Companion site to the Entertainment Writer's Data Base, http://www.entwdb.com/ opening 03-01-11.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

'Inception' and 'Social Network' take top Writers Guild awards

In his acceptance speech for 'Inception,' Christopher Nolan touches on the exclusion of several big-name films under guild rules.

Christopher Nolan's "Inception" and Aaron Sorkin's "The Social Network" took home top screenplay honors at Saturday evening's Writers Guild of America awards.

Nolan's work beat out the scripts for "Black Swan," "The Fighter," "The Kids Are All Right" and "Please Give" in the original screenplay category. "The King's Speech" and "Another Year" — Academy Award nominees for best original screenplay — were ineligible in the WGA category under guild rules.

Sorkin's script bested those for "127 Hours," "I Love You Phillip Morris," "The Town" and "True Grit" in the adapted screenplay race. Oscar nominees such as "Toy Story 3" and "Winter's Bone" were ineligible in the category under guild rules.
In accepting his award, Nolan touched on the exclusion of big-name films that were kept out of contention.

"Nine years ago I had a lot of success for 'Memento.' It was excluded," he said. "Nothing is more important than recognition from my peers. There were some notables left off the list this year."

"I'm not going to name them, for fear that it boosts their chances at the other show," he joked, referring to the Feb. 27 Academy Awards. "I hope next year the person who stands up here can give thanks without qualification."

Mark Boal, who won an Oscar last year for best original screenplay for "The Hurt Locker," was in attendance with "Hurt Locker" director Kathryn Bigelow; they presented the awards to Nolan and Sorkin.

"You can imagine how I feel to get recognition like this," Sorkin said. "I wrote a good screenplay, but David Fincher made a great movie."

In the documentary film category, the guild honored "Inside Job," produced, written and directed by Charles Ferguson and co-written by Chad Beck and Adam Bolt. In accepting his award for the movie about the financial crisis, Ferguson, clad in jeans and sneakers, quipped, "In the grand tradition of documentary filmmakers, I'm severely underdressed."

Sony Pictures co-chairman Amy Pascal presented the Laurel Award for Screen (honoring lifetime achievement in outstanding writing for movies), to Steven Zaillian, writer of films including "Schindler's List," "Gangs of New York" and "Awakenings."

On the TV front, "Murphy Brown" star Candice Bergen presented the show's creator, Diane English, with the Paddy Chayefsky Laurel Award, which is bestowed on the WGA member who "has made outstanding contributions to the profession of the television writer."

The tone of the evening was light, with numerous presenters making jokes about the ceremony, which is less glitzy than other Hollywood guild awards and isn't shown on TV. A parallel ceremony is held in New York simultaneously for East Coast WGA members.

Martin Short, on stage with Catherine O'Hara to bestow the Best Comedy/Variety TV Series award to Comedy Central's "The Colbert Report," joked that there's "no bigger high than appearing on an untelevised award show. Only difference between you people and pharmaceutical-grade morphine is morphine doesn't judge."

"Modern Family" was named best comedy series and "Mad Men" was named best drama series.

Documentary filmmaker Morgan Spurlock, on hand to present writing awards in the documentary category, joked that the event was "the only award show where [the invite] says 'self-parking in Hollywood & Highland.' Stay classy Hollywood!"

nicole.sperling@latimes.com

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Sundance Film Festival: a critic's preview

Kenneth Turan sizes up this year's most promising entries.

Sundance Film Festival
The Egyptian Theatre on Main Street in Park City, Utah, is ready for the Sundance Film Festival crowds. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times / January 20, 2011)
     
    Park City, Utah, may be an out of the way place in a not ordinarily glamorous state, but for 10 days in January, all roads in the cinema world lead there. Yet it's not simply the sheer volume of movies and fans at the Sundance Film Festival — this year's 117 features were culled from more than 3,800 submissions — that keeps up the momentum. It's also that the festival organizers, ever determined to solidify Sundance's position and expand its reach, are not averse to change. Faced with the loss of one of its key venues, the Park City Racquet Club, due to renovations this year, the festival has commandeered the Redstone Theatre a few miles out of town. In addition, Sundance, which previously made five films available on-demand through its Sundance Selects label, this year is launching an initiative to bring films and filmmakers in the flesh to nine cities, including Los Angeles, on Jan. 27. And, concerned that newcomers to Park City might be overwhelmed, the festival has initiated "How to Fest" tours.
    FOR THE RECORD:

