John Frederick Milius

John Frederick Milius net worth is $5 Million. Also know about John Frederick Milius bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

John Frederick Milius Wiki Biography

John Frederick Milius was born on the 11th April 1944 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA, and is a director, producer and screenwriter, probably best recognized for working on such projects as “Apocalypse Now”, “Conan The Barbarian” and “Red Dawn” among many others. He has been an active member of the film industry since 1966.

So, have you ever wondered how rich John Milius is, as of early 2018? According to authoritative sources, it has been estimated that the total size of John’s net worth is over $5 million, accumulated through his successful involvement in the film industry.

John Milius was brought up in a Jewish family with two siblings, by his father, William Styx Milius, who worked as a shoe manufacturer, and his mother, Elizabeth. He spent his childhood in his hometown until the family moved to California, where he attended the small private Lowell Whiteman School. At that time, John started to read a lot, and to write stories., and upon matriculation, he enrolled in the University of Southern California School of Cinema-Television to study Film, along with future notable colleagues Don Glut, Basil Poledouris and George Lucas. While in college, he made short films such as “The Emperor” (1967), “The Reversal Of Richard Sun” (1970), and “Marcello I’m So Bored” (1970), among others, and won an International Student Film Festival Award for best animation.

As a student, John was hired for the story department by American International Pictures, where he worked on such film titles as “The Devil’s 8” (1968), when he was spotted by Mike Medavoy, who became his agent. In no time he wrote the script for the film “Jeremiah Johnson”, which was sold to Warner Bros in 1970 and released two years later, starring Robert Redford, which increased John’s popularity enormously. In the following years, he wrote the script for the film “Apocalypse Now” (1979), directed by Francis Ford Coppola, and by the end of the decade, had also made his debut as a producer, working on three film titles – “Hardcore” (1979), “1941” (1979), and “Used Cars” (1980), which marked the beginning of an increase to his net worth.

During the 1980s, John moved his career to the next level, as he decided to pursue his career further not only as a screenwriter, but also as a director. Thus in 1982, he directed the film “Conan The Barbarian”, starring James Earl Jones and Arnold Schwarzenegger, which was followed by the film entitled “Red Dawn” in 1984, which he also wrote. In 1989, John wrote and directed the film “Farewell To The King”, which added a considerable amount to his net worth.

At the beginning of the next decade, John directed the 1991 film “Flight Of The Intruder”, starring Willem Dafoe and Brad Johnson, then wrote the script for a film entitled “Geronimo: An American Legend”, which was followed by the film “Clear And Present Danger” (1994), directed by Phillip Noyce, increasing his net worth by a large margin.

To speak further about his career, John wrote the 2001 film “Texas Rangers”, which was later rewritten, and afterwards started working as a screenwriter and executive producer on the TV series “Rome”, which lasted until 2007 and certainly increased his wealth.

Thanks to his accomplishments in the film industry, John was nominated for an Academy Award for writing the script for “Apocalypse Now”, and won a Distinguished Screenwriter Award at the Austin Film Festival in 2007.

Regarding to his personal life, John Milius has been married to actress Elan Oberon since 1992. He was previously married to Renee Fabri (1967-1978), with whom he has two children, and he was also married to actress Celia Kaye, with whom he has a daughter.

IMDB Wikipedia Apocalypse Now Basil Poledouris Celia Kaye Clear And Present Danger Conan The Barbarian Don Glut Elizabeth Farewell to the King Flight Of The Intruder Geronimo: An American Legend Jeremiah Johnson John Frederick Milius John Milius Marcello I’m So Bored Mike Medavoy Phillip Noyce Red Dawn Renee Fabri Robert Redford Rome Texas Rangers The Devil’s 8 The Emperor The Reversal Of Richard Sun William Styx Milius

