Showing posts with label Film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Film. Show all posts

Thursday, May 08, 2014

Movie Update: Belle, Palo Alto, The Devil Came on Horseback

I'm behind on recording movies. I know I've seen a couple that I've forgotten about..Maybe it doesn't matter, because maybe hearing someone recite movies they've watched is about as interesting as someone telling you their dreams. But here's the last three anyway:Belle_poster
Last weekend Paul offered me a date night--since game night got cancelled-- and I picked the movie. Belle.   You should go see it.  It was really good. And it was directed by a woman.  I can't name a single other mainstream theatrical release directed by a woman this year. It's May. That's a pathetic state of affairs, just by the way, but should make it easy to support films by women because you only need to do it a couple of times a year. Here's a review from the Washington Post.


Last night I watched a documentary about Darfur called The Devil Came on Horseback. Also really good. Was I saying something in my last post about counting blessings? Darfur was a tragedy of such proportions there is nothing in my life to compare to it. There are people to whom fate has only been brutal. The thing with the Nigerian girls being kidnapped by the Boko Haram also falls into a similar category, and is really on my mind of late. It's made me curious about Nigeria.  I didn't see any documentaries about Nigeria at the library, however, so pulled some about other parts of Africa.
Tonight I went to a screening of Palo Alto, a film directed by Gia Coppola based on short stories by James Franco.  I almost skipped it, disheartened by a third generations of Coppola making a movie in my lifetime when it seems unlikely I'll ever make one (or have my collection of short stories published after I'm already an international film star). But then I decided not to be a hater--and it was free, so I went, and it was sweet. I'll attach some reviews below.

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Movie Report: Tempations, 20 Feet From Stardom, The Lego Movie

I'm getting behind on my movie-tracking already.
I had an interesting job nibble a couple of weeks ago, tangentially related to a singing group from a past era.  No idea if it will manifest, but just in case, I Temptations coverwatched a couple of movies that I figured might inform either the structure or the subject matter of a hypothetical script. These were:
The Temptations: This was originally a two-mini series based on a book by founding member, Otis Williams.20 feet from stardom
Twenty Feet from Stardom: I got the screener for this documentary through the voting process for the Independent Spirit Awards. Much of it is devoted to the back-up singers of the fifties, sixties and seventies.
And finally, Paul and I actually went to a movie theater (!), and saw the Lego Movie. Many of our friends (and our niece and nephew) really loved this movie.  I thought it was okay. It would take a disproportionate amount of energy to make coherent argument of all the reasons why, but this hr_The_LEGO_Movie_10woman's review poses some interesting questions.

Saturday, February 01, 2014

Lovely and Amazing, Singles

I forgot, when writing my first "movies of 2014" post, that I had also watched Lovely and Amazing,  which is the second movie by writer-director Nicole Holocener, made in 2001 (her latest effort, is buzzing during this current awards season). The story (of Lovely and Amazing) revolves around a mother and her three daughters,  two adult, and one younger and adopted.  They are each kind of insecure and fucked up in different ways.  Each daughter has acquired some different aspect of the mother's insecurity and fucked-upness  integrated it into her own personality and functioning.  But everyone is likeable and you hope they can pull it together. It's a comedy.  Of sorts.
Lovely and Amazing is one of my friend Nikki's very favorite movies, and I had been trying to see it for a while, and while you'd think that since we have expensive cable, iTunes, Netflix-streaming, Hulu-Plus, and five library cards, it would not be difficult to do so.  In the end though, with a heavy heart, I added the lowest level of DVD rentals back onto my Netflix account.  Grrrrr.
But this is also how I also obtained another movie on my list:
Singles. This was a 1992 film by written and directed by Cameron Crowe about a group of 20-somethings and their quest for identity and love.  Most of them live in the same apartment complex in Seattle.  The movie was actually finished in early '91, but the studio didn't know how to market it until some of the  Seattle grunge bands featured in the film  became very popular nationally,  thus it was released in late '92. Some credit the film with kicking off a number of Generation X films soon after.  (All this information comes from the same Wikipedia page that I have linked to...I'm learning along with you!) You might know some of Cameron Crowe's other work, especially if you are close to my age--Say Anything with John Cusack in 1989,  Jerry Maguire, Almost Famous, and most recently, We Bought A Zoo, which I haven't seen.
The original title for this post was "2 movies, 2 books, 2 evenings." But I'm only a third of the way through, and it's time to leave for yoga. So look forward to an upcoming post about two books.  I might or might not get to the evenings.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

2014 Movies, Part I

or, Get Out While You Can...

