Monday, March 31, 2008

Script Frenzy


On Your Mark...Get Set...Write!

This year’s Script Frenzy—the screenwriter cousin of National Novel Writing Month—is in April. That’s right 30 days, 100 pages, and a completed screenplay at the Finish Line.

The point of Script Frenzy is productivity. The math is simple: If you write moving forward, with a page-count goal, you end up with a finished product. The website—Script Frenzy—offers message boards, announcements of local write-ins, resources, and other motivating fare.

Script Frenzy is a donation-funded nonprofit, and there is no fee to participate. The only prize, which is awarded to all who finish, is a Script Frenzy Winner's Certificate and web icon. The best prize? A completed screenplay. Whoo hoo!

According to the site, here are the 5 Basic Rules of Script Frenzy:

  1. To be crowned an official Script Frenzy winner, you must write a script (or multiple scripts) of at least 100 total pages and verify this tally on ScriptFrenzy.org

  2. You may write individually or in teams of two. Writer teams will have a 100-page total goal for their co-written script or scripts

  3. Script writing may begin no earlier than 12:00:01 AM on April 1 and must cease no later than 11:59:59 PM on April 30, local time

  4. You may write screenplays, stage plays, TV shows, short films, comic book and graphic novel scripts, adaptations of novels, or any other type of script your heart desires

  5. You must, at some point, have ridiculous amounts of fun

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Stephanie Palmer Booksigning

Stephanie Palmer, author of Good in a Room: How To Sell Yourself and Your Ideas and Win Over Any Audience, was beaming as she signed books at The Grove in Los Angeles Tuesday night. The crowd of about 50 friends and fans came out to support her first book, and learned a little bit more about taking meetings in the process.

According to Palmer, some of the classic mistakes people make during meetings are "saying too much, speaking too quickly, and asking for more than one thing."

Palmer, a former MGM executive who has taken more than 3,000 meetings with writers, directors, and producers, says "It would be ideal if great ideas sold themselves."

Since that is not often the case, Palmer developed a system to help people take better meetings, so they get the results they want. She started her company—Good in a Room—after she left MGM. She has since coached 12 Oscar winners, 5 Emmy winners, and numerous corporate executives, including Fortune 500 CEOs.

Palmer's book's purpose is to help more people gain access to this important information.

The best part of her job?

"To help someone with a fantastic idea bring their idea to life," Palmer says. "There's nothing better than that for me." For more information, go to The Writers Store.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

2008 Cinema City International Film Festival

On Monday, March 10, the ballroom at the Century Park Hyatt sparkled. Soldiers, filmmakers, and supporters came out to honor the winners of the 2008 Cinema City International Film Festival, as they capped off their 2-day screening competition.

Cinema City is dedicated to supporting the next generation of independent filmmakers. Yet the festival was much more than that. The Gala served as a fundraiser for numerous burn foundations, and honored American Soldiers who have endured burn injuries while serving our country.

Final Draft was pleased to sponsor the award for Best TV Pilot Script. Our winner, Liz Alper, who wrote Wheat in Chicago, was absolutely ecstatic.

"I feel like I'm on top of the world," she said. "I have a gold statuette that tells me I can go out and do anything."

Wheat in Chicago is the story of two brothers who went to Chicago during the Great Depression to make a better life, and wound up getting seduced by the gangs.

"The heart of the story," Alper says, "is based on a relationship I had with a friend, who was a role model for me."

The friend has since passed away, and Alper dedicated her award to him. Alper knows her journey as a writer is just beginning.

Congratulations to all the 2008 Cinema City International Film Festival Winners:

Best TV Movie Script - Watching Closely

Best TV Pilot Script - Wheat in Chicago

Best TV Short Form Pilot - The Volt

Best TV Pilot - Loving the InLaws

Special TV Pilot Diversity Award - The New Americans

Best Music Video - Siempre Pude Ver

Best Commercial - Too Many

Student Filmmaker Award - Marcus Clarke

Audience Award - A tie between Gunmen and Undoing Time

For more information, go to Cinema City International Film Festival