Max Borenstein
Max Borenstein is an American screenwriter, director, and television showrunner best known for co-creating and serving as showrunner on the HBO sports drama series Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty (2022–2023) and for writing key installments in Legendary Pictures' MonsterVerse film franchise, including Godzilla (2014) and Godzilla vs. Kong (2021).[1][2][3] Borenstein grew up in Los Angeles as a fan of the 1980s Showtime Lakers basketball team, which later inspired his work on Winning Time, adapted from Jeff Pearlman's book Showtime: Magic, Kareem, Riley, and the Los Angeles Lakers Dynasty of the 1980s.[4] He attended Yale University, where he majored in English and graduated in 2003; during his senior year, he wrote, directed, edited, and starred in his debut feature film, the comedic drama Swordswallowers and Thin Men (2003).[5][6] Following his early indie work, Borenstein broke into Hollywood with the screenplay for Godzilla (2014), directed by Gareth Edwards, which launched the MonsterVerse and grossed over $500 million worldwide.[3] He continued contributing to the franchise by co-writing Kong: Skull Island (2017) and providing the story for Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019), before returning to pen the script for Godzilla vs. Kong (2021).[1] In television, he served as writer and executive producer on the AMC anthology series The Terror: Infamy (2019), exploring Japanese American internment during World War II, and wrote the Netflix drama Worth (2021) about the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund.[1] Borenstein's projects often blend historical or real-life events with speculative or genre elements, earning praise for their character-driven narratives amid large-scale spectacles.[4]Early life and education
Upbringing and family
Max Borenstein was born on June 20, 1981, in Los Angeles, California.[7] Raised in the Los Angeles area, Borenstein grew up immersed in the surrounding Hollywood culture, which sparked his early fascination with films and storytelling.[8] From a young age, he was drawn to narratives, particularly monster movies like Godzilla, fueling his passion for writing and creative expression. At age 13, as a high school freshman, he interned at Oliver Stone's production company, gaining early mentorship in screenwriting.[9] Borenstein hails from a family of storytellers described as eccentric, convivial, rambunctious intellectuals who thrived on talking, arguing, debating, and sharing tales, creating a dynamic environment that nurtured his imaginative pursuits.[9] This household emphasis on verbal and narrative exchange provided a strong foundation for his interest in screenwriting, even as it contrasted with more conventional career paths.[10] These formative experiences in Los Angeles shaped Borenstein's path toward formal education at Yale University.Yale University and student film
Borenstein enrolled at Yale University, where he majored in English and graduated in 2003.[11] Although not part of the university's film studies program, he actively pursued his interests in writing and film through independent projects during his undergraduate years.[10] In his senior year, Borenstein wrote, directed, edited, and produced the independent feature-length film Swordswallowers and Thin Men (2003) on a $1,800 grant from Yale.[11] The comedic drama starred several of his Yale classmates, including Peter Cellini in the lead role of Zak—a college senior grappling with the end of a longtime relationship and the uncertainties of post-graduation life—and Zoe Kazan as his artist girlfriend Samantha; principal photography took place on the Yale campus.[12] The film screened at festivals including the New York International Independent Film & Video Festival and earned Borenstein the Arts Prize at his Yale commencement ceremony.[11] At the New York International Independent Film & Video Festival, Swordswallowers and Thin Men won awards for Best Feature Film and Best Screenplay.[13] This recognition for his debut as a writer-director marked a pivotal achievement, solidifying Borenstein's commitment to screenwriting and directing as he transitioned from academia to professional filmmaking.[14]Career
Early professional steps
After graduating from Yale University in 2003, Borenstein returned to Los Angeles—his hometown—to launch his screenwriting career.[7] Drawing brief inspiration from the critical success of his award-winning student film Swordswallowers and Thin Men, he shifted focus to professional script development without the safety net of family industry ties.[15] In his initial years, Borenstein worked on spec scripts to build a portfolio and attract attention, navigating the competitive landscape of unsolicited submissions and informal networking. His breakthrough came in 2008 with What Is Life Worth?, an adaptation of Kenneth R. Feinberg's memoir detailing the administration of the 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund; the screenplay landed on The Black List, an annual compilation of Hollywood's most liked unproduced scripts voted by executives.[16] This recognition marked his entry into professional consideration, highlighting his ability to blend historical events with dramatic tension. The momentum continued in 2009 when Legendary Pictures commissioned Borenstein to write Jimi, a biographical drama about guitarist Jimi Hendrix, which also earned a spot on The Black List.[16] These placements helped him secure literary representation and opened doors to paid assignments, including a polish on the script for the fantasy adventure Seventh Son (released 2014) around 2010.[16] By 2013, this foundation of spec work and early studio gigs positioned him for larger opportunities, demonstrating persistence amid the era's emphasis on original material to stand out in a script-saturated market.Screenwriting for major films