I've noticed, and am gratified, that a few of my readers (hi Mom!) have this blog sent to their in-boxes.  That can be really good for following a blogger who is sporadic and not too prolific in her output, which generally does describe me.  But I feel I should warn you that I am having some "thoughts." Thoughts like, I should keep a record of all the movies I see this year. And maybe all the books I read this year. I could do that on my blog!  And maybe, when I have some interesting notes from a class, or little writing exercises..."
There is the possibility, of course, that everything I post will be FASCINATING. And just as distinct a possibility that I will get busy and that little of this will really come to pass, but just in case the first thing doesn't happen and the second thing does, you should know that when you start to cringe when checking your inbox, it's okay to UNSUBSCRIBE  I'm not actually sure how to do that, but I'll figure it out and write the directions in a post. I just wanted to let you know it might come to that, and say that I won't be offended...
That being said, I am off to a late start on this movie thing, I think I've probably already forgotten a film or two since the first of the year, but the ones I remember are:
HUNGER GAMES, CATCHING FIRE: Enjoyable.  Paul asked an interesting question after, which is, could it stand alone as a film if you hadn't seen (or read) the first installment?  (Screenplay written by Simon Beaufoy, who wrote (among other things) SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE, and Michael Arndt, who wrote (among other things) LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE.)
HER: Awesome. Really lovely. Written by Spike Jonze, who also directed. This is the first screenplay he's written that I love, but it feels in kinship with two Charlie Kaufman written movies that he directed and that I really like: ADAPTATION and BEING JOHN MALKOVICH.
In the Mood for Love
In the Mood for Love
IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE: Beautiful. Written and directed by Wong Kar Wai, whose work I hear referenced, but don't really know.
FALLEN ANGELS: Also Wong Kar Wai.  I'm only half way through it.
GLORIA: Just saw this yesterday as part of the Film Independent screening series for their Spirit Awards. From Chile, about an older woman who is a mother and a grandmother, who has been divorced for a decade, who works during the day and at night goes dancing at clubs and occasionally picks up a man.  She meets an older gentleman who seems to have potential, but then doesn't.  She does some other stuff too. It's a little meander-y by conventional movie standards, but I liked it.

Friday, November 29, 2013

Good Movies that Can Do Good...At the Box Office

Holiday Box Office: The Battle for the Over-35s.  This is the headline of an article I just came across from the Hollywood Reporter talking about how "adult" (and by adult, they mean age, and not porn) dramas are getting some play--at least in the two months before the Oscars.  That it seems to happen almost exclusively then, is something that bears some consideration, but I'm supposed to be writing MY adult dramedy at this moment, so I'll just link and leave!

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Weekend Recap

Had a good weekend. Friday night I made my way to the Barnes and Noble in Santa Monica to hear readings by students and faculty of the program where I'm taking classes. I was so impressed by the quality of the work, and kind of in awe that I know so many people making that work.
This happy awe became a little less pure as I wandered through the stacks of the bookstore afterwards. So many books on the shelves that I don't know how to go about choosing. I've rarely met a published book I didn't like, so I guess any of them would have been a good option, but seeing them all together like that was overwhelming. Like making your way through a throng of people after a football game. It becomes hard to see any one of so many as an individual. And then I began to feel ridiculous, thinking of how I spend so much of my life putting words on paper when there are clearly already so many good words on paper crying out to be read. And yet, when I got back to my car I couldn't stop myself from risking my twenty minute allotment of time after paying for my parking ticket to write my impressions of the evening in my little notebook for no audience at all--so maybe we can only be what we are!

