1980s After college, Lawton moved to Los Angeles, settling near
Hollywood Boulevard and
Western Avenue, one of the areas of Los Angeles with the highest crime rate at the time. Living among prostitutes, pimps, drug users and dealers, and homeless people; the setting gave Lawton a wide range of inspiration for his stories. He wrote many screenplays while working at several post-production companies. During this time, Lawton met producer
Charles Band, for whom he would direct his first feature film.
Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death is a take-off of both
Joseph Conrad's
Heart of Darkness and
Francis Ford Coppola's feature
Apocalypse Now.
Playboy Playmate Shannon Tweed and horror actress
Adrienne Barbeau. It became a cult favorite and late-night cable staple. After
Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death, Lawton also wrote and directed
Pizza Man, a political satire about a pizza delivery man investigating a comical government conspiracy. Bill Maher also starred in the 1991 film
Pizza Man, along with comedian
Annabelle Gurwitch. In both movies, he used the pseudonym J.D.Athens.
1990s His script for the film
Three Thousand was accepted by the
Sundance Institute in the late 1980s. Executives at
Touchstone Pictures, a division of
Walt Disney Studios, became interested in making the movie. and with over $400million in worldwide box office, the movie became the largest grossing live-action film in
Disney history. Directed by
Garry Marshall, the film is a story about Vivian Ward, a prostitute who is hired by a wealthy businessman, Edward Lewis, to be his escort for one week while he is in town on business. Although they come from different backgrounds and lifestyles,
Pretty Woman and got Lawton nominated for a
Writers Guild of America Award and a
British Academy Award for his screenplay.
Julia Roberts won a
Golden Globe Award for her role and was nominated for an
Academy Award for Best Actress. Lawton was given an executive producer credit for his next original screenplay,
Under Siege, based on his million-dollar
spec script Dreadnought. The idea came when Lawton, who had served time in the
United States Coast Guard Reserve, read that the Navy was retiring the . The film stars
Steven Seagal as a disgraced
Navy Seal working as a cook on a battleship. Seagal's character must face off against a psychopathic ex-
CIA agent (
Tommy Lee Jones), who leads a group of mercenaries on a takeover of the battleship on its final voyage, so he can steal its arsenal of nuclear
Tomahawk cruise missiles. A successful sequel followed:
Under Siege 2: Dark Territory. With
Barry Primus, Lawton co-wrote
Mistress, The movie is about a Hollywood screenwriter, Marvin Landisman, whose career is going downhill until he meets a has-been hustler-producer who tries to help him revive his career. With two major studios willing to produce, the movie was put into hold due to a
MPAA Film Rating System dispute, as Lawton and Stern felt the content of the film was better suited for a mature audience, and wanted an R-rating for the film instead of a PG-13 rating. The film was put on hold, and Howard Stern included a five-page Fartman story in comics form in his 1995 book,
Miss America, which was based on Lawton's script. The book reached number one on
The New York Times Best Seller list within days of its release. For
Columbia Pictures, Lawton co-wrote the 1994 film
Blankman, a film starring and produced by
Damon Wayans. (Wayans' character is Darryla nerdy, comical ghetto superhero with a pure heart, who fights criminals in his own style.) Lawton went on to write and direct
The Hunted (1995), a thriller set in Japan starring
Christopher Lambert,
John Lone, and
Joan Chen. Written and directed by Lawton, the movie traces Paul Racine, a computer-chip executive from New York on one of his many business trips to Tokyo. Local authorities and a legendary
ninja cult get involved in an electric chase after a crime occurs in a hotel room.
The Hunted was released on February 25, 1995, and distributed by
Universal Studios. The score, featuring music by the acclaimed Japanese taiko troupe
Kodo, was formally specified by Lawton. Lawton's next film project was the action thriller
Chain Reaction, which starred
Morgan Freeman,
Keanu Reeves, and
Rachel Weisz. Filmed in
Chicago, Illinois, the movie was released on August 2, 1996, and grossed over $60million worldwide. In 1998 Lawton created and executive produced the
Sony Pictures Entertainment syndicated show
V.I.P. which ran until 2002. The adventure series starred
Pamela Anderson as Vallery Irons, a small-town girl who comes to
Southern California looking for a break, when she stumbles into the glamorous role of heading up a
Beverly Hills bodyguard agency called Vallery Irons Protection.
2000s In 2006, Lawton co-wrote for
Paramount Pictures a film based on the video game series
DOA: Dead or Alive, starring
Eric Roberts,
Jaime Pressly, and
Devon Aoki. Lawton wrote and directed the 2008 film
Jackson, a comedy-drama-musical starring
Barry Primus,
Charlie Robinson,
Steve Guttenberg,
Debra Jo Rupp, and included performances by opera singers Ella Lee, Shawnette Sulker,
Clamma Dale and others. The movie takes place on a single day involving two homeless men surviving on Los Angeles's
Skid Row. Lawton wrote two songs for the movie, "Downtown Birthday" and "Love Cannot Be".
Jackson was shot mainly in Downtown Los Angeles, except for one scene shot in
Kentucky. == Personal life ==