Chris Carter (screenwriter)

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Christopher Carl Carter (born October 13, 1956) is an American television and film producer, director and writer. Born in Bellflower, California, Carter graduated with a degree in journalism from California State University, Long Beach before spending thirteen years working for Surfing Magazine. After beginning his television career working on television films for Walt Disney Studios, Carter rose to fame in the 1990s for creating the Fox science fiction supernatural drama series The X-Files. The show earned high viewership ratings, and eventually led to Carter's being able to negotiate the creation of future series.

Carter has his own television production company, Ten Thirteen Productions, wherein he went on to create three more series for the network—Millennium, a doomsday-themed series which met with critical approval and low viewer numbers. Harsh Realm, which was canceled after three episodes had aired; and The Lone Gunmen, a spin-off of The X-Files which lasted for a single season. Carter's film roles include writing both of The X-FilesTemplate:' cinematic spin-offs—1998's successful The X-Files and the poorly received 2008 follow-up The X-Files: I Want to Believe, the latter of which he also directed—while his television credits have earned him several accolades including eight Primetime Emmy Award nominations.<ref name="thr_Jul12">Template:Cite web</ref>

Early life

Chris Carter was born on October 13, 1956, in Bellflower, California.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> His father worked in the construction industry.Template:Sfn Carter has described his childhood as "fairly normal", and was fond of both Little League Baseball and surfing;Template:Sfn his surfing stance is goofy footed.<ref name="salon">Template:Cite news</ref> He attended California State University, Long Beach in Long Beach, graduated with a journalism degree in 1979. An avid surfer, he began writing for Surfing Magazine, a San Clemente-based journal, eventually becoming its editor at the age of 28. Carter would work for the magazine for thirteen years, and credits his tenure there for teaching him how to run a business. It was also at this time that Carter began taking an interest in pottery, making "hundreds of thousands of pieces" of dinnerware as a hobby. He has compared the process of making pottery to Zen meditations, although he has since thrown out most of his work.Template:Sfn

Personal life

In 1983, Carter began dating Dori Pierson, whom he had met through a cousin of hers who worked with him at Surfing Magazine.<ref name="rovi bio">Template:Cite web</ref> The couple were married in 1987,<ref name="xcellence">Template:Cite web</ref> and live in Santa Barbara.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Career

Starting in television

Pierson's connections at Walt Disney Studios led to chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg hiring Carter on a standard contract.Template:Sfn Carter began writing television films for the studio, penning The B.R.A.T. Patrol in 1986 and Meet the Munceys in 1988. These scripts led to Carter being associated with contemporary youth comedy at the studio, and although he enjoyed the work he felt that his real strengths and interests lay in serious drama instead.Template:Sfn

Carter met the then-president of NBC, Brandon Tartikoff, at a company softball game in Brentwood, California. Tartikoff and Carter began talking between innings, and when Tartikoff eventually read some of Carter's script work, he brought him over to write for the network. There, Carter developed a number of unproduced television pilotsCameo By Night, featuring Sela Ward; Brand New Life, which has been described as being similar to The Brady Bunch; Copter Cop, a science fiction series that was hampered by Tartikoff's injuries after a car accident; and Cool Culture, influenced by Carter's passion for surfing and experience with Surfing Magazine.Template:Sfn During this time Carter would also work as a producer on Rags to Riches, a job he accepted in order to learn more about producing a series.Template:Sfn

Peter Roth, at that time the president of Stephen J. Cannell Productions, obtained a copy of Carter's pilot script for Cool Culture, and although the series was never picked up, Roth was interested in hiring Carter to work on the CBS series Palace Guard. However, Roth would soon leave Cannell Productions to work for Fox as the head of its television production wing. Carter was among the first wave of new staff hired by Roth in 1992 to develop material for the network,Template:Sfn and he began work on a series based on his own childhood fondness for The Twilight Zone, Night Gallery and Kolchak: The Night Stalker.Template:Sfn

The X-Files and success

A man speaking into a microphone
Carter in July 2013

Carter's new series would take its stylistic inspiration from Kolchak, while thematically reflecting his experiences growing up during the Watergate scandal. Carter also drew inspiration from his friend John E. Mack's survey of American beliefs in ufology, which indicated that Template:Nowrap of the population believed they had been abducted by aliens.Template:Sfn Roth warmed to the idea upon hearing of the influence of Kolchak, believing that vampires—one of the central antagonists of the original series—would be popular with audiences given the interest being shown in the upcoming film Interview with the Vampire, although Carter insisted on an extraterrestrial-focused series.Template:Sfn However, Carter had never been interested in science fiction before this point, professing to have briefly read one novel each by Ursula K. Le Guin and Robert A. Heinlein.Template:Sfn Basing his characters instead on those found in the English television series The Avengers, Carter took an eighteen-page treatment for his new project—by now titled The X-Files—to a pitch meeting at Fox, where it was soon rejected.Template:Sfn With the help of Roth, Carter was able to arrange a second pitch meeting, at which the network reluctantly agreed to greenlight a pilot for the series.Template:Sfn

