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Vol. 4, Ed. 10 - In case you've been out of the loop - the film market is shifting its relationship with screenwriters. To be a professional writer, your screenplay has to fit tightly into a neat, little niche. Right? Maybe not. This month we'll look at some up-and-coming companies popping onto the scene that provide writers with an excellent alternative to the standard spec submission process.
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http://www.scriptshark.com/insider/Home.asp/nsc/contest/
The Nashville Screenwriters Conference is pleased to announce the second National Screenplay Showdown. The Screenplay Showdown was created to honor the work of the best new screenwriters from around the country, and to serve as a bridge between those writers and the Hollywood film industry. The Showdown evaluates screenplays solely on the basis of storytelling ability -- all story genres have the same chance of winning. Three winners will be chosen in each of two categories:
- All Genre scripts
- Music-themed scripts
Both first place winners will receive a trip to the 2006 Nashville Screenwriters Conference, two nights hotel accommodations and $250.00 spending money. The two winners will also enjoy the perks of the Conference’s Silver Screen Pass, which includes admittance to the VIP Party, a great opportunity to meet and mingle with top industry professionals. The total value of the first place prize in each category is over $1,400.00. |
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Biography:
RUTH PRAWER JHABVALA
This German-born writer and her family moved to England in 1939. After her 1951 marriage to architect Cyrus S.H. Jhabvala, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala moved to India and began publishing a series of acclaimed novels, many of which dealt with the culture clash between Indians and the British. She turned screenwriter when the director-producer duo of James Ivory and Ismail Merchant sought her permission to film her novel, "The Householder" (1963). Continuing with the pair, Jhabvala penned other insights into post-Colonialism with "Shakespeare Wallah" (1965), "The Guru" (1969), "Autobiography of a Princess" (1975), and "Heat and Dust" (1983, based on her award-winning 1975 novel).
By the mid-1980s, however, partly in response to the poor box-office performance of several Merchant-Ivory original productions, Jhabvala moved with the duo to a series of intelligent, respectful adaptations of period novels, especially those of E M Forster and Henry James. "The Europeans" (1979) had been an early attempt in this direction, but the trio's first really successful venture into the drawing room was "The Bostonians" (1984). A more lighthearted follow-up, "A Room with a View" (1986), proved popular with critics and public alike, and brought Jhabvala an Oscar for her nicely judged adaptation of Forster's comedy of manners. After adapting two Evan Connell novels into a touching, time-spanning cinema portrait of "Mr. and Mrs. Bridge" (1990), she won a second Oscar for another Forster adaptation, "Howards End" (1992). Jhabvala's talent for creating strong-minded if sometimes eccentric women also found expression in her one non-Merchant-Ivory endeavor, John Schlesinger's quirky "Madame Sousatzka" (1988). She has continued to write period dramas for Merchant-Ivory, including "The Remains of the Day" (1993), "Jefferson in Paris" (1995), and "The Golden Bowl" (2000).
Next for Jhabvala and her collaborators was a sophisticated, unpretentious adaptation of Diane Johnson's bestselling novel "Le Divorce" (2003), a relaxed, sophisticated and contemporary tale of two American sisters in Paris: one a pregnant expatriated poetess (Naomi Watts) suddenly abandoned by her philandering French husband; the other a fresh, naive young woman (Kate Hudson) caught up in a seemingly cosmopolitan affair with a roguish, married and much older French diplomat.
- Education: Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London London, England English MA 1951
- Milestones: 1986 Received Oscar for her screenplay adaptation of E M Forster's "A Room with a View", a Merchant Ivory production; 1992 Won second Academy Award for adapting Forster's "Howards End" for Merchant-Ivory
All data from Baseline-StudioSystems. For more information on writers, directors, actors, and producers, please visit BaselineFT. |
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THE ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY:
A Dying Breed? |
Most aspiring screenwriters are introduced to the world of writing for celluloid through the "Gold Rush" dream of selling a spec screenplay. While this has certainly been a long-time outlet for big deals and big breaks into the business, it just isn't what it used to be. With the studios presenting fewer opportunities for big spec sales, writers have noticed a significant decrease in the market for original literary properties.
After a glut of original material rushing into the studio stock-piles during the eighties and nineties, most screenwriters today find themselves scratching their heads, attempting to figure out what the studios are buying. In fact, with expanding budgets and more independent divisions, recent market trends point to the key Buyers' desire to establish film projects from well-known properties - from remakes to adaptations to branding-based content. Unfortunately, this affinity for pre-created content appears to stem from an ever-growing stack of risk-averse business decisions. And, the truth is that there is more content than ever to help alleviate this fear. In turn, the amount of original screenplays introduced into the market is growing smaller, but the need for screenwriter isn't, necessarily.
