Sheldon Turner
Sheldon Turner (born January 31, 1970) is an American screenwriter and producer known for his work on major Hollywood films.[1] Turner's screenwriting career gained prominence in the mid-2000s with the remake The Longest Yard (2005), a sports comedy directed by Peter Segal and starring Adam Sandler, for which he received a Stinker Award nomination for Worst Screenplay.[2][3] He followed this with the horror prequel The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning (2006), co-writing the screenplay with David J. Schow.[1] His breakthrough came with Up in the Air (2009), where he co-wrote the adapted screenplay with director Jason Reitman based on Walter Kirn's novel; the film earned widespread acclaim and grossed over $160 million worldwide.[2][4] For Up in the Air, Turner shared an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay, a Golden Globe win for Best Screenplay – Motion Picture, and a BAFTA win for Best Adapted Screenplay.[5][6] Turner later contributed to the superhero genre with story credit (shared with Bryan Singer) on X-Men: First Class (2011), a prequel in the X-Men franchise directed by Matthew Vaughn.[1] His producing credits include upcoming projects, and as of 2025, he has several in development, including the screenplay for the action film Man of War (starring Samuel L. Jackson) and the TV adaptation Barbaric for Netflix.[1][7][8]Early life and education
Early life
Sheldon Turner was born on January 31, 1970, in Los Angeles, California.[9] He was raised in Los Angeles.[10] Public details about his family background remain limited, with Turner maintaining privacy regarding his parents and any siblings.[9]Education
Turner attended Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, where he pursued undergraduate studies and graduated.[10][11] Following his undergraduate education, Turner enrolled at New York University School of Law, earning a law degree.[12] After passing the bar exam, he chose to pursue writing rather than practice law.[12] This East Coast academic journey marked a departure from his Los Angeles upbringing.[11]Career
Legal career and transition
After earning his J.D. from New York University School of Law, Turner relocated to Los Angeles, where he established a career as an entertainment lawyer, focusing on contract negotiations for clients in the film and television sectors. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, motivated by a deep passion for storytelling and creative expression, Turner began transitioning to screenwriting while maintaining his legal practice. During this period, he composed roughly a dozen to fifteen screenplays, honing his craft in his spare time.[13] Balancing the rigors of legal work with writing presented significant challenges; Turner addressed them by writing longhand on legal pads to foster deep concentration and deliberately avoiding email to minimize distractions and preserve productivity.[14]Early screenwriting credits
Turner's breakthrough into screenwriting came while working as an entertainment lawyer after earning a law degree from New York University and passing the bar exam, as he began pursuing script sales in Hollywood alongside his legal career.[13] His first major produced credit was the screenplay for the 2005 remake of The Longest Yard, a comedy adaptation of the 1974 prison football film originally conceived by Albert S. Ruddy and scripted by Tracy Keenan Wynn. Directed by Peter Segal and starring Adam Sandler as disgraced quarterback Paul Crewe, Turner's version follows Crewe as he coaches a ragtag team of inmates to compete against the sadistic prison guards in a high-stakes game.[15][16] The screenplay shrewdly updated the source material to emphasize broader comedic elements suited to Sandler's style, while balancing cynical undertones with sentimental team-building arcs, potentially incorporating ad-libs from the cast.[16] Released by Paramount Pictures, the film grossed $190.3 million worldwide against an $82 million budget, becoming one of the year's top comedies and establishing Turner's knack for commercially viable remakes. Critics offered mixed assessments, praising its crowd-pleasing energy but noting formulaic plotting; Roger Ebert gave it three out of four stars, appreciating its "dogged ridiculousness" that delivered straightforward entertainment.[17][16] Turner followed with his entry into horror, co-writing the 2006 prequel The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning alongside David J. Schow, who shared story credit with him. This New Line Cinema production, directed by Jonathan Liebesman, is set in 1969 and traces the origins of the cannibalistic Hewitt (Sawyer) family, including young Leatherface (Thomas Hewitt), as they terrorize a group of motorists after a traffic accident.