death)

Did you know

Trivia Burnett was paid both for the rights to and to write "Nobody Lives Forever" as a starring vehicle for Humphrey Bogart. Due to a clause in his contracts stipulating that films had to be made in a certain period or he could take back ownership, the story reverted back to him. He immediately sold it for serialization in "Colliers" magazine in 1943. He then sold the hardcover book rights to Alfred Knopf publishing in 1945. Warners then paid him again for the rights to the story, and also paid him to write the screenplay. He was paid five (5) times for the same story, which was the kind of savvy wheeling and dealing that made him a rich man.
Nickname John Monahan

Scores

The Great Escape
2h 52m
8.2
Scarface
1h 33m
7.7
The Asphalt Jungle
1h 52m
7.8
Wake Island
1h 28m
6.7
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