Following his breakthrough in feature screenwriting, Max Borenstein took on initial assignments from major studios, including adaptations and original spec scripts that showcased his versatility in genre and drama. One early project was the screenplay for the fantasy adventure Seventh Son (2015), where he contributed revisions to an existing draft based on Joseph Delaney's novel series, focusing on crafting a mentor-protégé dynamic amid supernatural threats.[17] Although the film underwent multiple writer passes, Borenstein's involvement helped refine the balance between epic action sequences and character-driven lore, drawing from his prior experience as a script reader to streamline narrative arcs for studio appeal.[18] Borenstein also penned unproduced originals during this period, such as the Jimi Hendrix biopic Jimi for Legendary Pictures, which explored the musician's rise through personal and cultural lenses, and the sci-fi epic Paladin for Walt Disney Pictures, centering on a space-faring knight in a high-stakes interstellar conflict. These scripts, developed around 2012, highlighted his early skill in blending historical or speculative elements with intimate human stories, though rights issues and studio priorities kept them from production.[17][19] In the mid-2010s, Borenstein's process increasingly involved rewriting existing scripts for large-scale productions, emphasizing character depth within genre constraints. For the biographical drama Worth (2021), originally drafted in 2008 from Kenneth Feinberg's memoir What Is Life Worth?, he revisited and revised the screenplay over a decade, compositing real 9/11 victims' testimonies into fictionalized ensemble roles to humanize bureaucratic proceedings without sensationalizing tragedy. This iterative approach, informed by consultations with Feinberg and sensitivity to survivors, balanced factual restraint with emotional resonance, transforming a "unmakeable" story into a focused exploration of empathy and valuation.[20][21] Collaborations became central to Borenstein's workflow, as seen in his partnership with director Robert Rodriguez on the thriller Hypnotic (2023), where he rewrote Rodriguez's initial concept into a taut screenplay about a detective unraveling a conspiracy of mind control. Their joint effort integrated Rodriguez's visual flair with Borenstein's structural precision, ensuring high-concept twists served psychological tension rather than overwhelming the protagonist's arc, all while shooting on practical sets to maintain grounded stakes.[22] On Worth, he worked closely with director Sara Colangelo and producers to iterate drafts that prioritized ensemble authenticity, incorporating feedback from 9/11 advocacy groups to avoid exploitative tropes.[23] Throughout the 2010s, Borenstein's style evolved toward high-concept genre films, shifting from introspective dramas like the early Worth draft to action-oriented narratives in Seventh Son and Hypnotic, where he honed techniques for layering personal motivations onto spectacle-driven plots. This progression reflected his adaptation to studio demands, prioritizing relatable protagonists in expansive worlds while retaining a core focus on emotional truth, as evidenced by his Black List recognition for character-centric spec work.[17][24]Transition to television
Borenstein's entry into television began with his development of the 2015 Fox series Minority Report, a sequel adaptation of the 2002 Steven Spielberg film based on Philip K. Dick's short story, where he served as showrunner and wrote the pilot episode.[25][26] The series, set 10 years after the film's events, followed the precognitive siblings navigating a world without Precrime, and consisted of 10 episodes that balanced procedural crime-solving with serialized mythology.[27] His prior screenwriting experience on feature films informed the adaptation, allowing him to expand the sci-fi universe while focusing on character-driven narratives in an episodic format.[28] In 2019, Borenstein co-created the second season of AMC's anthology horror series The Terror: Infamy alongside Alexander Woo, exploring historical themes of Japanese American internment during World War II intertwined with supernatural elements and yōkai folklore.[29][30] As executive producer and writer, he contributed to specific episodes, including penning the sixth installment that delved into the emotional toll of relocation and cultural erasure. Borenstein further solidified his television presence with the 2022 HBO series Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty, which he co-created with Jim Hecht based on Jeff Pearlman's book Showtime: Magic, Kareem, Riley, and the Los Angeles Lakers Dynasty of the 1980s.[4] The single-season series, comprising 10 episodes, chronicled the Lakers' transformation into a cultural phenomenon under owner Jerry Buss.[2] This project followed his 2020 overall deal with HBO, which provided creative freedom to develop ensemble-driven stories rooted in real events.[29] Borenstein extended his television work into the streaming era as executive producer on Apple TV+'s 2023 series Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, expanding the MonsterVerse narrative through a multi-generational family saga that explored the origins and human impact of the secretive organization.[31] The 10-episode season emphasized television's capacity for deeper character exploration and timeline-spanning plots, distinct from the franchise's cinematic spectacles. Throughout these projects, Borenstein navigated the challenges of episodic storytelling, which demanded sustained world-building and arc management over multiple episodes, contrasting with the contained structure of feature films.[28] Successes included fostering collaborative writers' rooms to integrate mythology with standalone stories, as seen in Minority Report's show bible for technological consistency and Winning Time's ensemble scripting to capture historical dynamics.[28][2] He highlighted the rewards of this format in allowing richer character development, though it required rigorous oversight to maintain narrative momentum across seasons.[4]Key contributions to the MonsterVerse
