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A Cheesy Way To Start

Posted by Jennifer Girling on Monday, January 25, 2010 in ArticlesFeatured ArticlesWritersPen DenshamScript DevelopmentBusiness Tips • (9) CommentsPermalink

A “cheesy” way to start. I’ve just had the privilege of teaching a course at USC Film School for MFA students, on creating stories and selling them. Informally USC calls this their “Pitching Class”.

I regarded my goal for the class as slightly more expansive. I wanted to create a gateway of knowledge and confidence for the students, between the academic and the business worlds. To help them articulate what they had created and to try and guide them to surviving long enough with the best hope of selling themselves and their ideas.

I am not a product of the education system, in fact I left school at 15, in England. But I am a survivor who has loved the freedom of creating dreams and trying to realize them on the screen, since my partner John Watson and I founded our own film company (now called Trilogy Entertainment) when we were in our early 20’s.

In order to teach, I had to ask myself questions. How had I survived in this business? Why was I still dedicated to taking the giant risks of time and resources of writing spec scripts and trying to sell them? How do I overcome my ever present “imposter syndrome” and fear of failure? On reflecting, I decided that my primary secret to survival and occasional success in this business has been a cliché. Passion.

It feels “cheesy” to hold out an overused term like Passion to a room of 30 incredibly articulate and creative people. But when I look inward and ask myself why am I in this game? What keeps me writing and taking the pain of constant inevitable hits of rejection? I had to say that my emotional armor has been my desire to see my ideas grow into movies. But not just any ideas… I could look backward and see that the projects that I abandoned were usually ones that I thought fit someone else’s goals. They chased a fad. The projects I stayed with had welled up from my subconscious and had often seemed far less commercial. Yet, strangely when I add up the averages, I have fought longer and harder for these personal scripts. I went back and re-worked them more often to try and make them clearer and better. And I have got these made more frequently. By overcoming my doubts and letting my inner voice write, I think I was creating from my real instrument. The part of me that is in touch with my deeper subconscious observations, my feelings, my life experiences and the plain imprint of my inherited DNA. I do feel unashamedly passionate about these pieces. And they come in all flavors, comedies, fantasies – historical epics. But they all have an imprint of my voice. I call them “Life Scripts”. And I am convinced that even if they don’t sell, I have helped myself tune and improve my instrument when I write them.



(photo by rwrightpix.com)

Pen Densham: co-founder of Trilogy Entertainment Group considers himself a triple-hyphenate: a writer – producer – & director.  He writes for both TV and feature films and is responsible for reviving  'The Outer Limits' and 'The Twilight Zone' to television, Robin Hood Prince of Thieves, etc.  His personal favorite is Moll Flanders which he wrote and directed, starring Robin Wright and Morgan Freeman.  Pen also teaches part time at USC Film School and is just completing a book on Screenplay writing for publisher Michael Wiese.

Comment 1:

Posted by (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  January 30, 2010 at 02:59 PM

I love you. Have I told you recently that you are terrific?  I especially love your last line about even if it doesn’t sell…..

You’re a great cheerleader…
XXXX

Comment 2:

Posted by (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  January 30, 2010 at 05:30 PM

Pen; share your passion, loved your article.
All the Best
David R. Ellis

Comment 3:

Posted by (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  January 30, 2010 at 06:35 PM

I have worked in entertainment now for over 30 years. I have met the full spectra of people in the course of this career. The reason that I connected with Pen and now consider him a life long friend is specifically his passion. Lots of people craft entertainment that others consume. Some better than others.  But I doubt that any picture ever achieved substantial resonance in their audience if they were not fully steeped in passion from concept through complete execution.

Many discuss their craft from a host of perspectives and life experiences. When I listen to Pen discuss his, I sense that he is truly a deity in his own imaginary world bringing real people for whom he cares deeply into existence.  That quality shines clearly from his full body of work…. and that is a true anomaly in today’s cinema.

Comment 4:

Posted by (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  January 31, 2010 at 09:55 AM

cheers, pen! congrats on the first blog!

Comment 5:

Posted by (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  February 01, 2010 at 03:47 PM

Love the blog!  Thanks for sending the link.  I am sure your students must love you as you are one of a kind!  Best,

Alicia

Comment 6:

Posted by (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  February 05, 2010 at 04:38 PM

If Pen Densham is writing. I’m reading!  Maybe I can figure out how to make a dollar in this business!

Comment 7:

Posted by (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  February 09, 2010 at 05:24 PM

So, Pen and I have had many conversations about education—he was my friend and occasional confessor—when I was starting a school in LA that his great daughter went to.  When he talks about school/learning/teaching it comes from the heart.  This piece, which I hope is the first of very many, gets right at something crucial that every learner, whether they are learning to write, play the piano, read, or walk must have—emotional armor.  Learning is hard work, it is risky, it involves taking chances, often in front of ones you love, want to impress, or simply don’t want to let down.  So you have to make sure the learner is in control of the fear of failure and/or rejection (note, I did not say that there should be no fear, rather be in control of it).  Create that space for a learner, or for yourself, and ‘bob’s your uncle!’

Comment 8:

Posted by (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  April 20, 2010 at 12:19 PM

Pen has graciously helped my students up here in New Brunswick, Canada. It truly is a moving experience to watch a student’s face as Pen’s words strike deep - it is evident that the impact of his thoughts will be long-lasting and continually inspiring.

Comment 9:

Posted by (JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  May 12, 2010 at 10:48 PM

thanks for this Pen!  YOUR life has been a movie!

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