John Frederick Milius Quick Info

Full Name John Milius
Net Worth $5 Million
Date Of Birth April 11, 1944
Place Of Birth St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Profession Actor, Film director, Film producer, Screenwriter, Television producer
Education Lowell Whiteman School, University of Southern California School
Nationality American
Spouse Elan Oberon
Children Amanda Milius, Ethan Jedediah Milius, Marco Alexander Milius
Parents William Styx Milius, Elizabeth Milius
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0587518
Nominations Academy Award for Best Writing Adapted Screenplay, Writers Guild of America Award for Television: New Series, Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Drama
Movies Conan the Barbarian, Apocalypse Now, Red Dawn, Big Wednesday, The Wind and the Lion, Dirty Harry, Dillinger, Jeremiah Johnson, Magnum Force, Farewell to the King, Flight of the Intruder, Clear and Present Danger, Rough Riders, The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean, 1941, Geronimo: An American Legend,…
TV Shows Rome, Melvin Purvis: G-Man

John Frederick Milius Trademarks

  1. Liked to say outrageous things.
  2. Films often reflect his conservative political beliefs
  3. Frequently casts Gerry Lopez

John Frederick Milius Quotes

  • [on Francis Ford Coppola] Francis is the best of us all. He has the most talent and the most daring. There are a lot of faults in Francis, but I think he’s the leader.
  • [on “The Searchers”] A lot happens in old movies. Ideas were communicated. Ford’s “The Searchers,” for example. Sure, it’s a story about a guy searching for his niece, but it’s also a movie about the family. It’s a movie about pioneering and what it is to be a pioneer, what it is to put yourself out on a limb. It’s a movie about doing your job.
  • [on “Dillinger”] I got very expensive as a writer, so I was able to make a deal with AIP, who’d have never been able to buy one of my scripts. I said I’ll write whatever you want if I can direct it. I’d have paid them to direct. I looked at the gangsters of the time, and the one that had the most appeal was Dillinger. It was a subject I never would have chosen myself, but it allowed me to show how good I could do a gunfight, make the stuff cut together, make the story hold up, and make the actors act… I like it (the violence) because it’s real. There are consequences in “Dillinger.” You rob a bank, people are going to start shooting, and people are going to get hurt and shot. They run over a woman leaving the bank because that’s what they did. They wee desperate. But you don’t dwell on it. You don’t dwell on the bullet hole and blood pulsing out.
  • [on “The Wind nd the Lion”] I consider “The Wind and the Lion” my first real movie. I approached it as a David Lean film, to do it in that style, a large epic canvas, to see id I could pull off great movements of troops. The story is even written that way. Two guys, the Rasuli and Teddy Roosevelt, yelling at each other across oceans.
  • [In a 1982 interview] It’s important to go out and do something in your life, to do something with tremendous commitment and dedication. Maybe put your life on he line to do it. It’s important. It makes you a bigger person. We’ve gotten away from this. The pursuit of excellence – that’s really one of the values I try to get into all the movies I do… It’s all summed up so well in a surfer term – ‘GGo for it!”
  • [1982 interview] I will always be disliked by the Eastern critical establishment,
  • [1982 interview] Whatever I say sounds okay when I say it, but when it’s printed, it’s awful. I end up being this terrible guy that has guns and likes to shoot hippies. They always take the humor out of what I say. ‘Milius in Jack Boots and Leather Coat Says Facism Is On the Rise!’, that kind of thing, or ‘Para-Military Group Led By Director!’
  • [1982 interview] I love “Apocalpse, Now”… That one movie justifies my career. I feel I really did something worthwhile by writing it. Even though I share credit (with Coppola) and I didn’t direct it, it’s a real piece of me.
  • Luxuries and comforts are evil for humans.
  • You know, in fact, I am not a fascist. I am a total man of the people. They are the fascists[Hollywood critics]. They’re creating the fascist society. I am much closer to a Maoist. However, I am a Zen anarchist. –In an interview with Ken Plume on ign.com
  • [on Conan the Barbarian] A feverish dream on acid.
  • Everything has style, everything’s a bit larger than life and done with mischief. That’s the way Conan is.
  • I’ve led a whole life behind enemy lines. I’ve been the victim of so much persecution. I’m the barbarian of Hollywood.
  • [on the “Do I feel lucky?” speech in Dirty Harry (1971)] I have a .44 Magnum, I love the .44 Magnum, in fact I still have the .44 Magnum that inspired that that line. The Second Amendment becomes more important every day.
  • [on Mexican drug traffickers] We need to go down there, kill them all, flatten the place with bulldozers so when you wake up in the morning, there’s nothing there. I do believe if you have a military, you use it.
  • I was watching Rush Limbaugh the other night, and I was horrified. I would have Rush Limbaugh drawn and quartered. He was sticking up for these Wall Street pigs. There should be public show trials, mass denunciations and executions.
  • I try to maintain a certain innocence toward my material. I like to say that I do what I do because I like it and that it’s not preachy. When I try to put my finger on what I have to say, it’s very vague. It’s just an attitude. As Herman Melville put it in “Moby Dick”: ‘a free and easy desperado geniality.’ That’s my attitude. Melville was talking about men rowing into the mouth of a whale with their backs to it. I suppose that’s what life is like.
  • If there hadn’t been an Arnold around for Conan, we would have had to create him”. -Muscle & Fitness magazine, July 1982
  • I love the bomb. It’s sort of a religious totem to me. Like the plague in the Middle Ages, it’s the hand of God coming out indiscriminantly to snatch you.
  • [on the violence in Conan the Barbarian being rather essential]: “It’s not that violent, although I was happy not to get an X rating. But if you said ‘Conan the Barbarian’ was rated PG, people would feel cheated. We weren’t making ‘Conan’s Divorce’, you know.”
  • [on being rejected for military service due to asthma]: “I’m a very efficient director – it’s my training in military tactics. I’ve trained my whole life to be a general but I never could. So I became the next best thing, a movie director.”

