John Mattson

John Mattson

Lecturer
Lawrence and Kristina Dodge College of Film and Media Arts

Biography

John Mattson wrote "Free Willy 2: The Adventure Home" and "Free Willy 3: The Rescue", two-thirds of one of the most successful live action family franchises in Warner Brothers’ history. (Siskel & Ebert called "Free Willy 3" “the best of the Free Willy pictures.”) His screenplay "Milk Money" sold to Paramount Pictures for a no-option outright purchase of $1.1 million, a record for romantic comedy specs. His screenplay, "Me", was named one of the ten best unproduced scripts by the Los Angeles Times. His pitch, "Food", sold to Fox Animation and Jan de Bont, setting a new benchmark for animated pitches. He has sold numerous original scripts and pitches, in both features and television.

As a screenwriter, he has worked for Steven Spielberg, Kathy Kennedy, Frank Marshall, Walter and Laurie Parkes, Ron Howard, Brian Grazer, Richard Donner, Lauren Schuler Donner, Lynda Obst, Madonna, Joe Dante, Michael Finnell, Jan de Bont, Lucas Foster, John Goldwyn, Sherry Lansing, David Mickey Evans, and Richard Benjamin, among many others.

Prior to screenwriting, he worked as a development executive and Story Editor at HBO, contributing to the films "And the Band Played On", "The Josephine Baker Story", "Heist", "Somebody Has to Shoot the Picture", "The Image", "Framed", "The James Brady Story", and others -- and developing projects with Robert Bolt ("Lawrence of Arabia"), Julius Epstein ("Casablanca"), David Newman ("Bonnie and Clyde", "Superman"), Alan Sharp ("Night Moves"), Frank Pierson ("Cool Hand Luke", "Dog Day Afternoon") and Christopher Reeve. After graduating from UCLA film school (B.A., Motion Picture and Television Production, with honors), he worked as a story analyst for Universal, Tri-Star, Disney, The David Geffen Company, Columbia Pictures, Amblin’, Imagine Entertainment, The Samuel Goldwyn Company, Dawn Steel Productions, Cher, Dino de Laurentiis, and United Artists, and as a transcriptionist and copyeditor for performer/monologist/novelist Spalding Gray.

In 2017, he earned an MFA in Creative Writing and Writing for the Performing Arts from UC Riverside. His short story “Figure and Ground” won the 2018 R. N. Kinder Prize for Realistic Fiction and was published in Pleiades Magazine. In 2019, he won the Los Angeles Review Literary Award for Flash Fiction for his story “Eric Clapton’s Girlfriend,” which will be published in LAR’s “best-of” annual later this year.