[18][19] Turner's plot contributions vividly depicted the family's demented motivations and escalating brutality—such as Leatherface's initiation into murder and chainsaw use—while deliberately obscuring familial ties to build unease, blending graphic violence with black humor in a tight 91-minute runtime.[19] The prequel performed strongly at the box office, earning $51.8 million globally on a $13 million budget and topping its opening weekend with $18.5 million, underscoring Turner's ability to adapt horror franchises for profit. Reception was largely negative, earning a 16% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes for rushed character development and derivative scares, though some praised its unflinching gore and pacing as a competent, if constrained, expansion of the series.[20][19] Together, these mid-2000s credits showcased Turner's early adaptation approach: faithful yet expansive reinterpretations of established properties, prioritizing genre tropes and star-driven appeal to achieve box office success amid varied critical responses.[16][19]Major works and adaptations
Turner's adaptation of Up in the Air (2009), based on Walter Kirn's 2001 novel, marked a significant breakthrough in his screenwriting career. After discovering the book in a New York Times review, he crafted a spec script focusing on the psychological impact of corporate downsizing through the lens of protagonist Ryan Bingham, a professional firer. Turner sold the screenplay to DreamWorks in April 2003, with Ivan Reitman attached as producer, though the project remained in development for several years amid studio changes.[21][22] Director Jason Reitman revived the project in 2004 by acquiring the rights, independently adapting the novel without initially reading Turner's draft, but the Writers Guild of America ultimately awarded shared screenplay credit following arbitration due to overlapping elements. Reitman's revisions personalized the story, influenced by his own life experiences with marriage and fatherhood, transforming it into a tale of self-discovery amid isolation. Key script changes included introducing ambitious young HR executive Natalie Keener (Anna Kendrick) to represent generational clashes in the workplace and free-spirited Alex Goran (Vera Farmiga) as a romantic foil who mirrors Bingham's transient lifestyle, while adding subplots like a disastrous wedding speech and a pitch for virtual firings to heighten comedic and dramatic tension. Real-life interviews with recently laid-off individuals replaced scripted firing scenes, enhancing authenticity during the 2008 economic recession. Turner and Reitman met only after principal photography, but their promotional collaboration underscored the film's exploration of human connections in a disconnected world.[23][22][24] In 2011, Turner earned story credit on X-Men: First Class, a prequel expanding the Fox X-Men franchise by delving into the origins of Professor X (James McAvoy) and Magneto (Michael Fassbender). His contributions originated from an unproduced script for X-Men Origins: Magneto, which outlined the early friendship and ideological rift between the mutants during the Cold War era, including their recruitment of young mutants and confrontation with Sebastian Shaw amid the Cuban Missile Crisis. Shared story credit with producer Bryan Singer was determined by WGA arbitration, recognizing Turner's foundational narrative elements despite subsequent rewrites by the final screenplay team. This project highlighted Turner's entry into blockbuster superhero storytelling within the Marvel Comics universe.[25] That same year, Turner penned the screenplay for The Dilemma, directed by Ron Howard and starring Vince Vaughn and Kevin James as best friends and business partners facing a crisis of loyalty. The story centers on Ronny's moral quandary upon witnessing his partner Nick's wife in an affair, forcing him to weigh the betrayal against their deep bromance while navigating professional pressures and personal addictions. Blending raucous comedy with tense drama, the film examines male insecurity, marital dysfunction, and the ethical tightrope of honesty in relationships, showcasing Turner's adeptness at layering humor over serious interpersonal conflicts.[26][27]Producing and recent projects
