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Tab Murphy

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Tab Murphy is an American screenwriter, film producer, and film director.

Key Information

Biography

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Murphy's theatrical debut, Gorillas in the Mist, was nominated for an Academy Award for his writing. In 1995, Murphy made his directorial debut with Last of the Dogmen and wrote the feature. Afterwards, Murphy has spent nearly ten years with The Walt Disney Company writing The Hunchback of Notre Dame in 1996, Tarzan in 1999, Atlantis: The Lost Empire in 2001, and Brother Bear in 2003. During his time with Disney, he was hired by TriStar Pictures to write a treatment to a planned sequel to the 1998 film Godzilla.[2] But due to negative reviews from critics and audiences alike, the planned sequel was cancelled. After working with Disney for a few years, he then left the company in 2006 and went to work at Warner Bros. Animation for a couple years. His work includes Superman/Batman: Apocalypse and Batman: Year One, and he wrote several episodes for the 2011 Thundercats reboot, Teen Titans Go! and Be Cool, Scooby-Doo!. While at Warner Bros., Murphy wrote the direct-to-video 3D thriller film Dark Country for Sony Pictures and Stage 6 Films, based on a short story written by Murphy, and directed by Thomas Jane. He was attached to write an animated feature directed by Kirk Wise called Galaxy Gas,[3] and a TV pilot that was sold to Legendary Pictures.[4] Towards the end of the 2010s, Murphy became involved as a writer of two crowdsourced short films: The Haunted Swordsman[5] and The Passengers, based on the Stephen King short story Rest Stop.[6] In June 2020, Murphy became attached to write a reimagining of the 1980 horror film The Changeling.[7]

Filmography

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Title Year Role
My Best Friend Is a Vampire 1987 Screenwriter, associate producer
Gorillas in the Mist 1988 Story
Last of the Dogmen 1995 Director, screenwriter
The Hunchback of Notre Dame 1996 Screenwriter, animation story
Tarzan 1999 Screenwriter
Atlantis: The Lost Empire 2001 Screenwriter, story
The Making of Atlantis: The Lost Empire 2002 Himself, special thanks
Brother Bear 2003 Screenwriter
Dark Country 2009
Superman/Batman: Apocalypse 2010
Batman: Year One 2011
Thundercats 2011-2012 Teleplay (7 episodes)
Teen Titans Go! 2013 Writer: story, teleplay (2 episodes)
Road to Slipstream 2014 Special thanks
Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! 2016, 2017 Writer: story, teleplay (2 episode)
The Haunted Swordsman[5] 2019 Short film; writer
The Passenger[6] 2020
Bobbleheads The Movie Story
Kangaroo Valley 2022 Documentary; screenwriter
The Changeling[7] TBA Screenwriter

Unproduced Features

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Bibliography

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Collaborators

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  • The Walt Disney Company: The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Tarzan, Atlantis: The Lost Empire, Brother Bear (writer)
  • Warner Bros.: Gorillas in The Mist, Batman: Year One, Batman/Superman: Apocalypse, Thundercats, Teen Titans Go, Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! (writer)

Award nominations

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Tab Murphy is an American screenwriter, film producer, and director, best known for his contributions to both live-action dramas and Disney animated features, including an Academy Award-nominated screenplay for Gorillas in the Mist (1988) and writing credits on Tarzan (1999), The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996), Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001), and Brother Bear (2003).[1][2] Raised in Olympia, Washington, where he graduated from Olympia High School in 1975, Murphy initially pursued studies in forestry and wildlife biology at Washington State University before transferring to the USC Film School to focus on screenwriting, though he dropped out after a brief period to pursue writing full-time.[1][3] Murphy's career began in the early 1980s in Hollywood, where he supported himself with jobs like working at 7-Eleven while selling his first script, My Best Friend Is a Vampire (1987), and breaking through with Gorillas in the Mist, a biographical drama about primatologist Dian Fossey that earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay.[3][1] Over the next decade, he spent ten years at Walt Disney Feature Animation, crafting stories inspired by his passion for wilderness and natural history, resulting in multiple Annie Award nominations and an additional Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Feature for Brother Bear.[2] He also wrote and directed the adventure film Last of the Dogmen (1995), which featured over 70 members of the Cheyenne tribe and drew from his early interests in wildlife.[1][4] In addition to feature films, Murphy has contributed to animated projects for studios like DreamWorks and Warner Bros., including adaptations such as Batman: Year One (2011) and Superman/Batman: Apocalypse (2010), as well as writing nine episodes of the ThunderCats reboot (2011–2012).[2][4] More recently, he received an Emmy nomination in 2023 for his work on the Netflix documentary Kangaroo Valley, marking his foray into nonfiction storytelling while continuing to divide his time between Los Angeles and remote natural settings like Jackson Hole and the Canadian Rockies.[1][4]

