Trending Lounge Discussions

The hottest discussions in the Stage 32 Lounge.

Liked by Hudson Forster and 3 others

Pitch Sessions

I have a kernel of an idea that I think could be developed into a movie and/or series. But I am not a screenwriter nor a polished author. I'm a retired grandmother who simply is trying to understand how this works. Clearly there are thousands of 'good ideas' out there that could be developed and I d...

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Crystal Grose

First, Congratulations on having an idea that could possibly be made into a movie

Terri Jay

You need a ghost writer or partner. They are on here I think in jobs.

Göran Johansson

Browse the members. I mean those who live near you. Then you may discuss over a cup of coffee.

Maurice Vaughan

Hi, Judy Tenen. I agree with Terri Jay and Göran Johansson about hiring a ghostwriter, writer, or writing partner.

If you have a half-hearted desire to promote your concept, it'll show when you pitch,...

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Liked by Maurice Vaughan

Daniel Husbands
Attention to Detail

While a lot of amazing work has been showcased in many many films, what would you say is the most detailed piece of VFX you've ever seen. While not my most favorite franchise, I'm a fan of the amazing complexity in the Transformers films. The robots alone are so detailed in the fact that they have t...

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Maurice Vaughan

Incredible BTS video, Daniel Husbands! Definitely the VFX in the "Transformers" movies. The VFX is one of the reasons I watch the films.

Kerry Kennard

Star Wars and the Matrix series are pretty awesome in Detail.

All those moving “jets” and sky fighting had a lot of detail. I think I did see some mistakes and the behind the scenes even said / showed...

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Liked by Jim Boston and one other

Michael A. Levine
Real People Legal question

Legal Question. I am writing a screenplay based on real, but not famous, people. Some of them would certainly not give me a legal release if asked. Am I safe if I simply change the names or is more needed? Thanks in advance.

Sallie Olson

If they can be identified by the description of events, conduct, appearance, etc... you really need that release. If you fictionalize them beyond recognition, then you don't need the release.

Craig D Griffiths

If they can be identified they can sue you and the court will probably hear the case. If I wrote your life and just called the character Mick Vine, would you be pissed off? Perhaps.

At a minimum you h...

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Dan Guardino

If they won't give you legal release they'd probably sue you.

Liked by Sandra Isabel Correia and 5 others

Pat Alexander
Romantic Comedy Contest -- who submitted?

Let us know if you submitted and tell us more about your scripts!

Connie Barretta

LOVE AND THE DANCE began as a posting on FB to ole High School classmates. My dream was to plan a dance on a terrace in Italy where the blue skies meet the sea and I was determined to make it happen....

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John Michael German

Hello:

Fun and enjoyable competition to help more get their creative delights to more eyes.

What I submitted:

Title: Love Sarcastically

Logline: "Two lovable people meet on an obstacle course where their...

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Sandra Isabel Correia

Hi Pat Alexander and everyone in the lounge!

I submitted my metaphysical queer romcom:

What Is Meant For You Will Always Find You

which aims to increase awareness of humanity, especially to women.

Logli...

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Sydney Summers

Best of luck to everyone. These were all cool to see :)

Sam Sokolow

Wihsing everyone in the contest luck. I agree with Sydney Summers - these are great!

Liked by Jim Boston and one other

Göran Johansson
The easiest methods to find customers for screenplays

A decade ago I performed a trivial statistical analysis of no-budget films. The result : For no-budget films which try to be profitable, 10 % make a profit. For "arty" no-budget films, 1 % make a profit.

So if you can't sell your screenplay. Give it to those who create no-budget films. Will probabl...

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CJ Walley

I agree strongly with the principal of starting from the bottom. I focused heavily on the world of short films before my first feature assignment, which was a low budget indie.

Most people I see trying...

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Maurice Vaughan

Göran Johansson Build relationships/network online, and in person if the writer is able. Especially network with indie producers, directors, actors, etc.

Dan MaxXx

Being young is an advantage, so is good health, debt free. Nothing sexy living a broke artist life. Maybe learn a skill that pays money like grip, gaffer, sound, postproduction. Never know what opport...

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Liked by Hudson Forster and 3 others

J. Franklin Evans
Introducing multiple characters at once

How would you handle a scenario where you have, say, a dozen people who are in a room. None have been introduced in the screenplay yet, but they all already know each other, and it's important that each of them be there for the plot later on. Not all of them have dialog, though, or even do anything...

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Jessica Niemi

I'd tend to go with waiting until there is a need to introduce them. 'Everyone is there' is probably sufficient and the most succinct.

