Ken and Jim Wheat

Ken Wheat (born 1950) and Jim Wheat (born 1952) are an American screenwriting, producing, and directing duo.[1] Mainly known for their horror films, the brothers co-wrote the slasher film The Silent Scream (1979), as well as A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988), The Fly II (1989). In 1989, they wrote, directed, and produced the anthology horror film After Midnight. They later devised the story and co-wrote the screenplay of the science fiction horror film Pitch Black (2000).

Filmography

Year Title Directors Writers Producers Notes
1978 American Boy: A Profile of Steven Prince No No Executives Documentary film
1979 Silent Scream No Yes Yes
1980 The Return No Yes No
1983 Lies Yes Yes Yes
1985 Ewoks: The Battle for Endor Yes Yes No Television film
1988 A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master No Yes No
1989 The Fly II No Yes No
After Midnight Yes Yes Yes
1994 The Birds II: Land's End No Yes No Television films
Trick of the Eye No Yes No
1996 It Came from Outer Space II No Yes No
Rattled No Yes No
The Stepford Husbands No Yes No
1999 Free Fall No Yes No
2000 Pitch Black No Yes No

Also credited as "Characters created" in The Chronicles of Riddick franchise (second and third films, shorts and video games).

gollark: > oform.<|endoftext|>I'll try upgrading the next version, I'll have to switch to a better version.<|endoftext|>It's a shame I could switch a CC BIOS, but that's very irritating.<|endoftext|>I see. If you're running the commands directly into the sandbox, it will use a lot of logic.<|endoftext|>Well, yes, I did.<|endoftext|>Oh, you said that, and didn't do anything?<|endoftext|>But it's still running now.<|endoftext|>I have no clue what the "beware" means, because it's not really `gps`.<|endoftext|>No, the CLI is not an example.<|endoftext|>It also does random stuff, it's not helpful.<|endoftext|>It's not like it goes through your sandbox.<|endoftext|>I see.<|endoftext|>It's not like a program.<|endoftext|>Well, yes, for that.<|endoftext|>It's not really much easier to program.<|endoftext|>
gollark: So it'll be done with the 10 kilosteps I initially configured soon; I guess I'll run another 16000 or so, which should take about 3 hours.
gollark: The incredible march of technology.
gollark: (ping was in the output, blame the ineffable machinations of it)
gollark: > to have some sort of extremely powerful thing.<|endoftext|><@!341618941317349376> Are you meant to be "regular" or "regular" or something, instead of "subsidies"?<|endoftext|>Also, it seems to have been increasingly disconnected from the whole system.<|endoftext|>It seems like just saying that in the sense of "don't know how to make it", which has fallen out a lot of the time (most of which are not necessarily doing anything) and not having some sort of weird interaction which seems to have fallen out in my eyes when it's not necessary, and which I actually can't actually do anything about it for really long term calls, which need some sort of weird thing.<|endoftext|>So, I have a bunch of cases for different kinds of things, and some of the "smart" lights (with some sort of weird thing where you can't have one) and a bunch of cases for really weird reason.<|endoftext|>I think one of the most deeply nested ones seems to just be some sort of weird interaction between what happened to some network, and to some extent that some of the people involved

References

  1. Chitwood, Scott (February 18, 2000). "Ken Wheat Talks About Writing Pitch Black". IGN. Archived from the original on March 29, 2020.


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