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  1. www.imdb.com › name › nm0040022Tom J. Astle - IMDb

    Tom J. Astle. Writer: Adventures in Wonderland. Tom J. Astle was born on 8 April 1960 in Sherman Oaks, California, USA. He is a writer and producer, known for Adventures in Wonderland (1992), Get Smart (2008) and Failure to Launch (2006).

    • January 1, 1
    • 53 sec
    • Sherman Oaks, California, USA
  2. Oct 19, 2020 · Based on the book, "The War with Grandpa" (by Robert Kimmel Smith), the screenplay was a collaborative effort by Tom J. Astle and Matt Ember. In a recent interview with Borrowing Tape, Director Tim Hill ( The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run ) gave us his thoughts on his experience working on the picture, which is now available to ...

  3. Tom J. Astle (b. 1960) is a writer who co-wrote the 1998 Sesame Street special Elmopalooza with Joey Mazzarino. Astle had a background in television sitcoms, including Dave's World, Coach, Clueless, and the Saturday morning series Fudge. He also wrote single episodes of the 1980s revival of The...

  4. So Weird: Created by Tom J. Astle. With Patrick Levis, Mackenzie Phillips, Belinda Metz, Dave 'Squatch' Ward. A preteen girl travels around the country continually stumbling over supernatural occurrences. Since nobody believes her, she posts her finds on her website, "So Weird."

    • (3.3K)
    • 1999-01-18
    • Adventure, Family, Mystery
    • 30
  5. Tom J. Astle is known as an Writer, Screenplay, Creator, Supervising Producer, Teleplay, and Executive Producer. Some of his work includes Home, Get Smart, Epic, Failure to Launch, Stargate SG-1, The War with Grandpa, The Outer Limits, and The Twilight Zone.

  6. TOM J. ASTLE (Screenwriter) co-wrote the screenplay with Matt Ember. “Failure to Launch” marks their first produced feature film project. An Emmy Award-winning writer for the children's television series “Adventures in Wonderland,” Astle has written for a veritable smorgasbord of television comedies, science fiction shows, and children ...

  7. Oct 9, 2020 · In the script from Tom J. Astle and Matt Ember, Ed’s debilitation reveals itself in the kind of reductive characterization we too often see in films: He can’t figure out the self-checkout at the grocery store, he knocks over the mailbox while backing out of the driveway, he doesn’t know how to read the news on an iPad and he ...