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Walter F. Parkes (born April 15, 1951) is an American producer, screenwriter, and media executive. The producer of more than 50 films, including the Men in Black series and Minority Report , he is the co-founder and co-chairman of Dreamscape Immersive .
- Seeking Help on All Fronts
- SLU's Jesuits Step in to Aid A Child in Crisis
- The Exorcism
- The Struggle For A Soul Reaches Its End
- After The Exorcism
- What Happened to The People Involved?
Increasingly concerned, Robbie's parents took him to see a medical doctor, a psychologist and a psychiatrist. The family also turned to a local Lutheran minister, Rev. Luther Miles Schulze, who agreed to observe their son. Schulze also saw the boy's bed shake, dishes fly through the air and furniture move of its own accord. Even after inviting Robb...
After Robbie and his mother arrived in St. Louis, on March 9, 1949, Raymond Bishop, S.J., a Jesuit teaching at SLU's Department (now School) of Education, visited the family. One of Robbie's cousins, a University student, had informed Bishop about the strange events. The young priest, acting on the advice of fellow faculty member, Laurence Kenny, S...
According to the diary kept by Bishop, after Ritter authorized the Exorcism, he and Bowdern, the lead exorcist, visited Robbie in Bel Nor nightly throughout the rest of March and into April 1949. Other Jesuits and Scholastics including Walter Halloran, William Van Roo, S.J., John O'Flaherty, S.J., and Joseph Boland, S.J., also assisted during the m...
On Easter Monday, April 18, 1949, Robbie awoke in a fit at the Alexian Brothers Hospital. Bowdern continued the rite of exorcism, placing holy items in the boy's hands and around his neck. According to Bishop's diary, the exorcist then demanded to know the name of the demon possessing Robbie. The Jesuit demanded the demon leave the boy in peace. Th...
The Archdiocese of St. Louis received a formal report on the Exorcism, closing the matter formally. Neither the archdiocese or the Missouri Province of the Society of Jesus spoke publicly about the events, to protect Robbie's identity and because the matter was finished from an ecclesiastical standpoint. In August 1949, Schulze spoke about the even...
After200 years, there are many legends and untold tales hiding in the nooks and crannies of Saint Louis University. Delve into the myths, fables, fantastic lives, moments and surprises you will find in its story with“SLU Legends and Lore.” Story based on the "SLU Legends and Lore" Bicentennial Series by John Waide, University archivist emeritus. Te...
Walter F. Parkes. Writer: WarGames. Walter F. Parkes was born on April 15, 1951 in Bakersfield, California. He attended Yale University and it was graduated cum laude in 1973. He made its first film project The California Reich (1975), which was made in 1975.
- January 1, 1
- 3 min
- Bakersfield, California, USA
Walter F. Parkes is known as an Producer, Executive Producer, Actor, Screenplay, Creator, Writer, Characters, and Director. Some of his work includes Gladiator, Catch Me If You Can, Men in Black, Men in Black 3, Men in Black II, Minority Report, The Terminal, and The Ring.
Writer: WarGames. Walter F. Parkes was born on April 15, 1951 in Bakersfield, California. He attended Yale University and it was graduated cum laude in 1973. He made its first film project The California Reich (1975), which was made in 1975.
WALTER F. PARKES (Producer) is one of today's most active motion picture producers, in addition to being the co-head of DreamWorks Pictures with his wife and partner Laurie MacDonald. Parkes most recently produced the fantasy adventure hit “Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events,” starring Jim Carrey, Meryl Streep and Jude Law ...
Walter Parkes is a producer, screenwriter, and former studio executive. He and his wife, Laurie MacDonald, ran the motion pictures division of Dreamworks Studios from its inception in 1997 until 2006.