Biography
Screenwriter/Director Chris Columbus sold his first movie script for
Jocks while still a film student at New York University; although heavily rewritten by others for the screen, this piece got Columbus' foot in the big-time door. His breakthrough script for producer
Steven Spielberg was for
Gremlins, and was allegedly inspired by its writer's dreams of mice at his fingers. The film, which blended warmth and whimsy with violent slapstick and some truly mean-spirited moments, was even more vicious than what was seen onscreen before it was cleaned up by Spielberg, himself. The success of
Gremlins secured Columbus future writing assignments on such Spielberg projects as
Young Sherlock Holmes and
The Goonies (both 1985). He also developed the concept for a 1986 television cartoon series,
Galaxy High School, about an extraterrestrial school populated by weird-looking space aliens. Columbus was eventually given a chance to direct the medium-budget teen comedy
Adventures in Babysitting in 1988. He followed this with
Home Alone (1990), directed from a script by
John Hughes, which made incredible amounts of money and planted Columbus firmly on the Hollywood "A" list. Columbus continued to alternate between writing and directing as a Hollywood fixture in the '90s, churning out such box-office bonanzas as Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992) and Mrs. Doubtfire (1993), among other titles, before directing two even bigger blockbusters:
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (2001) and its sequel the following year,
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide