Neal H. Moritz is an American film and television producer who was born on June 6, 1959. After graduating from college at Westwood, he earned a master's degree in 1985, which led to a startup of his own production company Neal Moritz Productions. He had a production deal with Paramount Pictures. The first movie he produced is
Framed (1990)In 1990, Moritz partnered with ex-United Artists employee
David Heyman to start out Moritz-Heyman Productions. The two men have collaborated on films
Juice (1992),
The Stƶned Age (1994) and
Blind Justice (1994). Additionally, it partnered with commercial producer
Bruce Mellon to start out Original Film in 1993, to produce commercials and music videos. After Heyman left, he signed a production deal with Columbia Pictures in 1996, after a brief deal with 20th Century Fox expired.
Through his Original Film company, he produced two films in 1997, the disaster film
Volcano (1997) and the slasher film
I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997). The success of the latter saw him producing a sequel
I Still Know What You Did Last Summer (1998), as well as various slashers like
Urban Legend (1998) and
Urban Legends: Final Cut (2000), as well as
Soul Survivors (2001).
In 1998, he produced the TV movie
The Rat Pack (1998) for HBO, which marked for the first time seeing him working with director
Rob Cohen. On the same year, his Original Film company signed a deal with Newmarket Capital Group to produce lower budget films. Through his deal with Newmarket, he oversaw the teen fins
Cruel Intentions (1999) and
The Skulls (2000), both of them received two direct-to-video sequels. In 1999, his first foray on TV was the show
Shasta McNasty (1999), and at the same time he made its foray onto the comedy market with the films
Blue Streak (1999) and
Held Up (1999).
In 2001, after years of making teen films, he made its first foray by producing the action film
The Fast and the Furious (2001), which marked the first time he ever met him with star
Vin Diesel. The success of the film spawned many sequels and many imitators like
xXx (2002),
S.W.A.T. (2003) and
Torque (2004). In 2002, he partnered with agent
Marty Adelstein in launching the management company Original, and they spawned a division Original Television, of which signed a deal with 20th Century Fox Television. His venture produced
Tru Calling (2003),
Point Pleasant (2005) and the most successful of all time,
Prison Break (2005) and it went defunct in 2004.
He continued making films from the time period, including
Stealth (2005),
Gridiron Gang (2006),
Click (2006) (with friend and rival Columbia affiliated producer
Adam Sandler),
I Am Legend (2007),
Vantage Point (2008),
The Bounty Hunter (2010) and
The Green Hornet (2011) (with friend and the up and coming team of writers
Seth Rogen and
Evan Goldberg), while working on "Fast & Furious" sequels. In 2006, Original Film reactivated TV production by signing a deal with Sony Pictures Television, and the following year he made its first foray onto family films,
Evan Almighty (2007). In 2012, he worked with MGM and Columbia on
21 Jump Street (2012) and it's sequel
22 Jump Street (2014).
His TV work with Sony Pictures Television included the shows
The Big C (2010) and
Save Me (2013). In 2015, he produced the most successful family film of all time,
Goosebumps (2015) with Sony Pictures Animation, which was followed up in 2018 by
Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (2018). On the same year, he acquired the rights to Valiant Comics, resulting in the creation of
Bloodshot (2020). In 2017, Moritz signed a film production deal with Paramount Pictures (which Moritz worked with it back in the 1980s). His first film with Paramount was
Sonic the Hedgehog (2020). He continued to produce TV shows for Sony, like
Preacher (2016),
S.W.A.T. (2017) and
The Boys (2019), and for Universal, the show
Happy! (2017).
He was currently in post-production on the film
F9: The Fast Saga (2021), which is scheduled for release on Memorial Day 2021, which changed from release dates many times during the COVID-19 pandemic.