Saturday was a writing day, finishing a draft of a script that has been in the works for way too long to send to my writers group.

And today, Paul and I drove to the Big Bear International Film Festival to see a screening of a friend's film. Big Bear is a kind of resort and ski town a couple of hours northeast of Los Angeles. There's a big lake, and it's surrounded by mountains--really beautiful. It was nice to get out of town, and I was delighted that the film, As High as the Sky was well-crafted and emotionally impactful. They took home the audience award as they have at many other festivals. Hopefully they will find distribution soon, so you'll have the opportunity to see it!

Got home in time to watch the penultimate episode of Breaking Bad, and do a few dishes. Finally sent a picture and bio to The Drum to go with my essay when they post it. It took me longer to send that than to record and send the essay itself. I keep planning to take the ultimate author photo, that I will feel no hesitation sending out into the world, but it just hasn't happened yet...that perfect picture is a rare commodity.

Thursday, August 08, 2013

Elysium

I saw it last night. It was "okay," but just "okay" in this case, because I had high hopes means I was disappointed. I jotted down some notes--pretty extensive ones--about the experience, which I'll probably post, once we've passed the initial release this weekend, and once I've pared them down to something approaching blog-post size.

In other news...there isn't a lot of news. I'm depressed in a kind of underlying way, which I've found is generally my response to anxiety, and there are a bouquet of items for my anxiety to touch down on just at the moment: Money is a big one--a lot of sudden, unforeseen and uncontrollable expenses with no sudden, unforeseen income. I'm writing a screenplay draft, which, I realize more and more, also foments anxiety.

Health though, is good! I'm on Day 4 of a Whole 30 with Paul, and aside from feeling a little faint and shaky, which apparently is an effect of my body not have quick sugars to access or something, it's going well.

Although feeling the way I do makes me antisocial, I've been trying to use my lack of verve in a more productive way than just sleeping and playing bejeweled. I'm making it a point to watch films, as I don't have as big a filmic vocabulary as some of my counterparts. Also, late at night, I've begun watching Lynda tutorials online. This week I'm learning about Information Architecture, which is pretty interesting to me. I'm realizing I have some skill sets that with just a little upgrading, could be re-labeled if I were to decide to jump ship on the whole day job + writing thing. Yeah--that's another unmentioned source of uncertainty --> anxiety --> depression. I'm not making any big decisions yet...but I'm ruminating.

Friday, August 02, 2013

Brokeback Mountain

Just watched it--for the first time, if you can believe it.  And it blew me away.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xuugq7fito&w=420&h=315]

The trailer doesn't come close to capturing the mood of the film, but nothing could really.  After the movie ended, even going to find the trailer on YouTube seemed like an assault to my senses.  I try to avert my eyes from the bright colors and logos, the "shark week" advertisement along the sidebar, the inane scroll of comments--  because I just want to hold on to that end-of-film feeling for a bit longer.
Often when I have an evening and the TV screen to myself, I'll catch up on television shows, but I'm always happy when I choose a movie instead.  I love television--and particularly like some shows that are highly serialized, but it's their nature (especially the serialized ones) to leave you feeling half empty and unsatisfied.  At the end of this movie, I felt something like complete.