After finding the series' two starring leads in Gillian Anderson and David Duchovny,Template:Sfn Carter was given a budget of Template:Nowrap to produce a pilot episode.Template:Sfn The series aired on Friday nights on the Fox network, being broadcast in tandem with The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. in what was perceived to be an unpopular timeslot. The series earned relatively impressive Nielsen ratings for its Friday timeslot, and was given a full twenty-four episode order.Template:Sfn The series' popularity and critical acclaim built over the course of its second and third seasons, and saw it earning its first Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series – Drama and breaking the record for highest price paid by a network for rights to air re-runs, fetching $600,000 per episode from Fox's sister network FX.Template:Sfn After Carter's initial three-year signing for Fox had ended, the success of the series allowed him to negotiate a five-year contract with several additional perks, including the guarantee of a feature film adaptation to be produced by the parent company's film studio, and the greenlighting of Carter's next television project.Template:Sfn In March 2015, it was confirmed that Carter was set to executive produce and write for the revival of The X-Files,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> which was set for a six-episode event series.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2017 it was announced that The X-Files would return to Fox with a ten-episode season 11, with Carter set to executive produce and write.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Both Gillian Anderson and David Duchovny returned, as well as veteran writers Glen Morgan, Darin Morgan, and Jim Wong, and newcomers Gabe Rotter, Benjamin Van Allen, and Brad Follmer.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The eleventh season has received generally positive if somewhat lukewarm reviews from critics,<ref>Template:Citation</ref> but ratings fell dramatically, and Gillian Anderson has stated she will not play Scully again.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In August 2020, Fox announced that an animated comedy spin-off series was in development.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In October 2020, Chris Carter said: "I always thought there would be even more X-Files." He admitted that continuing the series at this point with Duchovny and Anderson is unlikely, but has plans to continue the franchise with an upcoming animated spinoff. "Being that Gillian has decided to move on with her career, we certainly couldn't do Mulder and Scully again. But that's not to say there isn't another way to do The X-Files. And so right now I think the future is unwritten." The rights are now owned by Disney.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Millennium

Carter began work on a new series, Millennium.<ref name="oic1"/> The genesis of this new project stemmed from "Irresistible", a second-season episode of The X-Files which Carter had written, which focused on a sexually motivated serial killer with none of that series' usual supernatural trappings.<ref name="oic1">Order in Chaos, 00:03–00:45</ref> Carter fleshed out the basis of the new show's protagonist, Frank Black, and travelled to Seattle for inspiration for a new setting. Influence was also drawn from the works of Nostradamus, and the increasing popular interest in eschatology ahead of the coming millennium.<ref>Order in Chaos, 00:48–01:51</ref> The central role of Black was eventually filled by Lance Henriksen, and the series began airing in the Friday timeslot formerly occupied by The X-Files.Template:Sfn "Pilot", the début episode, was heavily promoted by Fox, and brought in over a quarter of the total audience during its broadcast.<ref name="Variety">Template:Cite magazine</ref>

The series also attracted a high degree of critical appraisal, earning a People's Choice Award for "Favorite New TV Dramatic Series" in its first year.<ref name="people">Template:Cite web</ref> At the beginning of the second season, Carter handed over control of the series to Glen Morgan and James Wong, with whom he had previously worked on both MillenniumTemplate:'s first season and several seasons of The X-Files.<ref name="fall">Template:Cite news Template:Subscription required</ref> Despite its promising start, however, ratings for Millennium after the pilot remained consistently low, and it was cancelled after three seasons.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Feature films

During the production of the fourth season of The X-Files, work on the first feature film adaptation of the series began. Also titled The X-Files, Carter initially began a treatment for the script over Christmas holidays in Hawaii in 1996. Series producer Frank Spotnitz collaborated on the story outline at this time. Carter would later return to Hawaii for a ten-day stint in 1997 to begin fleshing out the finished script.Template:Sfn Carter appointed frequent series director Rob Bowman as director of the film,Template:Sfn which went on to feature many of the series' regular cast, including Duchovny, Anderson, Mitch Pileggi and William B. Davis.Template:Sfn

The X-Files premiered on June 19, 1998, eventually making a worldwide gross of $189 million,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and received mixed reviews.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Ten years after the success of the first film, and six years after The X-Files final season had finished, Carter would both write and direct a second feature film, titled The X-Files: I Want to Believe.<ref name="iwtb">Template:Cite web</ref> Filmed in British Columbia,<ref name="Province">Template:Cite news</ref> I Want To Believe was released on July 25, 2008;<ref name="iwtb"/> eventually grossing $68,369,434 worldwide.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The film received generally negative reviews from critics.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Other work

Carter has had several brief cameo roles as an actor — first appearing in The X-FilesTemplate:' "Anasazi" as an FBI agent;<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> before portraying a member of a film audience in "Hollywood A.D.", a later episode of the same series.Template:Sfn Carter also made a brief appearance in "Three Men and a Smoking Diaper", an episode of The Lone Gunmen.<ref>Template:Cite episode</ref>

