So that made me look it up. Not being a fan or anything but enjoying production stories. The credited writers are very interesting as is how long this thing was in production. In 2008, Dreamworks acquired the rights to produce a Ghost In The Shell adaption, apparently on Spielberg's interest. (There was, iirc from that Dreamworks rise and fall book I read, a period where he watched a bunch of anime with one of his sons and had Dreamworks buy up the rights to them which he did nothing with.)
By October 2009 one of the credited writers, Jamie Moss was already off the film after having done a screenplay that much survives in the final film I assume in that time or he wouldn't have a credit. In January 2014, Rupert Sanders was hired as director and he brought in William Wheeler, another credited writer, who has said he worked on it for a year and half and indicated that he was not the final writer and was given three prior drafts.
They originally were talking to Margot Robbie for the lead, but when she signed to do
Whiskey Tango Foxtrot and
Suicide Squad they responded with the $10 million offer to Scarlett. (Ultimately it took another year and a half before they were ready to even begin production so Robbie would have been available and coming off
Suicide Squad, although she's also problematically white and
extra so in
Suicide Squad.)
Now I digress in all this because wikipedia no longer mentions any other writers, though Wheeler indicates at least six people took a crack at it. In the end, him, Moss and one other person were determined by the Guild for credit: Ethen Kruger.
Ethan Kruger has a fun writer credit resume:
Dumbo (screenplay) (filming)
The Talisman (screenplay) (announced)
2017 Ghost in the Shell (screenplay by)
2014 Transformers: Age of Extinction (written by)
2014 Tin Man (TV Movie)
2011 Transformers: Dark of the Moon (written by)
2009 Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (written by)
2007 Blood and Chocolate (screenplay)
2005 The Brothers Grimm (written by)
2005 The Skeleton Key (written by)
2005 The Ring Two (written by)
2005 Rings (Video short) (written by)
2002 The Ring (screenplay)
2001 Impostor (screenplay)
2000 Reindeer Games (written by)
2000 Scream 3 (written by)
1999 New World Disorder (written by)
1999 Arlington Road (written by)
1998 Killers in the House (TV Movie) (written by)
As a further aside, apparently Disney who had first right refusal to outstanding Dreamworks films started before 2015 just gave this to Universal and Paramount, for free after seeing it. And Paramount didn't screen it for critics either. (Wikipedia also notes that Scarlett Johansson made only a couple tweets about it and before release

)
Although the film's budget was only $110 million and it made $170 million globally, Paramount and Universal apparently spent another $140-150 million on advertising, especially overseas, so it may have lost $60-90 million. It made $10 million in Japan which is apparently pretty good for the market size, and it also apparently did better with reviewers there. It totally bombed in China as it didn't crack $30 million with 75% of that coming in the opening weekend (46% of its total came from the first weekend in the US) and Chinese reviewers were apparently way more savage than American ones.

Aside from Japan, it seems to have done "best" in Australia, France, Germany and the UK.
Egypt, totally not fans. Made $33,000. Half of that in the first weekend.
Russia had the best opening weekend outside of the US and China, but almost instantly died after the first week, South Korea had a similar response, no word on North Korea's opinion.
