Bruce Joel Rubin

A Hollywood screenwriter who is drawn to emotional material incorporating spiritual and fantastic elements, Bruce Joel Rubin began working in films as co-director with Brian De Palma of "Dionysus in 69" and as an assistant director on De Palma's "Hi, Mom!" (both 1970). Following a turn as an assistant film editor at NBC, Rubin embarked on a quest for spiritual enlightenment which included stints on the Greek isle of Paros and in a Tibetan Buddhist monastery in Nepal. After three months of study at the latter, he was given 48 hours to leave by the Nepalese government, who suspected Rubin of being a CIA operative. Although the stay was cut short, its influence would be manifested in much of his subsequent screen work. Indeed, Rubin has made a good living from musing about death.

Back in New York, Rubin worked first as an associate curator and later advanced to head of the film department at the Whitney Museum. He and his wife (an art professor) next moved to the Midwest where he earned his graduate degree and wrote a screenplay, "The George Dunlap Tape". He planned to direct it himself, but once the financing fell through, it was optioned by Douglas Trumbull and was eventually made into Natalie Wood's swan song, "Brainstorm" (1983). The film's most memorable sequence depicted the dreamy sights and sounds of a woman's after-death experience.

Frustrated by his inability to work with Hollywood from the Midwest, Rubin moved to L.A. His first produced screenplay, "Deadly Friend" (1986), directed by Wes Craven, was an oddball teen horror film about a bright young lad who reanimates his dead girlfriend. 1990 was Rubin's breakthrough year: he wrote and served as associate producer on both "Ghost" and "Jacob's Ladder". The former featured Patrick Swayze as a murder victim who has unfinished business with his girlfriend (Demi Moore). This diverting romantic fantasy grossed over $200 million and netted a Best Screenplay Oscar for Rubin. The less successful, but more ambitious, "Jacob's Ladder" depicted the surreal hallucinations of a Vietnam vet trying to cope with life and love as a civilian. The film was abetted by the glossy direction of Adrian Lyne and a powerful central performance by Tim Robbins.

Rubin also contributed to the psychodramas "Deceived" and "Sleeping with the Enemy" (both 1991). Unhappy with the results, he was credited as "Derek Saunders" for the former and uncredited for the latter. At the age of 50, Rubin finally made his solo directorial debut with "My Life" (1993), an emotional drama starring Michael Keaton as a terminally ill man preparing for death by videotaping his final months for his unborn child.

  • Also Credited As:
    Bruce Rubin, Derek Saunders
  • Born:
    March 10, 1943 in Detroit, Michigan, USA
  • Job Titles:
    Director, Screenwriter, Producer, Assistant director, Assistant film editor, Associate curator, Head of the film department at the Whitney Museum
Family
  • Brother: Gary Rubin. Appeared in My Life (1993), which was directed by his brother Bruce
  • Father: James Rubin. Appeared in My Life (1993), which was directed by his son Bruce
  • Mother: Sondra Rubin. Died shortly after appearing in My Life (1993), which was directed by her son Bruce
  • Son: Ari Rubin. Born c. 1980; mother, Blanche Rubin
  • Son: Joshua Rubin. Born c. 1972; mother, Blanche Rubin
Education
  • New York University, New York, NY, film
  • Indiana University, Bloomington, IN
Milestones
  • 1970 Feature co-directorial debut (with Brian De Palma and Robert Fiore), Dionysus in 69
  • 1970 Made film debut as an assistant director on Hi, Mom!
  • 1976 Wrote the screenplay, The George Dunlap Tape
  • 1983 First story credit, Brainstorm
  • 1986 First screenplay credit, Deadly Friend
  • 1990 Penned the screenplay for Adrian Lyne s Jacob s Ladder
  • 1990 Received acclaim for his screenplay, Ghost
  • 1991 Wrote the screenplay for Deceived (credited as Derek Saunders)
  • 1993 Made directorial debut with My Life ; also wrote the screenplay and produced
  • 1998 Penned the sci-fi feature, Deep Impact
  • 2002 Received a writing credit for the film, Stuart Little 2
  • 2007 Credited as a writer on the film, The Last Mimzy
  • 2009 Contributed re-writes for the screenplay adaptation of The Time Traveler s Wife
  • Raised in Detroit, Michigan
  • Sold The George Dunlap Tape to Douglas Trumbull who re-worked it into the film Brainstorm
  • Stayed at a Tibetan Buddhist monastery in Nepal; told to leave after three months when the government suspected he was an CIA operative
  • Worked as an assistant film editor at NBC
  • Worked as an associate curator and head of the film department at the Whitney Museum in New York City
  • Wrote industrial film scripts in the Midwest

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