Wednesday, June 05, 2013

What I'm Watching / Reading



LeavingofThings_mini_thumbnail
Reading: Just finished Jay Antani's The Leaving of Things, about a young Indian man who has spent most of his life in Wisconsin but is forced to return to India with his family when his father takes a job there. It's set in the 80s, and really manages to evoke time and place, mostly in India, but also the scenes that are set back in the United States. I guess you might call it a YA novel, as the narrator is a young adult, but the book is so beautifully written and elegiac that the term seems reductive--people don't categorize Eugenides' The Marriage Plot or Marukami's Norwegian Wood as YA fiction, as far as I know (do they?).  Anyway, I really enjoyed and recommend The Leaving of Things.
(Also, the 2.99 price tag on the Kindle version is a steal. It's an interesting price point for a book--when I see something so inexpensive, I do look at it with some suspicion, and and if I don't have any other information at all, I'm likely to pass it by.  But it's low enough that if I've heard anything good I'm willing to take a chance much faster than I would at $9.99.  In this, I had met the writer, so took the chance and was very glad that I did.)
Watching: What I'm watching is research related.  I met another writer, Janice Roshalle Littlejohn, through my MPW program. She's written a book called Swirling, about interracial dating and relationships, and has been approached about making a fictional screenplay based on material in the book (maybe the way the non-fiction book Queen Bees and Wannabes was the basis for Mean Girls), We're going to meet and talk about her outline for the script. I'm just a consulting, (you know, because I've been to film school and stuff) but I think it's pretty fascinating, so I've been watching films that deal with that subject matter.  I haven't had time yet to go back to some older ones I've seen in the past, like Look Who's Coming to Dinner and Jungle Fever, but I've re-watched My Big Fat Greek Wedding, and watched for the first time Crash, and Something New. They aren't all perfect films, but they each have something to contribute to the conversation, and they make you realize even though mixing is happening all around us, it's not really a conversation you see in too many movies--at least not in depth.  I'm looking forward to seeing where the project goes!

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

TV vs Film in the Privacy of Your Own Home

Currently there are four seasons of Mad Men on Netflix.

I've always figured it would be one of those series that would be fun to plow through hours at a time when the opportunity presented itself, and with my recent illness and end of my writing project, I thought the time was right.

I'm halfway through season two, and it has been fun, but I've discovered this:  Watching lots of television drama, even the shows I really like, makes me kind of depressed, while watching movies, even ones that I don't think are particularly good, does not usually have the same effect.

I'm guessing it's because television shows make one want a kind of arc for the characters, but as an audience member ones desires are always frustrated--always pushed into an indefinite future. Another way of saying this is that it is hard to watch the characters make bad choices episode after episode, and grow (if they do) at a glacial pace.  (If I want to see continued self-deception, I have ample opportunity in my real life.) In the past, a separation of a week probably mitigated my feelings--not so when I have four seasons  at my disposal.  No doubt there is a rush of satisfaction at hitting "next episode," akin to being able to reach for another chocolate after the first--but in both cases, I fear the lack of portion control isn't the best for me in the long run.

Which is why I have temporarily abandoned Peggy and Don for the movies, where, in most cases, people realize their mistakes and make changes, they live through their tragedies and move on. I understand that one might actually consider this a flaw, citing Hollywood's penchant for happy endings, but I'm talking just about my own personal mood control here. 

The other night, when I felt the cravings for Mad Men, I substituted with an On-Demand movie...Larry Crowne.  Wow, if there was ever a movie made to go straight to video, this was it.  but even though I cringed at the too-easiness of Larry's sudden relationships and life changes,  I was inspired in spite of myself...and as the credits rolled, I didn't feel an uncontrollable desire to see another episode of Larry Crowne.  The experience was incredibly complete.

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Weekend at Home / BIG ANNOUNCEMENT

(This is a pretty boring post with a BIG ANNOUNCEMENT buried about halfway through.  I'll TYPE IN CAPS when we get to it, so you can skim without fear of missing it.)

Did I mention Paul got in a accident and totaled one of our cars?  That happened. A few weeks ago.  Everyone is fine, and insurance paid generously enough that with a little effort we should be able to replace our mediocre car with one of equal mediocrity.  But driving around L.A. looking for cars you've seen advertised Craigslist is tedious, so we haven't done very much of that yet, and are existing with just one car.

Paul was supposed to be doing night shifts color correcting every night this weekend and taking the car to get there, so I'll say that is my excuse for not having made any evening plans this weekend.  Other excuses might include needing to write, or energy-sapping ennui.

I do, however, wish that I could invite people to come see me--but our house is super messy right now.  To that end, Paul and I spent about four hours each today trying to reclaim the space.  This was hugely exciting for me, in a muted, I'm-folding-clothes-and-vacuuming kind of way, because Paul is generally opposed to cleaning and doesn't see the need for it, but in this case, because he is avoiding doing film related work, he actually volunteered, and was quite focused.  I think with another 8-10 man hours, things could be quite presentable again.