In 1999, Carter began adapting the comic book series Harsh Realm as a television show. Carter's friend and frequent collaborator Daniel Sackheim had optioned the comics for adaptation in 1996. However, when the series first aired on October 8, 1999, the comics' writers Andrew Paquette and James Hudnall were given no writing credits for the work; the two then filed suit against Fox to be credited for their work.<ref name="fight">Template:Cite web Template:Subscription required</ref> Harsh Realm received disappointing viewing figures,<ref name="fight"/> and was cancelled after only three episodes had been broadcast.<ref>Template:Cite web Template:Subscription required</ref>

Two years later, Carter launched a spin-off of The X-Files titled The Lone Gunmen, a series centred on three minor characters from the former series.<ref>Template:Cite web Template:Subscription required</ref> The Lone Gunmen was cancelled after thirteen episodes, later receiving a coda in the form of a crossover episode with The X-Files.Template:Sfn Carter has since been involved with writing and directing the as-yet unreleased film Fencewalker, set to feature Natalie Dormer and Katie Cassidy.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> In 2011, he began working to develop Unique, a police thriller television series;<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> the project was eventually dropped before completion.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Carter next began work on the Amazon Studios television series The After.<ref name="after">Template:Cite web</ref> The pilot episode was made available for viewing on February 6, 2014;<ref name="afterpilot">Template:Cite web</ref> the series was green-lit the following month, but finally cancelled on January 5, 2015, without another episode beyond the pilot being shot.<ref name="thr_Jul12"/><ref name="aftergreenlight">Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Influences

As well as The Twilight Zone and Kolchak: The Night Stalker, Carter has spoken about the influence on his work of Frankenstein (both the Whale film and the Mary Shelley novel),<ref name="thedaughtersgrimoire.com">Template:Cite web</ref> The Wizard of Oz (1939),<ref name="thedaughtersgrimoire.com"/> Spielberg films (specifically citing E.T., Schindler's List and Munich),<ref name="ReferenceA">Template:Cite web</ref> and Twin Peaks, about which he has said, "I could have watched that show every night of the week, that's how much I loved it."<ref name="ReferenceA"/>

In addition to these cultural sources, Carter has spoken about the impact that witnessing the hypnosis, by John Mack, of an alleged abductee, and meeting alleged abductees and UFO witnesses in general, had upon his work writing The X-Files: "When I was writing about the phenomenon, it wasn’t as a disbeliever – it was as a person who wanted to believe."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Accolades

Carter's work has earned him several accolades over his career, including eight nominations at the Primetime Emmy Awards.<ref name="emmy">Template:Cite web</ref> Carter has also received award nominations for the Directors Guild of America Awards,<ref name="DGA1"/><ref name="DGA2"/><ref name="DGA3"/> the Edgar Awards,<ref name="Edgar"/> and the British Academy Television Awards.<ref name="Bafta"/>

Award Year Category Work Result Template:Refh
Emmy Awards 1995 Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series "Duane Barry" Template:Nom
<ref name="emmy"/>
Outstanding Drama Series The X-Files Template:Nom
<ref name="emmy"/>
1996 Outstanding Drama Series The X-Files Template:Nom
<ref name="emmy"/>
1997 Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series "Memento Mori" Template:Nom
<ref name="emmy"/>
Outstanding Drama Series The X-Files Template:Nom
<ref name="emmy"/>
1998 Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series "The Post-Modern Prometheus" Template:Nom
<ref name="emmy"/>
Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series "The Post-Modern Prometheus" Template:Nom
<ref name="emmy"/>
Outstanding Drama Series The X-Files Template:Nom
<ref name="emmy"/>
Directors Guild of America Awards 1995 Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series "The List" Template:Nom
<ref name="DGA1">Template:Cite web</ref>
1998 Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series "The Post-Modern Prometheus" Template:Nom
<ref name="DGA2">Template:Cite web</ref>
1999 Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series "Triangle" Template:Nom
<ref name="DGA3">Template:Cite web</ref>
British Academy Television Awards 1999 Best International Programme or Series The X-Files Template:Nom
<ref name="Bafta">Template:Cite web</ref>
Edgar Awards 1995 Best International Programme or Series "The Erlenmeyer Flask" Template:Nom
<ref name="Edgar">Template:Cite web Note: Database does not allow direct linking to results. Use the drop-down menus to select "Best Episode in a TV Series" with the "Winners & Nominees" field checked for results. Results can be filtered by year, using "1995" for both year fields will narrow results to the precise year.</ref>

Filmography

Film

Year Title Director Writer Producer
1986 The B.R.A.T. Patrol Template:No Template:Yes Template:No
1988 Meet the Munceys Template:No Template:Yes Template:No
1998 The X-Files Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes
2008 The X-Files: I Want to Believe Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes

Television

Year Title Director Writer Executive
Producer
Creator Notes
1987–1988 Rags to Riches Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:No Wrote 2 episodes, directed episode "That's Cheating";
Also co-producer
1993–2018 The X-Files Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Wrote 72 episodes, directed 10 episodes
1996–1999 Millennium Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Wrote 7 episodes
1999–2000 Harsh Realm Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Wrote 4 episodes
2001 The Lone Gunmen Template:No Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Wrote 2 episodes
2014 The After Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes Template:Yes TV movie

Footnotes

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References

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