After three decades working between filmmakers, talent representatives, financiers, and distributors — and as a member of the Producers Guild of America — I’ve had a rare vantage point on how projects actually travel from script to screen.
Every so often, I see posts celebrating the idea that you can simply email agents directly with just a spec and bypass the traditional pathways of Hollywood.
“An agent responded to my email," as if Brad Pitt or the like would rush to attach.
But here’s the part many newcomers misunderstand:
A response is not a pathway.
Agents and managers receive hundreds of submissions every week.
A reply, a release form, or even a quick phone call does not mean the script will reach the actor they represent.
Most agencies screen submissions internally. That is part of their job.
Actors — particularly established ones — are extremely careful about what they read and what they attach their names to. Their careers depend on it. Even when a script is liked, the most common response is:
“Come back when the project has financing or a producing team attached.”
This is how our industry manages risk.
Another common misunderstanding where filmmakers and writers or new producers "name drop" actors in their queries who are not on board:
A request to read is not permission to publicly associate a star with your project.
Using a performer’s name without a formal attachment can burn bridges very quickly in a relationship-driven business.
There is also something most outsiders find surprising: seasoned producers are often far more careful about approaching talent than newcomers are.
In fact, many will not reach out to actors they already know personally unless a project has real momentum.
One of our producing partners, whose credits include films such as Gangs of New York, has often said he would never approach an A-list actor — even one he has direct contact with — unless the project already has a serious path toward financing and production.
Why?
Because in Hollywood, relationships are currency.
And professionals protect that currency carefully.
Hollywood is not a system you break into with a bold email.
If there is one lesson three decades in this business has made very clear, it is this:
Attention and traction are not the same thing.
Many people get attention.
Very few know how to turn that into momentum.
2 people like this
Sounds like a cool project Alex! Have you thought about writing a screenplay adaptation?
Amanda Toney it's very screen-friendly, not least as the haunting leads to a movie franchise!
But I'm not keen on adapting my own work, I rather like the idea of leaving it to someone else....
Expand commentAmanda Toney it's very screen-friendly, not least as the haunting leads to a movie franchise!
But I'm not keen on adapting my own work, I rather like the idea of leaving it to someone else.
1 person likes this
"Hi Alex, your project sounds amazing! I admire how you’re blending meta elements with suspense—this kind of storytelling really pushes boundaries and engages the audience on multiple levels. I also f...
Expand comment"Hi Alex, your project sounds amazing! I admire how you’re blending meta elements with suspense—this kind of storytelling really pushes boundaries and engages the audience on multiple levels. I also focus on creating tension and atmosphere in my own work, and I know how much impact well-developed characters and subtle visual cues can have in keeping viewers invested."
Hi Alex,
Congrats on the upcoming publication of "The House That Screamed" a meta horror with found-footage elements already suggests a strong atmospheric engine, and framing it as Amityville for the d...
Expand commentHi Alex,
Congrats on the upcoming publication of "The House That Screamed" a meta horror with found-footage elements already suggests a strong atmospheric engine, and framing it as Amityville for the digital era is a very clear hook.
It sounds like a project with natural screen potential, especially if the narrative plays with perception, authorship, and the reliability of what we’re “seeing.” I’d be interested to hear how you’re using the digital layer whether it shapes structure, character psychology, or the escalation of dread.
Wishing you a strong launch in June. It’s always exciting to see dark fiction that leans into both concept and emotional unease. Would be great to stay connected and hear how readers respond.