John Frederick Milius Important Facts

  • Suffered a severe stroke, and was treated for pancreatic cancer.
  • He is Jewish.
  • According to Milius, he didn’t get on to well with Robert Redford and Sydney Pollack on Jeremiah Johnson (1972) and he was fired. Milius claims that his substitute “…couldn’t write that stuff,” and the only who contributed anything was Edward Anhalt. Redford and Pollack ultimately rehired Milis after Anhalt had left the project.
  • Lost most of his fortune in the early naughts due to a corrupt accountant. Desperate to pay for his son’s Law School tuition, He asked his friend _David Milch_ to hire him as a staff writer for Deadwood (2004). Milch refused based on the absurdity of hiring a veteran screenwriter for entry-level work, and instead offered to simply pay the son’s tuition in full. Milius later repaid Milch for the loan.
  • He was partially the basis for the character of Walter in the cult classic The Big Lebowski (1998).
  • Despite making two films about Theodore Roosevelt, The Wind and the Lion (1975) and Rough Riders (1997), he considers himself too enamored with Roosevelt to ever make an actual biographical film about his life.
  • Cigar smoker.
  • Turned down the role of Jack Lipnick in Barton Fink (1991).
  • Made an honorary member of the Sioux Nation, after his filming of The Rough Riders.
  • Was the inspiration for drag-racer John Milner (played by Paul Le Mat) in American Graffiti (1973).
  • Is a close friend of MMA legends Rorion Gracie and Rickson Gracie and Jennifer Salt.
  • His favorites films are Howard Hawks’ Red River (1948), and “Viva Villa,” Gillo Pontecorvo’s The Battle of Algiers (1966) (aka Battle of Algiers), Raoul Walsh’s They Died with Their Boots On (1941), John Ford’s The Searchers (1956) and They Were Expendable (1945), Werner Herzog’s Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972) Sam Peckinpah’s The Wild Bunch (1969), Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai (1954) (aka Seven Samurai), Billy Wilder’s Sunset Blvd. (1950), Federico Fellini’s La Dolce Vita (1960), John Huston’s The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948), David Lean’s Lawrence of Arabia (1962), and Orson Welles’ Citizen Kane (1941).
  • Despite his political beliefs, he is an avid fan of director Spike Lee.
  • Considers himself as a “zen anarchist”.
  • Was Sergio Leone’s first choice to write Once Upon a Time in America (1984). But due to scheduling problems, and Leone’s struggle to acquire the rights of Harry Grey’s book The Hoods, Milius passed on the project.
  • Is one of the original founders of the Ultimate Fighting Championship.
  • Through his work, on Rough Riders (1997), he was instrumental in causing President Theodore Roosevelt to be posthumously awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for acts of conspicuous gallantry on San Juan Hill.
  • Milius, an avid gun collector, insisted that part of his payment for writing Jeremiah Johnson (1972) be in antique weapons.
  • Is a personal friend of the Coen brothers and was the inspiration for the character of Walter in the The Big Lebowski (1998).
  • Member of the NRA Board of Directors from 1995-2001. He currently serves on the Public Affairs and Shotgun Committees.
  • Wrote “U.S.S. Indianapolis” scene in Jaws (1975).
  • Wrote the line, “Go ahead, make my day,” for Clint Eastwood’s “Dirty Harry” character in Sudden Impact (1983).
  • Is an avid gun collector.
  • Attended Los Angeles City College and USC School of Cinema-Television, where he won an International Student Film Festival Award.