Part of the art of screenwriting is generating an original story. And while the studios have long-embraced this notion, their current needs are shifting more toward assignment-based hiring. Luckily, however, a new market of smaller, independently financed production sources have been rising from both the domestic and international markets. Companies like Intermedia, Working Title, and Revolution Studios have been providing homes for original screenplays, even when the larger entities haven't been able to. Additionally, over the past five-ten years, each of the main studios have developed more independent-based production arms that focus on filmmaker-driven material. Divisions like Fox Searchlight, Universal Focus, and Paramount Classics not only acquire finished films, but also develop solid, original material.
With this in mind, it's important to remember that the shift lies less in the notion that there aren't as many buyers, and more in the realization that the purchasing entities are segmenting into companies focused on different needs. As a result, the studios may, in general, be more risk-averse on larger-budgeted projects, but are expanding their shelf space for original material in the lower-mid budget ranges. |
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Presents:
Development Snapshot
New projects in D at the studios:
WEDDING INCIDENT |
Writer: |
Ian Deitchman,
Kristin Rusk Robinson |
Producer: |
Kevin Misher |
Production Co: |
Misher Films |
Studio: |
Universal Studios |
| Logline: A woman discovers that her old college boyfriend is now happily married, so she drags her best friend to her college reunion to investigate more. |
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MOST LIKELY TWO |
Writer: |
Kelly Rouse |
Actor: |
Laurence Mark |
Production Co: |
Laurence Mark Productions |
Studio: |
Columbia Pictures |
| Logline: A high school reunion consultant makes peace with her inner geek when she falls for a client who never got over his cheerleader crush. |
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TOWN HOUSE |
Writer: |
Tish Cohen |
Producer: |
Ridley Scott, Tony Scott |
Production Co: |
Scott Free |
Studio: |
Fox 2000 |
Logline: An agoraphobic man lives with his teenage son in a historic Boston town house he inherited from his rock-star father. With royalties from his father's work dwindling, the man is forced to come to terms with his life; he falls in love with the ditzy Realtor assigned to sell his home after the bank has foreclosed on it. |
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EX-FACTOR |
Writer: |
Andrea King |
Production Co: |
Team Todd |
Studio: |
Revolution Studios |
| Logline: A divorced newspaper editor is horrified to learn that the rival paper in town has hired a new editor who'll surely step up the competition, and he happens to be her ex-husband. |
All data from Baseline-StudioSystems. For more information on writers,
directors, actors, and producers, please visit BaselineFT. |
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*Detailed information on your work provides professional accessibility. |
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*Advanced searches give your material an opportunity to be discovered by executives and reps. |
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Writers to discuss succeeding in more than one medium on Sept. 3 in Glendale
Bestselling Author Denise Hamilton lectures on the art of writing and publishing on October 1 in Glendale Author Denise Hamilton will present "From Fact To Fiction, a Best-selling Writer's Journey From Rough Draft to Publication," at the Alameda Writers Group (AWG) meeting on Saturday, October 1, 2005. Doors open at 9:45 a.m. and the meeting begins at 10 a.m. at the Glendale Central Library, 222 East Harvard St. in Glendale.
The presentation will cover the craft of writing, the business side of publishing, and the realities of commercial success. She'll share her background as a journalist (she was a former Los Angeles Times staff writer) and advice on getting the most out of writers conferences, how and when to look for an agent, the pros and cons of selling your work to movies and TV and other topics.
Hamilton is the author of the Eve Diamond crime series, which include THE LAST JASMINE TRADE, SUGAR SKULL, LAST LULLABY and the newest, SAVAGE GARDEN. Her award-winning stories have also appeared in Wired, Cosmopolitan, Der Speigel and New Times. During the Bosnian War, Hamilton lived and taught in Yugoslavia as a Fulbright Scholar.
Admission is free, and the library validates parking in the structure at Harvard and Maryland.
The AWG presents lectures by novelist, screenwriters, agents, producers, and other industry professionals at free monthly meetings. In addition, AWG members may attend special interest groups that offer support and feedback to works-in-progress.
Visit www.alamedawritersgroup.org or email feedback@alamedawritersgroup.org for more information.
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3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd, Suite 200, Los Angeles, CA 90034 |
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