Biography

Early life and education

Tab Murphy was raised in Olympia, Washington, in the historic South Water Street District near the state capitol. At age 14, he served as a senate page and attended a Bigfoot Rally on the state capitol steps, sparking a lifelong interest in Sasquatch.[5] He attended Lincoln Elementary School, Washington Middle School, and Olympia High School, graduating in 1975.[5] Growing up in the Pacific Northwest fostered his deep interest in the outdoors, including camping, fishing, backpacking, and wildlife observation.[4] Murphy initially enrolled at Washington State University, where he majored in forestry and wildlife biology, aspiring to become a wildlife biologist or park ranger.[6][3] This academic focus reflected his passion for natural history and environmental themes, drawing inspiration from wildlife and adventure narratives.[4] During his time there, he experienced an existential shift toward storytelling, leading him to transfer to the University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts in his sophomore year to study directing and screenwriting.[6][5] After dropping out of USC to pursue screenwriting full-time, Murphy took early jobs to support himself, including working at a 7-Eleven convenience store in Los Angeles, which contributed to his grounded perspective on perseverance in creative pursuits.[3] These formative experiences in science and the natural world informed his later emphasis on environmentalism, as seen in projects like Gorillas in the Mist.[4]

Career overview

Tab Murphy began his professional career in 1987 as a screenwriter and associate producer on the comedy-horror film My Best Friend Is a Vampire, marking his entry into the film industry. This initial project laid the groundwork for his storytelling approach, blending humor with supernatural elements. His breakthrough came the following year with Gorillas in the Mist (1988), which served as his theatrical debut and earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay, solidifying his reputation for crafting emotionally resonant, character-driven narratives inspired by real-world conservation themes. In 1995, Murphy made his directorial debut with Last of the Dogmen, a film that integrated his early studies in forestry and wildlife biology into a narrative exploring human-nature connections in the American West.[4] From 1996 to 2006, Murphy held a significant tenure at The Walt Disney Company, where he contributed as a screenwriter to several prominent animated feature films, honing his skills in family-oriented storytelling during a pivotal era for Disney animation.[6] Following this period, he transitioned to Warner Bros. Animation in 2006, focusing on adaptations of DC Comics properties and animated television series, which expanded his portfolio into superhero genres and episodic formats.[7] In recent years, Murphy has pursued independent projects, including writing crowdsourced short films such as adaptations of Stephen King stories, alongside documentary work like the 2022 wildlife film Kangaroo Valley.[8] His ongoing evolution is evident in a forthcoming 2025 short documentary, How AI Can Prevent a Global Food Crisis, addressing contemporary issues at the intersection of technology and sustainability. Spanning from 1987 to the present, Murphy's career reflects a dynamic progression from live-action screenwriting and directing to animation, and now to diverse independent formats emphasizing thematic depth.

Film and television credits

Feature films

Tab Murphy's early work in feature films focused on live-action projects that blended genres such as horror-comedy, biography, and adventure, often drawing from his interests in wildlife and human-nature conflicts. His screenwriting and producing roles in these films established his reputation for crafting narratives with emotional depth and environmental themes. In 1987, Murphy made his feature film debut as screenwriter and associate producer on My Best Friend Is a Vampire, a teen horror-comedy directed by Jimmy Huston. The film centers on a high school student navigating friendship and supernatural mishaps after his best friend turns into a vampire, blending humor with light horror elements in a low-budget production starring Robert Sean Leonard and Cheryl Pollak.[9] Murphy's breakthrough came in 1988 with the story credit for Gorillas in the Mist, a biographical drama directed by Michael Apted and starring Sigourney Weaver as primatologist Dian Fossey. The film depicts Fossey's efforts to protect endangered mountain gorillas in Rwanda, adapting her autobiography and emphasizing conservation challenges. For this work, Murphy shared an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay with Anna Hamilton Phelan at the 61st Academy Awards. His background in wildlife education contributed to the film's authentic portrayal of ecological advocacy.[4] In 1995, Murphy expanded his role by writing and directing Last of the Dogmen, an adventure drama exploring themes of cultural preservation and discovery. The story follows a bounty hunter (Tom Berenger) and anthropologist (Barbara Hershey) who uncover a hidden community of Cheyenne tribe members surviving in the Montana wilderness, long thought extinct. This marked Murphy's directorial debut and received praise for its scenic cinematography and respectful depiction of Native American heritage, though it achieved modest box office success.[10] Murphy returned to screenwriting in 2009 for Dark Country, a noir thriller directed by Thomas Jane and based on Murphy's own short story. Filmed in digital 3D, the film follows a newlywed couple (Thomas Jane and Lauren German) whose desert honeymoon turns nightmarish after encountering a mysterious stranger, incorporating psychological tension and visual effects to heighten its suspense. Released directly to video after a limited 3D theatrical run, it showcased Murphy's versatility in adapting personal material to the thriller genre.[11] In 2020, Murphy wrote the screenplay for The Passenger, a psychological thriller short film directed by Alexander Bruckner as part of a collaborative project adapting Stephen King's short story "Rest Stop." The narrative tracks two friends whose late-night rest stop encounter spirals into paranoia and danger, starring Ben Dahlhaus, Andrew Garrett, and Gaelle Gillis. Though concise at around 20 minutes, it highlights Murphy's skill in condensing high-stakes tension for intimate storytelling.

