Joseph Minion

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Joseph Minion is an American film director and screenwriter, best known for Martin Scorsese's After Hours (1985).

Born in New Jersey in 1957, Minion briefly attended NYU Film School before finishing his studies at Columbia University, then renowned for its screenwriting program. In 1984, Minion's script for After Hours was optioned by Griffin Dunne and Amy Robinson, the latter a former actress who'd appeared as Harvey Keitel's damaged girlfriend in Scorsese's Mean Streets (1973). Robinson got the screenplay to Scorsese, whose Last Temptation of Christ had recently fallen through; production on After Hours started shortly afterwards. Later, it surfaced that Minion had borrowed minor details of After Hours from cult radio host Joe Frank, who successfully sued for an undisclosed sum. Minion continued his screenwriting career with 1987's Giulia e Giulia, starring Kathleen Turner, 1989's Vampire's Kiss, starring Nicolas Cage, Motorama (1991), and On the Run (1990). As a director, Minion made his debut for producer Roger Corman with 1987's Daddy's Boys, said to have been thrown together at the last minute to make use of standing sets for Big Bad Mama II. His last outing as director was for another low-budget feature, Trafficking (1999).

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