    Get breaking news alerts delivered to your mobile phone. Text BREAKING to 52669.
    Sundance Film Festival: A Jan. 20 Calendar section article about highlights at this year's Sundance Film Festival identified the director of the film "How to Die in Oregon" as Paul Richardson. His name is Peter D. Richardson. —
    Sundance has also changed how the festival begins. Instead of the traditional single opening-night film Thursday, audiences will have the choice of five screenings, including one the best documentaries in the festival, James Marsh's thoughtful and unnerving "Project Nim." Marsh, whose last film was "Man on Wire," examines the celebrated chimpanzee Nim who was raised as a human to see if he could learn to communicate with sign language. This controversial experiment turned out to be a Rorschach test for the Homo sapiens involved, exposing complicated and unsettling human egos and emotions. Sundance has upped its documentary quotient this year by starting a non-competition Documentary Premieres section for veteran directors. Among the best in this category is Liz Garbus' "Bobby Fischer Against the World," a drop-dead fascinating examination of how the American chess genius triumphed against the Soviet Union's Boris Spassky, then lost his mind. Hoping to build interest, the filmmakers have invited four expert players to Park City to take on all comers at "Grandmasters Chess Stations." Also excellent in this section are Steve James' "The Interrupters," an inspirational, three-hour-plus look at former gang members in Chicago who defuse violent situations on the streets. And no one who remembers the 1960s will want to miss Alex Gibney and Alison Elwood's "Magic Bus," an acid flashback of a movie compiled from the 40 hours of footage Ken Kesey and Co. shot on the LSD-fueled 1964 cross-country bus trip Tom Wolfe chronicled in "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test." For many festivalgoers, the U.S. dramatic competition (and its grand jury prize) is of great interest. The highlight here is Drake Doremus' "Like Crazy," a crackerjack love story about the longing of long-distance romance told with wonderful intimacy and breakout performances by Felicity Jones and Anton Yelchin. Also noteworthy for their fine sense of a particular setting are Andrew Okpeaha MacLean's "On the Ice," which examines the difficult lives of Inupiaq teenagers in Barrow, Alaska, and "Circumstance," Maryam Keshavarz's Douglas Sirk-type melodrama about unsanctioned love in Iran. Sure to cause talk is Azazel Jacobs' "Terri," a gently melancholy film about loneliness and hope revolving around a way overweight high school misfit who so doesn't belong he wears pajamas to class. Jacob Wysocki is excellent as Terri, and John C. Reilly is his match as the administrator who takes an interest in him. Reilly is just as good in a supporting role in "Cedar Rapids," a good-humored black comedy in the Premieres section directed by Miguel Arteta from Phil Johnston's script about insurance agents gone wild. Another highlight of that section is "Win Win," from Tom McCarthy ("Station Agent," "The Visitor"). Made with a peerless feeling for off-center comic reality, it stars Paul Giamatti as a man who cuts a moral corner and sees what happens. Deliciously, humanly complicated from start to finish. The U.S. documentary competition is always one of the festival's strengths, and never more so than this year, with films including the entertaining "Troubadours," Morgan Neville's look at the emergence of singer-songwriters exemplified by Carole King and James Taylor; Andrew Rossi's informative "Page One: A Year Inside The New York Times"; and Yoav Potash's blood-boiling "Crime After Crime," an L.A. story of how infuriatingly self-protective law enforcement agencies can be when it comes to admitting mistakes and correcting serious injustices. Two of the ultimately most uplifting films in the section sound like the most depressing. David Weissman's "We Were Here" is a clear-eyed, soulful look at the AIDS epidemic in San Francisco, with reflective survivors talking about how community members stepped up and weathered the storm individually and collectively. Peter D. Richardson's enormously moving "How to Die in Oregon" examines that state's groundbreaking law allowing physician-assisted suicide. Focusing on a number of people considering that option, most especially a remarkable woman named Cody Curtis, the film unflinchingly illustrates what "death with dignity" really means.
    FOR THE RECORD: A previous version of this story mis-identified Peter D. Richardson as Paul.
    Several competition documentaries focus on larger-than-life personalities and the worlds they create. Eric Strauss and Daniele Anastasion's "The Redemption of General Butt Naked" brings us along on the unbelievable journey of a man who went from being one of the most savage killers in Liberia's civil war to a minister seeking forgiveness and reconciliation. Also on an exceptional life voyage is Buck Brannaman, the subject of Cindy Meehl's "Buck." The inspiration for the book "The Horse Whisperer," Brannaman overcame a horrific childhood to do things with horses that beggar description. Though Marshall Curry's "If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front" chronicles the rise and fall of that controversial organization, it gains much of its considerable power because of its ability to illuminate the complexities behind the actions of activist Daniel McGowan. Yet another charismatic individual, tireless movie producer Roger Corman, is profiled with tremendous humor in Alex Stapleton's "Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel." In the world documentary section, some of the most interesting films made by overseas directors focus on American issues. David Sington's "The Flaw" is a lively, iconoclastic look at the current crisis in capitalism; Göran Hugo Olsson's "The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975" makes fascinating use of footage of that movement shot by Swedish journalists; and Danfung Dennis' "Hell and Back Again" has remarkable access to one seriously injured soldier in Afghanistan and on his return home to North Carolina. Sundance's foreign-language films often feature mature themes and characters that American independents do not. Among the most interesting this year are, from Israel, Yossi Madmony's "Restoration," and from Canada, Sébastien Pilote's French-language "The Salesman." On a different plane altogether is Japanese director Shunji Iwai's spooky and unsettling "Vampire." And Sundance would be a place to catch up with Danish director Susanne Bier's exceptional "In a Better World," sure to be among the five titles nominated for an Oscar for foreign-language film. kenneth.turan@latimes.com
     
