Rafael Moreu
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Rafael Moreu | |
|---|---|
Moreu in 1994 | |
| Born | 1961 or 1962 Miami, Florida, U.S. |
| Died | 2021 (age 58–60) |
| Alma mater | New York University |
| Occupation | Screenwriter |
| Spouse |
Kristin Ellingson (m. 1989) |
Rafael Moreu (1961 or 1962[1] – 2021[2][better source needed]) was an American screenwriter, best known for his work in horror and thrillers.
Moreu was born in Miami, Florida, to a family who had fled Cuba in the early 1960s. He was a graduate of New York University, where he studied film and met his future wife Kristin Ellingson, whom he married in 1989.[1]
Career
Moreu wrote the movies Hackers (1995) and The Rage: Carrie 2 (1999).[3][4] For Hackers, he saw the film as more than just about computer hacking but something much larger: "In fact, to call hackers a counterculture makes it sound like they're a transitory thing; I think they're the next step in human evolution."[5] He had been interested in hacking since the early 1980s. After the crackdown in the United States during 1989 and 1990, he decided to write a script about the subculture. For research, Moreu went to a meeting organized by the New York-based hacker magazine 2600: The Hacker Quarterly. There, he met Phiber Optik, a.k.a. Mark Abene, a 22-year-old hacker who spent most of 1994 in prison on hacking charges.[5] Moreu also hung out with other young hackers being harassed by the government and began to figure out how it would translate into a film. He remembered, "One guy was talking about how he'd done some really interesting stuff with a laptop and payphones and that cracked it for me, because it made it cinematic".
The Rage: Carrie 2, which was originally titled The Curse, was initially scheduled to start production in 1996 with Emily Bergl in the lead, but production stalled for two years.[6] The film eventually went into production in 1998 under the title Carrie 2: Say You're Sorry.