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Scott Moore

Highest Rated: 79% The Hangover (2009)

Lowest Rated: 6% Full of It (2007)

Birthday: Not Available

Birthplace: Honolulu, Hawaii, USA

Two heads are often better than one, and Scott Moore, along with his screenwriting partner Jon Lucas, wrote one of the biggest comedies of all time, "The Hangover" (2009). Their success was nearly a decade in the making, but when the team hit, they really hit big with a comedy that launched many imitations, and a successful franchise. Moore graduated from The University of Colorado in 1989 with an economics degree, but he was fascinated by film, even though the school didn't have a big cinema department. As it turned out this was not a disadvantage, because with a smaller film division, Moore could get more hands on experience and access to the equipment. Moore's first taste of Hollywood was an intern position at Disney when he got out of school. At first he wanted to be a producer, then figured it would be more fun to be a writer. Moore and his future partner, Jon Lucas, at first wrote separately, but they did much better when they got together, realizing they had a strong chemistry that worked. Both Moore and Lucas ended working for Daniel Petrie Jr., the screenwriter of "Beverly Hills Cop" (1984), and they would eventually write a comedy that would surpass "Cop" as one of the biggest comedies of all time. Moore and Lucas got a lot of work doing uncredited rewrites of hit comedies including "The Wedding Crashers" (2005) and "27 Dresses" (2008). Then the duo heard a wild true story of a Hollywood producer who went on an insane bender during his bachelor party, culminating with the producer waking up in a strip club, having no idea how he got there, with a bouncer standing over him, furious over a large unpaid bill. It was the perfect conceit for a comedy, and Moore and Lucas didn't feel bachelor party movies had been done well before. Released on June 5, 2009, "The Hangover" was a huge runaway hit, becoming the #10 grossing film of the year, and making $467 million on a budget of $35 million, an enormous return on investment. "The Hangover" even won a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Musical or Comedy in 2010. Wary of repeating themselves, Moore and Lucas stepped away from "The Hangover" series and went on to write "Ghosts of Girlfriends Past" (2009), and "The Change-Up" (2011). The team also created the TV comedy "Mixology" (ABC 2013 -). It was another comedy about drinking, this time about five strangers coming together in a bar over the course of one evening, spread over the length of a season.

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Highest-Rated Movies

79% 84% The Hangover
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59% 63% Bad Moms Watchlist
56% 80% Savior
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32% 43% A Bad Moms Christmas Watchlist
27% 40% Ghosts of Girlfriends Past
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26% 46% 21 and Over
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26% 47% The Change-Up
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25% 47% Four Christmases Watchlist 23% 71% Jexi Watchlist
15% 42% Flypaper
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Filmography

Movies TV Shows
Name the Demon 2024 Father Joshua Matthews Actor She Walks the Woods 2019 Executive Producer Jexi 23% 71% 2019 Director, Screenwriter A Bad Moms Christmas 32% 43% 2017 Director, Screenwriter Bad Moms 59% 63% 2016 Director, Screenwriter 21 and Over 26% 46% 2013 Director, Screenwriter Flypaper 15% 42% 2011 Screenwriter The Change-Up 26% 47% 2011 Screenwriter Reparando 100% 2010 Producer, Production Design The Hangover 79% 84% 2009 Screenwriter Ghosts of Girlfriends Past 27% 40% 2009 Screenwriter Four Christmases 25% 47% 2008 Screenwriter Full of It 6% 45% 2007 Writer Rebound 15% 38% 2005 Screenwriter Savior 56% 80% 1998 Associate Producer I Shot a Man in Vegas 1995 Producer
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