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Steven Zaillian to Receive WGA's Lifetime Achievement Award

Awards Tracker

All things Oscars, Emmys, Grammys and Tonys

Zaillian
Oscar- and WGA Award-winning screenwriter Steven Zaillian ("Schindler's List") is set to receive the 2011 Screen Laurel Award for lifetime achievement at the Writers Guild Awards West ceremony. It will be held Feb. 5 at the Grand Ballroom at Hollywood and Highland.
Besides writing and co-writing screenplays for "Awakenings," "Hannibal" and "The Gangs of New York," Zaillian has written and directed the films "Searching for Bobby Fischer," "A Civil Action" and "All the King's Men." His latest project is the adaptation of David Fincher's remake of "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo."
-- Susan King

Monday, January 17, 2011

Aaron Sorkin At Golden Globes: “Elite Is Not A Bad Word, It’s An Aspirational One”

 by Matt Schneider | 9:08 am, January 17th, 2011


Last night’s Golden Globes telecast was largely devoid of politics and instead the target seemed to be Hollywood itself, thanks to the tone set by a fearless, go-for-broke hosting job by Ricky Gervais. However, Aaron Sorkin, screenwriter of The Social Network and The American President and creator of television’s The West Wing, did manage to slip in a veiled political reference.
In his acceptance speech for Best Screenplay, Sorkin thanked Scott Rudin and David Fincher, producer and director, respectively, of the “Facebook movie” and even complimented Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, despite suggestions in the past that Zuckerberg was not pleased with the film. Then out of nowhere Sorkin offered up this piece of wisdom:
“And I want to thank all the female nominees tonight for helping demonstrate to my young daughter that elite is not a bad word, it’s an aspirational one. Honey, look around, smart girls have more fun, and you’re one of them.”