Animated projects and television

Tab Murphy's contributions to animated projects began prominently with his tenure at Disney, where he played a key role in developing several feature-length animated films. For The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996), Murphy served as the animation story writer and co-screenwriter, adapting Victor Hugo's classic novel Notre-Dame de Paris into a musical tale exploring themes of prejudice, redemption, and societal outcasts set in 15th-century Paris.[12] His work on Tarzan (1999) involved co-writing the screenplay, offering a modern reinterpretation of Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan of the Apes that emphasized family bonds and human-animal connections through innovative "staircase" animation techniques.[13] Murphy continued this collaboration with Disney on Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001), where he wrote the screenplay and contributed to the story, crafting a science-fiction adventure loosely inspired by Jules Verne's exploratory novels like Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, following a team's quest to uncover the mythical underwater city.[14][15] In Brother Bear (2003), he co-wrote the screenplay for this environmental-themed story about a young Inuit boy's transformation into a bear, highlighting lessons on brotherhood, nature's balance, and indigenous perspectives.[16] Murphy also contributed the story for the animated feature Bobbleheads: The Movie (2020), a family adventure involving bobblehead toys coming to life to save their owner. Transitioning to direct-to-video animated features for Warner Bros. Animation, Murphy adapted DC Comics storylines into screenplays that captured the essence of superhero lore. He wrote the screenplay for Superman/Batman: Apocalypse (2010), a direct adaptation of the "Supergirl from Krypton" arc by Jeph Loeb and Michael Turner, centering on Superman and Batman's alliance against Darkseid's invasion involving Kara Zor-El's arrival on Earth.[17] The following year, Murphy penned the screenplay for Batman: Year One (2011), faithfully adapting Frank Miller's influential 1987 graphic novel, which chronicles Bruce Wayne's early days as Batman alongside detective Jim Gordon's fight against Gotham's corruption.[18] Murphy extended his animation work into episodic television, contributing teleplays to reboots and comedic series produced by Warner Bros. Animation. For the ThunderCats reboot (2011–2012), he wrote nine episodes, including "Journey to the Tower of Omens" and "Native Son," helping reimagine the 1980s action series with deeper character arcs and mythological elements in a fantasy world threatened by ancient evils.[6] In Teen Titans Go! (2013), Murphy provided story and teleplay for two episodes—"Driver's Ed" and "Parasite"—infusing the superhero parody with humorous takes on team dynamics and everyday teen challenges. He later wrote two episodes for Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! (2016–2017), the modern iteration of the mystery-solving franchise, including "Saga of the Swamp Beast" and "World of Witchcraft," blending slapstick comedy with supernatural investigations.[19] Looking ahead, Murphy is attached as screenwriter to a reimagining of the 1980 horror classic The Changeling, announced in June 2020 and set in Ireland, where a grieving musician confronts supernatural forces in his childhood home following his daughter's death.[20]