Max Borenstein's involvement in the MonsterVerse began with the 2014 film Godzilla, for which he wrote the screenplay after being hired by Legendary Pictures to revise earlier drafts by Dave Callaham and David S. Goyer. His selection stemmed from prior spec script work that impressed the studio, leading to collaboration with director Gareth Edwards on a grounded reboot that emphasized scientific realism and spectacle. Borenstein and Edwards focused on balancing human drama—centered on family dynamics and military response—with the kaiju elements, deliberately limiting Godzilla's screen time to build suspense akin to Jaws, portraying the monster as a force of nature rather than a villain. This approach established the franchise's tone of awe and restraint, grossing over $529 million worldwide and setting the stage for a shared universe.[17][32] Borenstein continued shaping the MonsterVerse with the screenplay for Kong: Skull Island (2017), co-written with Dan Gilroy, Derek Connolly, and John Gatins. The film served as an origin story for Kong, reimagining him as a protector of his island realm amid human encroachment, set against the 1973 Vietnam War era to evoke 1970s adventure films like Apocalypse Now. This historical backdrop allowed Borenstein to explore themes of exploration and hubris, introducing Skull Island's ecosystem and foreshadowing connections to Godzilla's world through ancient cave paintings depicting titans. The movie earned $566 million globally, expanding the lore by humanizing Kong while hinting at a larger kaiju hierarchy.[33][3] For Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019), Borenstein received story credit alongside Michael Dougherty and Zach Shields, contributing key plot elements without full screenplay involvement. His input helped integrate additional Toho kaiju like Mothra, Rodan, and King Ghidorah into the narrative, portraying Godzilla as an alpha titan restoring ecological balance after human interference awakens ancient beings. This installment deepened the franchise's mythology by emphasizing symbiotic relationships between monsters and the planet, influencing the global awakening of titans and setting up interstellar threats. The film concluded a trilogy arc Borenstein helped architect, blending spectacle with environmental undertones.[3][34] Borenstein co-wrote the screenplay for Godzilla vs. Kong (2021) with Eric Pearson, based on a story by Terry Rossio, Dougherty, and Shields. The film explored crossover dynamics between the two icons, initially pitting them against each other due to territorial instincts before uniting against Mechagodzilla, a human-engineered threat. Borenstein introduced the Hollow Earth concept—a subterranean realm linking the monsters' ancient histories and housing other titans—resolving lore questions about their coexistence and power sources. Production faced delays from the COVID-19 pandemic, shifting the release to HBO Max and theaters simultaneously, yet it achieved $470 million in earnings and revitalized the franchise.[35][34][36] Across these films, Borenstein influenced the MonsterVerse's narrative continuity, integrating Toho's kaiju lore with modern ecological and scientific themes to create a cohesive universe where titans embody natural forces disrupted by humanity. His work established Godzilla and Kong as anti-heroes with relatable motivations, paving the way for expansions like the 2024 film Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire, though he was not directly involved in its screenplay. By 2025, Borenstein's foundational contributions have supported the franchise's evolution, with ongoing plans for further installments drawing on his established mythology.[3][37]Works
Feature films
Borenstein's feature film credits span from his student film to major blockbuster screenplays, reflecting his progression from independent storytelling to high-stakes genre epics.[1] Swordswallowers and Thin Men (2003)This 105-minute feature film, directed, written, and edited by Borenstein during his senior year at Yale University, follows Zak, a charming young man whose post-college life unravels as his relationship with his artist girlfriend Samantha deteriorates amid personal and professional uncertainties. Godzilla (2014)
As screenwriter, Borenstein contributed to this Legendary Pictures reboot directed by Gareth Edwards, where nuclear plant workers discover massive parasites awakening an ancient beast, leading to Godzilla's emergence to combat the threats ravaging modern cities.[38][39] Kong: Skull Island (2017)
Borenstein served as a screenwriter alongside Dan Gilroy and Derek Connolly for this film directed by Jordan Vogt-Roberts, in which a 1970s expedition to a mysterious Pacific island uncovers King Kong and a host of perilous prehistoric creatures.[39] Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019)
Borenstein is credited with the story alongside Michael Dougherty and Zach Shields for this entry directed by Dougherty, depicting the Monarch organization's efforts to contain Godzilla as he battles fellow Titans Mothra, Rodan, and the alien King Ghidorah; the screenplay was written by Dougherty and Shields.[39] Godzilla vs. Kong (2021)
As co-screenplay writer with Eric Pearson, Borenstein contributed to this Adam Wingard-directed crossover, where seismic activity draws Godzilla to the surface while Kong's protectors seek answers in the Hollow Earth, pitting the two iconic monsters against each other amid human conspiracies.[39] Worth (2021)
Borenstein wrote the screenplay for this Netflix drama directed by Sara Colangelo, depicting attorney Kenneth Feinberg's administration of the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund and the moral challenges of assigning value to human lives.[40] Hypnotic (2023)
Borenstein co-wrote the screenplay with director Robert Rodriguez for this thriller, following a detective investigating bank robberies who uncovers a web of hypnotic mind control tied to his missing daughter.[41])