In 2020, screenwriter Sheldon Turner partnered with producer Jennifer Klein to form Vendetta Productions, focusing on developing television and film projects. The company quickly secured a first-look deal with A+E Studios for television development and production, allowing Vendetta to prioritize content creation under the studio's banner. By 2023, they established 100% Productions under an overall deal with A+E Studios.[28] Through Vendetta and 100% Productions, Turner has expanded his producing role on several post-2020 initiatives, including the original pitch Man of War, acquired by Paramount Players in 2021 as a potential action-thriller feature. As of April 2025, Samuel L. Jackson is set to star, with Tim Story directing.[29][30] Another key development under the A+E first-look arrangement is the Netflix drama series Stronger (working title), announced in 2022 with comedian Yvonne Orji attached to star and executive produce, centering on themes of personal resilience and community amid crisis; the project remains in pre-production as of 2025.[31] In 2023, AMC Studios began developing the drama Diligence for AMC and AMC+.[32] More recently, in July 2024, Netflix announced Barbaric, a TV series adaptation of the Vault Comics series, with Turner writing and executive producing; Sam Claflin and Patrick Stewart are set to star, and Michael Bay is in talks to direct.[8] In May 2025, Peacock greenlit Strangers, a thriller series executive produced by Turner and Klein via 100% Productions, with Leslie Mann and Gabrielle Union eyed to star.[33] These projects highlight Turner's shift toward producing unproduced pitches that emphasize character-driven narratives, building on his earlier screenwriting successes like X-Men: First Class as a foundation for collaborative opportunities. Turner's producing involvement also extends to high-profile adaptations, notably his 2014 hiring by New Regency Productions and Ubisoft to rewrite the script for a live-action Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell film, starring Tom Hardy as operative Sam Fisher. Despite initial momentum toward production that year, the project faced prolonged delays typical of video game-to-film adaptations, including script revisions, director changes, and broader industry challenges in translating interactive stealth mechanics to cinematic storytelling. As of 2025, the adaptation remains canceled following the underwhelming reception of similar genre efforts like Borderlands, marking another stalled endeavor in Turner's producing portfolio amid ongoing video game adaptation hurdles.[34][35]Filmography
Films
Turner's film credits as a writer and producer are primarily in the realm of screenwriting for feature films, with several produced projects spanning comedy, horror, drama, and action genres.- The Longest Yard (2005, writer - screenplay), directed by Peter Segal.
- The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning (2006, writer - screenplay), directed by Jonathan Liebesman.
- Up in the Air (2009, writer - screenplay), directed by Jason Reitman.
- X-Men: First Class (2011, writer - story), directed by Matthew Vaughn.
- Road House (2024, writer - story), directed by Doug Liman.[36]
- Gunner (2024, writer - screenplay), directed by Dimitri Logothetis.[37]
Television
Turner's contributions to television are centered on pilots for major networks and a single episode in an anthology series, with ongoing development work through his production company Vendetta Productions. The Advocate (2015)Turner wrote the pilot for this ABC medical drama, inspired by the real-life experiences of former talent agent Byrdie Lifson-Pompan, centering on a businesswoman navigating the U.S. healthcare system after a personal medical crisis. Directed by Michael M. Robin, the project starred Kim Raver but was not picked up to series.[39] Controversy (2017)
As creator and writer, Turner developed this Fox drama pilot, which explored a university's junior counsel handling a major campus scandal. Directed by John Requa and Glenn Ficarra, it featured Archie Panjabi in the lead role but did not advance beyond the pilot stage.[40] Acting for a Cause (2020)
Turner adapted his screenplay for Up in the Air as a one-episode script in this philanthropic live-read anthology series, directed by Brando Crawford. The episode, featuring Zazie Beetz and others, reimagined the story of a corporate downsizer confronting personal detachment. Broadcast on YouTube, it contributed to fundraising for The Actors Fund.[41] Through Vendetta Productions, co-run with Jennifer Klein, Turner has executive produced several television projects in development from 2021 to 2025. Notable among these is Wyrd (announced 2020, FX), a sci-fi drama based on the Dark Horse comic, for which Turner serves as writer and executive producer; starring Matthew Rhys as an exiled extraterrestrial adapting to Earth, it remains in development without a series order as of 2025.[42] Other efforts include the NBC sci-fi pilot Connection (2022, co-writer with Nic Sheff), focusing on alien abductions and human connections, which has not progressed to production,[43] and The Star Chamber (2020, Amazon Studios), a legal thriller reimagining the 1983 film about vigilante judges, also still in development.[44] Additionally, Barbaric (announced 2024, Netflix), a fantasy series based on the Vault Comics title, for which Turner serves as writer and executive producer; starring Sam Claflin and Patrick Stewart with Michael Bay in talks to direct, it remains in development as of 2025.[8]