And on the topic of the film that Paul is avoiding ...(THIS IS IT, this is the BIG ANNOUNCEMENT)

 Rock Jocks. 

Is it done????!!!!

No, not quite.

But it will have to be really soon, because THE PREMIER SCREENING IS SCHEDULED.

It will be at DRAGON*CON in ATLANTA, GA over LABOR DAY WEEKEND.  Rock Jocks will screen at 8pm on Sunday--but that's not a school night, cuz the next day is Labor Day.

I WILL BE THERE.

So, if you live near Atlanta, you should come on up, down, over and see me.  I don't know if we'll get any comp movie tickets.  It seems like the screenings are "inside" the festival.  A day pass for  Sunday is $40.   That will maybe be fun and worth it for you if you are into anything geeky, sci-fi, fantasy or comic-book related.  Otherwise it will be a waste of your money.  In that case, don't feel obligated to see the film, just come see us.

I am also interested, if my entourage duties allow, in going to the Decatur Book Festival, probably on Saturday.  I believe I have at least one friend who is doing a reading on Saturday afternoon, but I'm not sure where, and I'm not sure what the geographic relationship is between the con and the fair.

More details to come.  Facebook posts and Tweets no doubt.  But for the loyal readers of this blog--you four know about it first!


Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Movie Follow-up

You may remember that last weekend I was excited to see Prometheus.  I saw it. I became less excited.  I could tell you why--but I could not tell you why as articulately and entertainingly as does the Hinx Minx in her review.

I was also excited to see Safety Not Guaranteed, by the Duplass brothers, and indeed, I left the theater satisfied enough. But the movies that have really inspired me in the last week are this one, also by Mark and Jay Duplass, which I also liked very much:



And this one,directed by Lynn Shelton, which I LOVED:

Friday, June 08, 2012

Movies this Weekend!

We have tickets to see Prometheus.  I'm excited.  I haven't even watched a trailer for it yet--so it will be completely new.


I'm also excited to see this move, because I am a big fan of anything Duplass. 

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Rock Jocks Update

Paul continues to work with his editor Adam to get a locked cut of the Rock Jocks--the film he wrote and directed. There are still many things to be done, like sound mixing, music, special effects etc, before the latest deadline for Sundance at the end of September. But this week he took a few days off to visit Chicago Comic Con and promote the film.

Friday, August 05, 2011

Cowboys and Aliens

Went to a screening of Cowboys and Aliens the other night, fortunately for free. I'm sure many others are saying most of what I can think of to say. Instead I'll do you a favor and say this:

If you are thinking about going to see Cowboys and Aliens, go see Attack the Block instead.



Seriously. You'll thank me.

Wednesday, August 03, 2011

The Help

Saw a preview screening for The Help the other night. They asked us to spread the word if we liked the film, so I will. I did like the film and it's definitely worth a watch. I'm interested to see the box office numbers for this film. If you know someone in a bookclub, then you likely know someone who has read the book of the same name.

Emma Stone is ever-beguiling, and Viola Davis and Octavia Spencer turn it excellent performances. I was extra-impressed by Bryce Dallas Howard as the uber-bitchy Hilly. Not that she's a bad actress, but I'd never seen her in a role that wasn't not sweet and fragile-seeming. I literally didn't recognize her.

I think the movie made all the moves it intended to. The tone was controlled. It stayed light, didn't drift into Lifetime movie territory, and avoided preachy history lessons... but there was a certain cost for this. I never felt super connected to or worried about the main characters--there was an element of distance. There were real, dark stakes, but the movie (like the book) skirted around them. The heart-wrenching stories the maids have to tell are told to us, not experienced by us. The "mean" white people in the film are such caricatures that it's easy to believe that, put in the same circumstances, we would have certainly been more enlightened.