Monday, January 10, 2011

Screenwriting Tips from a Screenplay Contest Judge

By Gordy Hoffman
http://www.bluecatscreenplay.com/
After cracking hundreds of screenplays sent into the BlueCat Screenplay Competition, the same problems in the execution of the story and script continue to emerge. Here is a general overview of these persistent issues.

Do you realize what you're saying??

In the theatre, they read plays aloud over and over in the process of script development, and one of the reasons they do this is to hear the dialogue. When I hear dialogue in my head, it might sound very good, but then when I hear a person actually speak it, I often have an impulse to jump in front of a bus. And over and over and over and over, when I read screenplay entries to BlueCat, I am immediately dismayed when the characters start speaking. Excellent everything else, awful dialogue. And I often wonder if the writer has actually heard the lines they have written for their characters out loud. Either read the whole thing aloud to yourself, or even better, get a group of your friends to read it. You do not need professional actors to evaluate dialogue. Just people excited to help. Videotape it. I have videotaped readings, and then sat down and worked out an entire rewrite off the tape, addressing every single line that bothered me. Which leads me to another thing.

Ha.

It's hard to pass a screenplay on to industry contacts if an unfunny joke is sitting in the middle of page two. It’s highly difficult if there’s twelve by page five. You might have a payoff in your third act that would break my heart, but if your jokes are poor, the heart of your audience will be shot, probably resentful, and your work will be recycled. Please try your humor out. If your beats aren’t funny to some people, rewrite. Trust a truly hilarious bit is coming. Think of the patience you need to muster through this writing process as courage, because it is.
If you find you are not funny, write a script that is not funny. Many, many great scripts are not funny, as we all know.

Mispellings.

Do you think the development people in Los Angeles, basically the smartest people in the film industry, will not be annoyed and continue to read your script when you have misspelled three words in the first five pages? Perhaps. How do you feel when you're reading something and you find misspelled words? How does your attitude shift towards the author? Exactly.
If you don't think many scripts have this problem, start a screen writing competition.

OKAY, WE GOT IT!

Try to limit your scene description. When a person opens your script, how many INCHES of action slug are they looking at on page one? Is there anyway you can convey what you want us to SEE with less words? I always go back and CUT CUT CUT to prevent my screenplay from fatiguing my reader with excess words as they try to listen for my story. Do we need to know what necklace someone is wearing? We all understand making motion pictures is collaborative. I strive to let the art department and the costumer and the prop master and so on DO THEIR JOB by not making their decisions in the screenplay, because I have little passion for it and don’t do it well. They will make their own choices, and most likely better ones, so why bother? Always use fewer words to say the same thing.

It's not show and tell, it's show not tell.

I constantly find myself being told something by the screenplay the viewer of the film will not be aware of. Screenplays are not literature. They are words assembled to describe what motion pictures will play out on the screen. Telling us a character is a jealous person is passive and dull. Showing a character in an act of jealousy is more effective and essentially cinematic. Let the words and actions of your characters carry your story. This is not easy. You want the actor or director to understand what you want and what you mean. Allow the description of physical actions and the recording of spoken words reveal the narrative to the filmmakers. The script will read faster and offers the reader a richer opportunity to imagine and discover.

The Joy of Making Things Up.

I really cherish the idea, that as a writer, I can make things up. If I want the guy to say something, all I have to do is type it. But I have to fight against creating characters and interactions amongst characters derived from movies I have watched and television I have seen. I often find myself writing a scene only to realize I'm not drawing from my imagination or my own life experience or my observations of people, I'm drawing from the millions of hours of observing actors play human beings on television and in movie theaters. And because I’m writing a “MOVIE,” it is even more difficult, because I’m fighting against a subconscious or unconscious observation that this is "how people act in movies." Stop yourself and ask, would this happen on planet Earth? Do I know how people from Miami really speak? What would a person actually say if they had a gun in their face? Can you possibly imagine what could happen? This is your opportunity to be truly imaginative. Answer your own expectations of original work. A mature writer develops a strong capacity to recognize and reject the false.

Ouch.