John Frederick Milius Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
Red Dawn 2012 1984 screenplay Writer
Homefront 2011 Video Game written by Writer
Between the Lines: The True Story of Surfers and the Vietnam War 2008 Documentary guest writer Writer
Rome TV Series created by – 22 episodes, 2005 – 2007 written by – 1 episode, 2005 Writer
Apocalypse Oz 2006 Short screenplay “Apocalypse Now” Writer
Medal of Honor: European Assault 2005 Video Game story: design team / writer: design team Writer
Rough Riders 1997 TV Series written by – 2 episodes Writer
Clear and Present Danger 1994 screenplay Writer
Geronimo: An American Legend 1993 screenplay / story Writer
Conan 1991 Video Game character Writer
Farewell to the King 1989 screenplay Writer
Extreme Prejudice 1987 story Writer
Miami Vice 1987 TV Series story – 1 episode Writer
Red Dawn 1984 screenplay Writer
Conan the Barbarian 1982 written by Writer
1941 1979 story Writer
Apocalypse Now 1979 written by Writer
Big Wednesday 1978 written by Writer
The Wind and the Lion 1975 written by Writer
Melvin Purvis G-MAN 1974 TV Movie creator / story / teleplay Writer
Magnum Force 1973 screenplay / story Writer
Dillinger 1973 written by Writer
The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean 1972 original screenplay Writer
Jeremiah Johnson 1972 screenplay Writer
Dirty Harry 1971 screenplay – uncredited Writer
Evel Knievel 1971 screenplay Writer
The Devil’s 8 1969 screenplay Writer
Glut 1967 Short Writer
The Emperor 1967 Documentary short Writer
Rome 2005-2007 TV Series executive producer – 14 episodes Producer
Uncommon Valor 1983 producer Producer
Used Cars 1980 executive producer Producer
1941 1979 executive producer Producer
Hardcore 1979 executive producer Producer
Rough Riders 1997 TV Series 2 episodes Director
Rebel Highway 1994 TV Series 1 episode Director
Motorcycle Gang 1994 TV Movie Director
Flight of the Intruder 1991 Director
Farewell to the King 1989 Director
The Twilight Zone 1985 TV Series 1 episode Director
Red Dawn 1984 Director
Conan the Barbarian 1982 Director
Big Wednesday 1978 Director
The Wind and the Lion 1975 Director
Dillinger 1973 Director
The Reversal of Richard Sun 1970 Director
Marcello, I’m Bored 1970 Short Director
The War I Knew 2014 military advisor Miscellaneous
East to West 2011 TV Series documentary program consultant – 7 episodes Miscellaneous
Lone Wolf McQuade 1983 spiritual advisor Miscellaneous
On Story 2011 TV Series Actor
The Twilight Zone 1985 TV Series Attendant (segment “Opening Day”) Actor
Conan the Barbarian 1982 Foodseller in the Old City (uncredited) Actor
Big Wednesday 1978 Marijuana Dealer in Tijuana (uncredited) Actor
Crazy Mama 1975 Cop (uncredited) Actor
The Wind and the Lion 1975 The One-Armed Military Advisor (uncredited) Actor
Deadhead Miles 1973 2nd State Trooper Actor
The Reversal of Richard Sun 1970 The Chauffeur Actor
The Lotus Gun 2015 Short special thanks Thanks
The War I Knew 2014 very special thanks Thanks
A Night at the Movies: The Gigantic World of Epics 2009 TV Movie documentary special thanks Thanks
Inglourious Basterds 2009 special thanks Thanks
Popcorn Porn: Watching ‘Zack and Miri Make a Porno’ 2009 Video documentary the producers wish to thank Thanks
Between the Lines: The True Story of Surfers and the Vietnam War 2008 Documentary special thanks Thanks
Iron and Beyond 2002 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
Dirty Harry: The Original 2001 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
The Bridge on the River Kwai: An Appreciation by Filmmaker John Milius 2000 Video documentary short special thanks Thanks
Milius 2013 Documentary Himself Self
Jewish Soldiers in Blue & Gray 2011 Documentary Narrator (voice) Self
Conan: From the Vault 2011 Video short Himself Self
Jaws: The Inside Story 2010 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Hollywood Don’t Surf! 2010 Documentary Himself Self
A Night at the Movies: The Gigantic World of Epics 2009 TV Movie documentary Himself – Interviewee Self
Hollywood Gangster 2008 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