Maurice Vaughan

I agree with Jessica Niemi, J. Franklin Evans. If you decided to introduce a large group of characters individually, I suggest introducing and describing each character on separate lines so the reader...

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Dan MaxXx

Best way to learn is watch movies & read stack of pro scripts similar your ideas and study how writers did it on the page with an ensemble intro.

Reservior Dogs, Saving Private Ryan (beach invasion), T...

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Dan Guardino

I would say there are a dozen people in the room and introduce them as they speak or move around. Anyway, that is how I do it. As far as character descriptions go I only briefly describe them and I never describe extras,

Andy Byrne

Dan, Max and Jessica hit solid points there. And totally agree with Maurice's thoughts. Make them memorable. And keep each one as tight and punchy as hell.

Always handy, to keep the flow, knitting the...

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Liked by Allen Lynch and 4 others

Jeff Goldsmith
Hey!!

Hi Everyone! Want to chime in here quick and say hello. I’m a fairly new composer in the industry (3-4 years) and I’m looking forward to connecting and hopefully learning from you all!

Kerry Kennard

Have a great week ! - Kerry Kennard

Jeff Goldsmith

Hey Kerry! Good question. I use both- tonal and non-tonal. Often times my samples will start off as non-tonal—then through processing and manipulation—I will end up with tonal sounds-or vice versa.

In...

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Daniel Husbands

Welcome Jeff Goldsmith You'll meet a lot of great people in the community. Be sure to drop a hello in the Introduce Yourself lounge as well.

Kerry Kennard

Jeff Goldsmith , I understand. The sound palette will differ depending on the scenes and the period set in the Film. Your ideas seem to be a little like.Hans Zimmer ! I saw Dune 2 about 2 weeks ago an...

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Amanda Toney

Glad to have you here Jeff! Here’s a blog about composing you might like on Stage 32: https://www.stage32.com/blog/3343

Liked by Maurice Vaughan

Noah Mccay
Short film reccomendations

Hello all,

I was wondering if anyone has any recommendations for short films they think are awesome and a great example of the format?

I totally understand the urge to drop your own short film here, but I think that would defeat the purpose of the exercise.

Joel Holland

I love this question, Noah! I particularly like this one for its use of clever edits, fun concept, in a low-budget setting!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7OQHIpDlvA...

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Amanda Toney

The Whiplash short film is really well structured. Also, we are breaking down Wes Anderson’s Oscar winning short film today in the writers’ room: https://www.stage32.com/writers-room

Liked by Allen Lynch and one other

Zane MacDonald
Greetings from Strangefolk!

Thrilled to join this wonderful filmmaking community.

I’m a producer/writer based in Europe, seeking a North American co-producer to develop a couple of TV series ideas. Some of them have already undergone development workshops at the Berlin Film Festival and the Tallinn Dark Nights festival, demonst...

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Maurice Vaughan

Welcome to the community, Zane MacDonald. Great name for a film company. "StrangeFolk." That's me! Haha

Here's a blog that'll help you navigate Stage 32 for your best experience: www.stage32.com/blog/n...

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Allen Lynch

Welcome Zane! Much continued success. I've found talented people & great opportunities here at S32. Let me know if you ever need music or anything else.

Liked by Jeffrey B. Wayne and 4 others

Michael Olderr
Basic question, but how do you guys keep yourself dedicated to writing?

I know the key to writing is to write a little bit every day, whether script-related or not. But how do you guys keep yourselves accountable?

Dan MaxXx

5 -7 year plan per idea. Maybe 10+ years or never. Unprofitable hobby given the mental time & physical labor

Dan Guardino

It is just something I do to kill time so I'm not really dedicated to writing anymore.

Chez Wise

Same time, Same place, Same warm up. Like a daily run, the stretching exercises get your brain in the zone, and the repetition of the mental and physical actions puts you in the "zone" to succeed. After about a month, you don't even realize you are doing it.

Anhtuan Do

You know for me, I don't carve out a time every day for writing. I carve out a time for me that's in "creation" mode versus "consumption" mode.

Most of the time it's writing.

But sometimes, it playing...

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Andy Byrne

In the tough patches I hold myself accountable by the simple facts -- if I don't do the work, it won't get done. Otherwise, Pat Alexander nailed it precisely You truly have to love the hunt over the reward.

Liked by Navid Lancaster and 2 others

Kerry Kennard
New Dashboard at BMI

Any other composers/Songwriters see the new Dashboard at BMI ?

It’s really nice !

I went to BMI to write down other Metadata info this week.

Here’s the article; there’s a video how to use when you login to the new portal.

Navid Lancaster

Will check it out later today

Navid Lancaster

Okay just did it. Wow this is really different. Much easier to read and the Royalty Dashboard is very informative

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