Finally, although this is an ensemble cast,
the main character of the movie is really Skeeter, who, if you haven't read the book, is white. I don't fault the choice, but there is a certain risk, that even with the right-minded message of the film, I'm not sure you really make a movie about a community of black people during the the beginning of the civil rights era whose lives seem only able to be changed by the white character without it feeling just a tad patronizing. I've heard a few such complaints about the book, and am sure, when it is released, there will be more about the movie.

My initial instinct, though, is to defend the movie on at least two fronts:

Sadly, one of them is business more than art. The decision to allow the audience to enter the world with the eyes of a white person will garner a bigger and more mainstream audience. Good box office for a film where every main character is a woman, and half of the main characters are black is good news for other films that want to focus on these demographics, which is awesome. It's not pure, but it's a path.

My second defense is that there are a lot of events that have happened in the world, and a lot of ways to treat them. You can look at a concentration camp and write Elie Wiesel's Night, or make Life is Beautiful--which also withstood some criticism at the time for not taking the experiences of the holocaust seriously enough. I would say, when a topic is important and resonant, there's room for many stories, and many perspectives, especially if the stories are well-crafted and have a degree of truth such that they don't become just more noise for the better-crafted stories to get lost in. There is a lot to say about our history--segregation, Jim Crow, the civil rights movement, and while this movie benefits us by bringing it up, helping us remember and assimilate our history, no one work is can say it all, nor should it feel it has to. If The Help acts as a gateway for some people to revisit their history books, inspires read The Autobiography of Malcolm X, that's great; but a creative work is not obligated serve any agenda, even a right-minded one, even if people like me will look at in Critical Studies class fashion and question it.

I might be rambling. But I think that's what I think. If you go see The Help, I'd love to hear what you think.





Monday, August 01, 2011

Crazy Stupid Love

I've been looking forward to this film, because of the stellar cast, and the awesome trailer, so
went to see it last night with "the girls." And the verdict is that it was ... fun and heartwarming and a tiny bit sad. As my friend Nikki said, it wasn't as good as the trailer (what could be?), but it was better than some of the more critical reviews it has gotten.

It is probably more a dramedy than a comedy, which might be the reason it doesn't quite feel like the movie you are expecting from the trailer, but I have a feeling I might actually like it better for that.

I left the theatre with a feel-good vibe that I didn't want to disrupt by taking it apart and analyzing. I was happy (or lazy) enough to just conclude that the strengths outweighed the weaknesses.

Don't let this set your level of expectation, but do watch and marvel at the sublime pacing of the trailer. The placement of the Twilight soundtrack song is brilliant. First it takes the piss out of Twilight, which is funny, but right on top of that, it uses the innate power of the music coming to a crescendo for the big kiss, and we cant help reacting to that. There's something about the push and pull that is really skillful.


If you have already seen the movie, did you notice the snippet of a scene that was not actually in the movie?

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Paul's Feature Debut

Paul will be directing his first feature length film in less than a month!

This is a big announcement that doesn't feel quite as big around here because it's been in the works for awhile. Sometime last year, a friend, Sheri, who produces independent films, approached Paul. Her company (comprised of herself and her husband) had a potential deal to make a film and they were looking for the right project to pitch. They asked Paul to come up with a list of log-lines. Paul gave them a list of ideas--his own and also those of some friends he invited to submit. In the end, none of them were what the other party was looking for, but one of them, ROCK JOCKS, intrigued Sheri. She asked Paul to write it to be made for a really low budget, and she would keep an eye out for an opportunity. Paul spent the next several months working on the script, and eventually the opportunity did arise. One thing led to another, and now casting is in progress, a set is being built, and shooting is scheduled to begin on March 17th!

I am super proud and happy for him, and he is excited too--at the same time that he's nervous. No one wants to mess up a big opportunity! He's also been busy and stressed juggling his pre-production duties with his day job, which he finally and reluctantly had to leave this past week in order to devote himself to the film full time. No movie gets made without an alternating series of lucky breaks and heartbreaking setbacks, and this one is no exception--but there are some exciting possibilities being discussed in terms of cast and crew--and as soon as contracts get signed, hopefully I can talk about them here.