A Moral Right: The Politics of Dirty Harry 2008 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Business End: Violence in Cinema 2008 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Evolution of Clint Eastwood 2008 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Long Shadow of Dirty Harry 2008 Video documentary short Himself Self
Between the Lines: The True Story of Surfers and the Vietnam War 2008 Documentary Narrator (voice) Self
The Craft of Dirty Harry 2008 Video documentary short Himself Self
Spec Ops 2006 TV Series documentary Series Host Self
The Searchers: An Appreciation 2006 Video short Himself Self
American Masters 2006 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Special Ops with John Milius 2006 Video documentary Himself Self
Hollywood Vietnam 2005 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
A Legacy of Filmmakers: The Early Years of American Zoetrope 2004 Video documentary Himself Self
Rated ‘R’: Republicans in Hollywood 2004 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
An Opera of Violence 2003 Video documentary short Himself Self
Something to Do with Death 2003 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Wages of Sin 2003 Video documentary short Himself Self
Discovering Treasure: The Story of the Treasure of the Sierra Madre 2003 Video documentary Narrator (voice) Self
Capturing the Swell 2003 Video documentary short Self
Go West, Young Man! 2003 Documentary Himself Self
Frazetta: Painting with Fire 2003 Documentary Himself Self
Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: How the Sex, Drugs and Rock ‘N’ Roll Generation Saved Hollywood 2003 Documentary Himself Self
Surf Now Apocalypse Later 2002 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Iron and Beyond 2002 Video documentary short Himself – Director Self
Modern Marvels 2002 TV Series documentary Himself Self
E! True Hollywood Story 2002 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Dirty Harry: The Original 2001 Video documentary short Himself Self
Conan Unchained: The Making of ‘Conan’ 2000 Video documentary Himself Self
The Bridge on the River Kwai: An Appreciation by Filmmaker John Milius 2000 Video documentary short Himself Self
Hell Hath No Fury 1999 Video documentary short Narrator (voice) Self
A Turning of the Earth: John Ford, John Wayne and the Searchers 1998 Documentary short voice of John Milius (voice) Self
Hollywood Salutes Arnold Schwarzenegger: An American Cinematheque Tribute 1998 TV Special Himself Self
Frank Capra’s American Dream 1997 TV Movie documentary Himself – Interviewee: Writer / Director Self
In Search of ‘Da Cat’ 1996 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Ben Johnson: Third Cowboy on the Right 1996 Documentary Himself Self
The Making of ‘1941’ 1996 Video documentary Himself Self
American Cinema 1995 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse 1991 Documentary Himself Self
Signals 1990 TV Series documentary Himself Self
First Works 1989 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Talking Pictures 1988 TV Series documentary Himself Self
The Lion Roars Again 1975 Documentary short Himself Self
The Making of ‘The Wind and the Lion’ 1975 Documentary short Himself Self
A Million Feet of Film: The Editing of Apocalypse Now 2006 Video documentary short Himself Archive Footage

John Frederick Milius Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
1998 Lone Star Film & Television Award Lone Star Film & Television Awards Best TV Teleplay Rough Riders (1997) Won
1994 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Theatrical Motion Picture Geronimo: An American Legend (1993) Won
1972 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Theatrical Motion Picture Jeremiah Johnson (1972) Won
1998 Lone Star Film & Television Award Lone Star Film & Television Awards Best TV Teleplay Rough Riders (1997) Nominated
1994 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Theatrical Motion Picture Geronimo: An American Legend (1993) Nominated
1972 Bronze Wrangler Western Heritage Awards Theatrical Motion Picture Jeremiah Johnson (1972) Nominated