Unproduced and other works

Tab Murphy contributed a story treatment for Godzilla 2, an unproduced sequel to the 1998 Godzilla film directed by Roland Emmerich. Commissioned in late 1998, the treatment expanded the narrative to include multiple kaiju threats and a global scale, building on the original's baby Godzilla subplot, but the project was shelved in 1999 amid creative disputes between Emmerich, producer Dean Devlin, and TriStar Pictures following the first film's underwhelming box office and critical reception.[21] Murphy also wrote the screenplay for Galaxy Gas, an unproduced 2D hand-drawn animated feature originally conceived as live-action. Directed by Kirk Wise and involving Disney alumni such as animators from Beauty and the Beast, the project centered on a teenager discovering his father's secret alien alliances at a remote gas station; a sizzle reel was completed in 2014 to demonstrate hand-drawn animation's potential, but it failed to secure studio funding and was abandoned.[22] In the realm of shorter formats, Murphy penned the script for the 2019 short film The Haunted Swordsman, a bunraku puppetry production directed by Kevin McTurk. This 16-minute supernatural tale of a ronin seeking vengeance with a cursed severed head companion formed part of McTurk's collaborative Spirit Cabinet online series, blending practical effects and animation for festival screenings.[23]

Writing outside film

Bibliography

Tab Murphy's published writings outside of screenplays are limited but notable for their contributions to horror literature and graphic storytelling. His untitled short story, a concise horror narrative centered on a newlywed couple encountering supernatural terror in the Nevada desert, was first published in prose form as part of the 2012 graphic novel Dark Country. This original work served as the foundational text for the 2009 feature film adaptation directed by Thomas Jane.[24] In 2012, Murphy collaborated on Dark Country, a digital graphic novel published by Raw Studios and illustrated by Thomas Ott. This adaptation expands the short story's elliptical horror elements into a visually intense psycho-noir tale, utilizing Ott's signature scratchboard technique to evoke isolation and dread across 70 pages of sequential art. The project integrates Murphy's prose directly, reprinting the full short story alongside production insights and essays on its thematic influences from classic film noir and EC Comics-style suspense.[25][26]

Documentaries and shorts

Tab Murphy has extended his screenwriting expertise into documentaries and short films, often drawing on his early studies in wildlife biology to explore themes of conservation, technology, and human-nature interactions. His work in this area highlights a shift toward non-fiction storytelling that combines narrative craft with real-world issues, particularly environmental challenges. In 2022, Murphy served as screenwriter for Kangaroo Valley, a Netflix nature documentary directed by Kylie Stott and produced by Ample Nature.[27] The film follows the coming-of-age journey of a young kangaroo joey named Mala in a secluded Australian valley, emphasizing survival amid threats from predators like dingoes and environmental pressures.[4] Narrated by Sarah Snook, it showcases Murphy's ability to infuse documentary footage with dramatic tension, underscoring conservation efforts in fragile ecosystems.[28] This project reflects his passion for wildlife, rooted in his undergraduate focus on forestry and biology. Murphy's involvement in short-form content includes the original stop-motion puppet film The Haunted Swordsman (2019), directed by Kevin McTurk, featuring voice talents like Jason Scott Lee, James Hong, and Christopher Lloyd.[23] Set in a mythical world of demons and spirits, the 20-minute short depicts a samurai's quest for vengeance alongside a cursed severed head, blending horror with intricate animation funded through Kickstarter. He also wrote The Passenger (2020), a psychological thriller directed by Alexander Bruckner that adapts Stephen King's short story "Rest Stop" and explores a tense late-night encounter between two friends at a roadside stop.[29] At 18 minutes, this collaborative effort highlights Murphy's skill in condensing suspenseful narratives for brief formats.[30] More recently, in 2025, Murphy wrote the short documentary How AI Can Prevent a Global Food Crisis, produced by Cointelegraph. This piece examines AI-driven innovations in agriculture, such as predictive analytics and automated farming, as solutions to feeding a growing population amid climate challenges.[31] It ties into broader themes of technological intervention in environmental crises, aligning with Murphy's interest in biology-informed storytelling.

Professional relationships

Key collaborators

Tab Murphy has frequently collaborated with Disney animation directors, including Kevin Lima on the 1999 feature Tarzan, where Murphy contributed to the screenplay alongside Bob Tzudiker and Noni White. He also worked repeatedly with the directing duo Gary Trousdale and Kirk Wise, co-writing the screenplay for The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) with Irene Mecchi, Tzudiker, and White, and writing the screenplay for Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001), both directed by Trousdale and Wise.[32] In live-action projects, Murphy's directorial debut Last of the Dogmen (1995), which he also wrote, starred Tom Berenger as bounty hunter Lewis Gates and Barbara Hershey as anthropologist Lillian Sloan, marking notable partnerships in a story blending Western adventure and cultural themes. Murphy extended his animation work to DC Universe projects, collaborating with executive producer Bruce Timm on Superman/Batman: Apocalypse (2010) and Batman: Year One (2011), both of which he scripted, drawing on Timm's oversight of the DC animated film initiative.[33][34] More recently, in documentary filmmaking, Murphy partnered with director Kylie Stott on the Netflix nature feature Kangaroo Valley (2022), where he provided the screenplay for Stott's coming-of-age narrative about a young kangaroo, produced by Ample Nature and emphasizing environmental storytelling. In 2025, he wrote the short film How AI Can Prevent a Global Food Crisis.[35][4][7]