Update: Yesterday I got to go see the stage (warehouse) where the production office and sets are both in early stages of assembly, and took this blurry picture on my phone. The pink sign says ROCK JOCKS.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Amazon Studios Week 1, or, Why You Might Not Think I'm a Real Artist

Housekeeping:It's Wednesday night as I begin this blog post--approximately the end of the first full week at Amazon Studios. There are now 1094 entrants on the site. Also, just today, the displays of the films have been altered--from the front page you can now differentiate between movies and scripts, and the number of downloads has been omitted. To my mind, these are both improvements.

On the interwebs, the first parody sketch of Amazon's endeavor (that I have seen), entitled "Scamazon," has hit YouTube, and Deadline Hollywood has jumped on board to cover the recent criticism, mostly by by quoting blogposts of John August and Craig Mazin, which, if you are one of this blog's loyal readers, you have already seen.

In response to some of the furor--much of which has also been echoing in the forums on the Amazon Studios, Amazon Studios has responded in one of its forums.

And now,
Tonight's topic.
The Rewrite Thing.

A number of people have voiced distress over being rewritten. An articulate phrasing of the complaint has been rendered by John August, who says:
Do you really want random people rewriting your script?

To me, this feels like the biggest psychological misstep of the venture. Sure, most aspiring screenwriters yearn for access to the film industry and the chance to get their movies made. That’s why they enter screenwriting competitions, including things like Project Greenlight, which feels like its closest kin.

But here’s the thing: each of these writers wanted to get his movie made. I’ve never met a single screenwriter who hoped anonymous strangers would revise him.

As someone who has made the choice to be on the site, albeit via different circumstances than some, I've been doing some soul searching, and I've come to the conclusion that given the right circumstances, I might be that screenwriter that John August has never met.

Is anonymous revision by strangers the way I want develop all my scripts? No. But is it the worst scenario I can envision? Not really.

Some background: I go to a school with a good reputation for teaching screenwriting and stuff. I entered school, like many of my classmates, thinking that, with enough skills, I might write a screenplay with a singular vision that might someday be embodied as a film. But as the semesters passed, I started to assemble a different vision of how things work. Some factoids:

1) People work on scripts they are not credited on pretty frequently. As far as I can tell "script doctoring" is a work-for-hire gig.

2) The phrase "working writer." As in "If you want to be a working writer, you have to have a flexible mindset. If the project is "Garfield, the Movie, or Monopoly, the Movie, or Slinky, the Movie," (this is a paraphrase, if there is actually a Slinky movie coming out, I don't know about it yet, but I am excited already), you need to be able to find something in that that resonates with you--you have to find and convey passion for the Slinky."

3) Scripts get rewritten so many times, by so many people, that the WGA has problems allocating credit to the maximum number (is it four?) of writing slots.

4) Sometimes a writer invests in a project only to see it disfigured--if not in the rewrite, then in production, by the acting or directing or the lack of funds or the whim of a producer or in the editing bay. Writing for film for money by all accounts is a collaborative process, and sometimes it goes wrong. Have you had the opportunity to listen to this NPR podcast with Corey Mandell--one of the credited writers on Battlefield Earth? In it he gets to explain how, even though this movie got made, with his name on it, it's not really the movie he wrote.

Out in the real world, some people were interested in the script I currently have on Amazon. They were in the process of giving me notes for how to make my script more marketable--in one case, more of a horror movie, in another, more of a thriller with better action. These notes--which as far as I can tell were good notes-- weren't MY vision, yet I was going to take these notes and rewrite the script myself. This was for no money and no promises--just the possibility that if I could make changes that one person liked, that person would show it to someone slightly more powerful, and maybe something would happen. This, according to my industry class, is a standard starting opportunity for a "baby writer," and in this situation I should grateful and ready to make changes. I absolutely was both of these things, and should I be so lucky, I will be the next time around, too. If the process had completed and resulted in a great produced script, no one would have been more thrilled than me. But none of that changes the fact that even if I typed every word, the movie would have been fundamentally different from my initial conception of it. Basically I'm saying--unless I was a self-financed writer-director, my movie was always destined to change at some stage in the game in a way that I was not going to control.

