Roberto Orci, Writer of Star Trek, Transformers, and More, Has Died
gizmodo.com
Roberto Orci, one of the most prolific and successful Hollywood writers and producers in recent memory, died Tuesday from kidney failure. He was 51 years old. Orci is best known for his work with fellow writer and creator Alex Kurtzman. Together, the pair wrote and produced a slew of massive hits such asMission: Impossible III, Star Trek, Transformers, The Amazing Spider-Man 2, and more. Truly, there was a time when anything the pair touched turned to gold and two of the best words you could hear in Hollywood were Kurtzman and Orci. That relationship ended in 2014 which saw Kurtzman moving on to CBSs Star Trek shows like Discovery and Picard as well as directing Tom Cruises film The Mummy ,while Orci took to the beaches to help bring back Hawaii Five-O for 10 years. But even with their own newer, individual successes, their names will forever be connected. Orci and his partner basically defined an era when nerdy wasnt quite that cool yet. When the big IPs were just starting to break into the mainstream in a way that would become a second thought years later. That started in the late 1990s with jobs writing on Hercules: The Legendary Journeys and Xena: Warrior Princess. They then hooked up with Bad Robot and J.J. Abrams on shows like Alias and Fringe before graduating to the big screen with films like 2009s Star Trek and 2007s Transformers. Not the crappy sequels eitherthough they had smaller parts to play in those toobut the really good originals. For about 10 years or so it was almost like Orci and his friends could do no wrong. They even got a dream team together including Harrison Ford, Daniel Craig, and Jon Favreau to make a sci-fi cowboy film called Cowboys and Aliens. It, unfortunately, didnt live up to its standards but that was the power of Orci in that time. You expected it to be amazing because everyone involved was amazing.There were tons of other noteworthy projects along the way, such as the TV remake of Sleepy Hollow, Limitless and his original idea, Matador. And, at only 51, one would imagine there were several more decades of noteworthy projects to come. Orci had a dream career that ended way too soon. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, whats next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.
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