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Entertainment|Fri, Aug. 29 2008 09:48 AM EDT

Man Behind 'Basic Instinct,' 'Showgirls' Reveals Faith in New Book

By Josh Kimball|Christian Post Reporter

The man behind “Basic Instinct” and “Showgirls” will have his memoirs published next week to share with the world how one of America’s most notorious screenwriters turned his life around since finding God.

  • Screenwriter Joe Eszterhas
    (Photo: AP Images / Ron Schwane, File)
    Screenwriter Joe Eszterhas sits for a photo in his Chagrin Falls, Ohio, home Friday, Jan. 30, 2004. Eszterhas has traded the cliffs of Malibu, fights over script changes and a bad-boy reputation for five snow-covered acres, Sunday church services and Little League games in the Cleveland suburb. Eszterhas grew up in Cleveland after his Hungarian family were relocated from a German refugee camp after World War II.

After years of smut and violence, Joe Eszterhas says he found God one hot summer day in 2001 as he desperately battled to survive throat cancer and his addictions to alcohol and cigarettes.

“I didn’t even really know how to pray,” Eszterhas writes in his upcoming book Crossbearer: A Memoir of Faith.

“I didn’t know what to say, so one of the first things I said was ‘I’m sorry. I’ve acted like a colossal A-hole. I’m really, really sorry. I don’t deserve to be forgiven, but please try to forgive me.’”

Prior to his conversion, Eszterhas was the “Shakespeare of the Jerry Springer crowd,” writing dark, sexually graphic, and violent films like "Basic Instinct," "Jagged Edge," and "Jade."

“Eszterhas is reminiscent of Playboy's Hugh Hefner: They share the same exaggerated sense of importance, the same pontificating humorlessness about their ridiculous jobs,” wrote Slate magazine’s David Plotz back in 1998 – a decade before he became the magazine’s editor. “Hefner published pictures of naked women and believed himself a radical. Eszterhas writes movies about naked women and believes himself an artist.”

In the late 1990s, however, Eszterhas gave up the Hollywood lifestyle, and moved with his wife and four sons to a small suburb of Cleveland, where one month later he was diagnosed with throat cancer.

In their effort to prolong Eszterhas’ life, doctors at the Cleveland Clinic removed 80 percent of his larynx, put a tracheotomy tube in his throat, and told him he must quit drinking and smoking immediately.

While Eszterhas wanted to change his ways, after a lifetime of wild living, the 56-year-old Hungarian native knew it would be a struggle to do so. And it was.

In the summer of 2001, Eszterhas reached a breaking point and for the first time since he was a child, he prayed for God’s help.

"I was going crazy. I was jittery. I twitched. I trembled. I had no patience for anything. … Every single nerve ending was demanding a drink and a cigarette," he writes in Crossbearer.

After his prayer, however, he felt an overwhelming peace.

It was "an absolutely overwhelming experience," he recalled to the Toledo Blade earlier this month.

Eszterhas went from doubting if he could make it through life without tobacco and alcohol to knowing that he could "defeat myself and win."

"Frankly my life changed from the moment God entered my heart. I'm not interested in the darkness anymore," he told the Blade.

Eszterhas has reportedly turned down hefty offers to write scripts for movies with sinister plots and dark themes like the 16 other ones he wrote that made it to the screen – some paying as much as $3 million a script.

"I've got four gorgeous boys, a wife I adore, I love being alive, and I love and enjoy every moment of my life. My view has brightened and I don't want to go back into that dark place," he said.

Notably, however, four years earlier, Eszterhas had published Hollywood Animal: A Memoir, a best-selling, raw, salacious tell-all in which he described in shameless detail his sexcapades with Hollywood actresses and nasty battles with Hollywood execs. Continue >>

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  • Mon Sep 01, 2008 10:10 am Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    Always excellent to see a fellow human come to Christ.

    On another note, it is a sad fact that most Christians are interested in discussing politics (McCain's VP) rather than be excited about a conversion.

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