Now, with the advent of the Amazon thing, the possibility is raised that someone else might change the script. It is hard for me to imagine who has the time and energy to rewrite my entire film for no money--in fact it seems unfathomable--but that is tangential to the discussion at hand. We are imagining that some hypothetical person(s) exist(s) who will rewrite my script. Maybe they will make it more of a horror movie, or a thriller, or write bigger and better chase scenes. Then, we are imagining, that someone (Amazon, Warner Brothers?) will see this revised edition, and want to make it. I will still make at least half the money, and retain writing credit. As an artist, I should apparently say that I will be terribly offended if if this happens, but the truth is, I wrote the script I wanted to write. I dealt with the issues that were important to me, and that script is now published. Truth be told, if someone sees fit to revise--I will be FINE with that. Maybe more than fine, since I probably wasn't the writer (yet) to make that chase sequence work anyway. I don't really get chase sequences--even fancy ones like in the last Matrix movie. I fell asleep during the big chase in the French Connection. But I respect that movies need chase sequences. If someone else who loves chase sequences can write it for me and get my movie made, in any form...I am A-OK. with that. (And I'm ignoring the fact, that in this structure, as the original writer, I can rewrite the rewrites, using the parts I like and disregarding the rest. I don't get to choose--but I get to make my bid.)

I'm sure this has to do with where I am, in my life, and my career. If I were a "working writer" instead of just a writer who works, my situation would be entirely different. But for the moment, if someone, anyone, gives me a lump sum of 100 thousand dollars, I will buy my husband a sushi dinner, and then go write a check for $99,900 and send it to Sallie Mae, where it will pay off some, but not all of my student loans. After I've done that, I will be so frickin’ relieved I won’t be able to see straight. I will feel free and light as I drive to K-town to teach ESL for $14 bucks an hour, and I will give myself permission to write a fifteen-page short story that will be all mine, and no one else will rewrite. If I’m lucky it will be published in a mid-tier literary journal, (which may or may not be funded in part by Amazon), and I will send copies to my friends and family at Christmas and say "I did that!"

And as for the movie that gets made-- if it sucks --I can always point to my original. It's already out there, in public. There's a paper trail of ideas, decisions and mistakes. I may have to apologize for my own writing and decisions that didn't ultimately work, but I will never have to dispute what those were on public radio.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Amazon Studios Day 4--A Quick Update

We've just passed 750 entries. I note that the entry that had boasted 2500 downloads has somehow had 2000 downloads "deducted." It's now gaining downloads at a pace more in keeping with the other frontrunners of the group.

I have garnered four more reviews. One is a five star review from someone named Robert! This might or might not be a Robert I know--I know a few, and don't know many others. Has he read my script? I have to be honest, it seems doubtful. Was it "helpful?" The "number of five-star reviews" line on my display now shows a five star review, so in that way, yes!

I have also received three other quite thoughtful and articulate reviews from both a stranger and two friends who have taken the task quite seriously. I do think these are the kinds of reviews that could accumulate and comprise notes for another draft.

So the combination is gratifying. Any script in development probably has both kinds of advocates--the cheerleader (agent, manager, producer) who puts on a completely positive face to the world, and the person (agent, manager, producer) who pushes for improvements with the writer. What is a little socially awkward in this case is that both the writer and potential buyer are the audience as well as the other crowd members. It's like if a friend was setting you up on a date--and you were on the line while the friend told the guy how perfect and great you are--but then the potential suitor was on the line listening to the friend giving you advice about plucking your chin hairs and playing down your childhood crush on Mr. Spock.

But, in life, I like to flatter myself that I am someone who dislikes too much song and dance and prefers transparency. So in a way, maybe that is being put to the test.

Other changes...sorting by "popularity" no longer displays in order of downloads, which is confusing. What is it sorting by? The same with "total hits." This also seems to be a somewhat random order, maybe because they have a record of page views, but it's not published?