Studio affiliations

Tab Murphy began his screenwriting career with early collaborations alongside independent producers, notably on Gorillas in the Mist (1988), produced by The Guber-Peters Company and distributed by Universal Pictures in the United States and Warner Bros. internationally, and Last of the Dogmen (1995), produced by Carolco Pictures and distributed by Savoy Pictures.[36][37] These projects allowed Murphy to establish his narrative style in adventure and wildlife-themed stories before transitioning to larger studio environments. From 1995 to approximately 2006, Murphy maintained a significant affiliation with The Walt Disney Company, contributing to four major animated features during this decade-long multiproject engagement at Walt Disney Feature Animation.[2] This period shaped his output toward family-oriented narratives, as seen in films like The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996), Tarzan (1999), Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001), and Brother Bear (2003), all produced by Walt Disney Pictures.[38] Following his Disney tenure, Murphy joined Warner Bros. Animation around 2006, where he focused on superhero adaptations within the DC Comics universe, including direct-to-video animated films such as Superman/Batman: Apocalypse (2010) and Batman: Year One (2011).[38] This affiliation expanded his work into television animation, with contributions to series like Thundercats and DC-related projects, emphasizing action-driven storytelling.[7] In more recent years, Murphy has worked with independent and smaller studios, including Sony Pictures' Stage 6 Films for the 3D thriller Dark Country (2009), produced in association with Hyde Park Entertainment.[39] These engagements have enabled diverse, lower-budget productions outside major animation pipelines.[4]

Recognition

Awards and nominations

Tab Murphy received an Academy Award nomination in 1989 for Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium for his story contribution to Gorillas in the Mist, shared with Anna Hamilton Phelan.[40] This marked his debut feature screenplay.[41] He was also nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award in 1989 for Best Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium for the same film.[41] In animation, Murphy earned Annie Award nominations for his writing contributions to Disney features. For The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996), he shared a 1997 nomination for Outstanding Individual Achievement for Writing in a Feature Production with Irene Mecchi, Jonathan Roberts, Bob Tzudiker, and Noni White.[41] For Tarzan (1999), he shared a 1999 nomination for Outstanding Individual Achievement for Writing in an Animated Feature Production with Bob Tzudiker and Noni White.[41] For Brother Bear (2003), he received a 2004 nomination for Outstanding Writing in an Animated Feature Production, shared with Lorne Cameron, David Hoselton, Steve Bencich, and Ron J. Friedman.[41] These honors underscored his versatility in crafting narratives for family-oriented animated films.[2] The Oscar nomination for Gorillas in the Mist notably elevated Murphy's profile, opening doors to major studio projects in both live-action and animation. In 2023, Murphy received a Primetime Emmy nomination for Outstanding Nature Documentary for his writing on the Netflix documentary Kangaroo Valley.[42]

Honors and tributes

In April 2025, the Washington State House of Representatives adopted House Resolution 4655 to honor Tab Murphy as a distinguished Washington native and acclaimed screenwriter, recognizing his pivotal contributions to cinema, including his work on the Disney animated film Brother Bear and his broader lifetime achievements in storytelling that have inspired audiences worldwide. The resolution highlights Murphy's journey from studying forestry and wildlife biology at Washington State University to becoming an Oscar-nominated writer, emphasizing how his Pacific Northwest roots continue to influence his creative output.[1] A 2022 feature interview in Script Magazine paid tribute to Murphy's foray into documentary filmmaking with Kangaroo Valley, praising his ability to infuse narrative-driven storytelling with profound wilderness themes drawn from his lifelong passion for nature.[4] The piece underscores his skill in transforming raw footage into emotionally resonant tales, such as the survival journey of a joey kangaroo, while connecting this work to his earlier environmental narratives and mentorship in the industry. Murphy has received public recognition through appearances at fan conventions, including as a featured guest at GalaxyCon Austin in September 2023, where he discussed his Disney-era projects and connected with admirers of his animated screenplays. These events reflect ongoing tributes from Disney alumni and enthusiast communities, which celebrate his foundational role in films like Tarzan and Atlantis: The Lost Empire.

References

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