Forced exposition. This is when a brother tells a sister on page two that he will be attending a school which dad wouldn't pay for because he bought a farm that the whole family will be moving to tomorrow because he found that the city was a really bad place to live in after mom was really scared because of that mugging thing that happened after they came back from the sister's graduation from high school. When characters engage in an unbelievable conversation about matters in which they would be familiar with, or when they proclaim something completely out of nowhere simply to inform the audience of key facts crucial to their understanding of the movie, you have a problem. This awkward exposition will not be seen as genuine human behavior and will detach your audience from the emotional current of your story. Exposition is necessary and difficult to execute. Be careful how you offer information crucial to your story at the start of your screenplay. This is a common problem in early drafts. Exposition needs to be seamless and graceful.

Format.

You know what? Go get a script and copy what you think it looks like and you'll be fine. Trust me. Spec scripts are sitting on desks all over Hollywood and their format is not consistent at all. Getting crazy about format sells screenwriting software. I use two tab settings and copied stuff from a book and not one person in the film industry has ever said a thing to me in ten years. But if your script looks like a book, or a poem, or a magazine article, your screenplay format is wrong. Just make it look a little like a movie script, and if it kicks ass, guess what.
So do you.

Bio of Gordy Hoffman


Winner of the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival for LOVE LIZA, Gordy Hoffman made his feature directorial debut with his script, A COAT OF SNOW, which world premiered at the 2005 Locarno Intl Film Festival. The movie would go on to win the Domani Vision Award at VisionFest, held at the Tribeca Cinemas. He has conducted screenwriting workshops all over North America, Poland and the UK.He recently taught screenwriting at the USC School of Cinematic Arts and the University of Kansas, and he's serving as a panelist for the 2010 IFP Script to Screen Conference in New York City, as well as a judge for the 2010 McKnight Screenwriting Fellowships. He's attached to direct CORDELIA, written by Melissa Brandt, a love story inspired by KING LEAR, and he's writing a comedy set in the Gaza Strip. Gordy Hoffman founded the BlueCat Screenplay Competition in 1998.

Academy Award for Best Writing (Original Screenplay)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Academy Award for Best Writing (Original Screenplay)
Presented byAcademy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
CountryUnited States
Official websitehttp://www.oscars.org
The Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay is the Academy Award for the best script not based upon previously published material. Before 1940, there was an Academy Award for Best Story for writing. For 1940, it and the award in this article were separated into two awards. Beginning with the Oscars for 1957, the two categories were combined to honor only the screenplay. In 2002, the name of the award was changed from "Writing (Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen)" to "Writing (Original Screenplay)".[1][2]

Superlatives

Charles Brackett was the first to win twice in this category. Others to do so are Billy Wilder, Paddy Chayefsky and Woody Allen.
Woody Allen has the most nominations in this category with 14.
Richard Schweizer was the first to win for a foreign language film, Marie-Louise. Other winners that had followed included Albert Lamorisse, Pietro Germi, Claude Lelouch and Pedro Almodovar.
Muriel Box was the first woman to win in this category, which she shared with her husband, Sydney Box. Other female winners include Sonya Levien, Nancy Dowd, Callie Khouri, Jane Campion, Sofia Coppola and Diablo Cody. The Boxes are also the first married couple to win in this category. The only other married couple to win are Earl W. Wallace and Pamela Wallace.
Joel Coen and Ethan Coen, in 1996, are the only siblings to win in this category, and Francis Coppola, in 1971, and Sofia Coppola, in 2004, are the only father-daughter pair to win.

[edit] 1940s

(In 1949, the category was renamed "Story and Screenplay")

[edit] 1950s

[edit] 1960s

(In 1969, the category was renamed: "Story and Screenplay - based on material not previously published or produced)

[edit] 1970s

(In 1976, the category was renamed: "Screenplay written directly for the Screen - Based on factual material or on story material not previously published or produced")
(In 1978, the category was renamed: "Screenplay written directly for the screen")

[edit] 1980s

[edit] 1990s

[edit] 2000s