I was asked this recently. Here's my answer:
"It's hard to write a screenplay.
"Now cube that. That's how hard it is to sell.
"Now square that. That's how hard it is to have your sold screenplay produced.
"Now cube that. That's how hard it is to have a hit.
"As for getting the Oscar, just appeal to their current sympathies better than the other four nominees."
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Yeah! It ain't easy. Not for quitters.
I always tell people that if they want to write so they can say they "have written," they are writing for the wrong reason. Get famous some other way, if that's what you need. But if you want to tell yourself stories, movie-stories, and then send them out to others, those are good reasons. If you keep it up, and you're a voracious reader, you will write things people will want to see. Eventually. Like Milton Berle once said, "If opportunity doesn't knock, build a door!"
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I've always wondered how many good scripts failed on the production side. Obviously I'm sure some weak scripts slip through the cracks, especially if penned by someone's cousin...
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There's plenty of stories in various biographies mentioning exactly what Dan MaxXx describes. Brilliant scripts can fail. Terrible scripts can become brilliant. A lot of great directors owe a lot to t...
Expand commentThere's plenty of stories in various biographies mentioning exactly what Dan MaxXx describes. Brilliant scripts can fail. Terrible scripts can become brilliant. A lot of great directors owe a lot to their editors. They're called dream fixers for a reason.
I get to be on set and I get to be a big part of the editing process. It makes you pretty brutal and ruthless. I helped cut five minutes out of a first act only last week. Hours of passionate writing cast aside. It almost becomes masochistic.
You have to trust the process. It makes sense to overwrite and take risks, then see what is best left on the cutting room floor. Stuff you think will work doesn't. Stuff you think was a bad idea surprises you.
It teaches you to stop searching for perfection on the page.
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Got to be rough cutting footage, some people can't even bare to cut lines from their scripts!
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As a writer, It's my job to tell a story. So flash backs, intercuts, whatever it takes to get my story properly told and understood...is going to be used. A spec script is not my BABY. It is a road ma...
Expand commentAs a writer, It's my job to tell a story. So flash backs, intercuts, whatever it takes to get my story properly told and understood...is going to be used. A spec script is not my BABY. It is a road map to completing my vision. Nothing is set in stone. Anything can be changed/fixed/updated. I always give the same two words of advise. BE FLUID.
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Mike Childress, I went through a baptism of fire on my first movie. It was like we were cursed on the shoot. Every day entailed a huge issue that couldn't be predicted or eliminated. That resulted in...
Expand commentMike Childress, I went through a baptism of fire on my first movie. It was like we were cursed on the shoot. Every day entailed a huge issue that couldn't be predicted or eliminated. That resulted in me tearing pages out the script over and over. Then we found out our first cut was half an hour too long and we had to butcher some more. I came out of that with a thousand yard stare and whole new attitude. You have to get something in the can and you have to deliver the most marketable movie possible. As Dan Maxxx rightly says, there's the movie you write, the movie you shoot, and the movie you edit.
This is why, when you see people fussing over FADE IN and "we see" you realise they aren't living in the same world as you.