Tales from the Script: 50 Hollywood Screenwriters Share Their Stories
By Peter Hanson and Paul Robert Herman
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About this ebook
“Tales from the Script gathers notable veterans of the screen wars who demonstrate the basic truth of our adventures in Movieland: Writing is the easy part.” — John Sayles, writer/director of Lone Star and Eight Men Out
“Fascinating tales from the belly of the beast.” — Lawrence Kasdan, Oscar-nominated writer/director of The Big Chill, Wyatt Earp, and Body Heat
Tales from the Script is an unprecedented collection of exclusive interviews with dozens of Hollywood screenwriters—including industry legends Bruce Joel Rubin, David S. Ward, Nora Ephron, Paul Mazursky, John August, Steven De Souza, and Paul Schrader. In these conversations, they reveal the secrets behind their successes and failures, offer uplifting stories about how faith in their talent has empowered their careers, and share colorful, entertaining anecdotes about popular movie stars and films.
Peter Hanson
Michigan native Peter Hanson studied film at New York University and journalism at the University at Albany-SUNY. He is the author of Dalton Trumbo, Hollywood Rebel (a finalist for the Theatre Library Association Award), and The Cinema of Generation X. He directed the documentary feature Every Pixel Tells a Story and the award-winning short Stagehand, and co-wrote the narrative feature The Last Round. His articles have appeared in Script and Written By. He lives in Beverly Hills, California.
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Reviews for Tales from the Script
18 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Everything you need to know about how to survive as a screenwriter in Hollywood. Now I'm prepared for my first meeting.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5This could have been a really good collection. But it’s not. The premise is that successful screenwriters are providing insight into the business – how they started, how they do their job, and what any future screenwriter will face. However, execution of the concept and a questionable approach to choosing who will share doom the overall effort. On top of this, there is an occasional attitude that encroaches (accepting defeat to keep moving forward) that drives another nail into this coffin. Let’s look at each individually.First, the concept is to provide short quotes/paragraphs/stories from the screenwriters that fit into the format of the book. This is a tricky approach (the number of times I’ve seen it work can be counted on one hand) and it is not executed well in this collection. The individuals represented here have some very good stories to tell (and they are, after all, storytellers.) By chopping them up into subjects, the thread of their stories is sacrificed for the artificial structure devised by the editors. So, while the editors get to make their points, the joy of reading what these people have to share is damaged.Second, the premise is that screenwriters at every stage of their career are chosen. There are some incredible talents in here. Examples include William Goldman, Paul Mazursky, and Paul Schrader. However, these are outweighed by the individuals that have only one or two successes, and far outweighed by the screenwriters who are responsible for much of the dreck out there. Explain this to me. What is it I want to learn from the screenwriter responsible for Catwoman, Terminator 3, Termination Salvation, and The Game; or the one responsible for *batteries not included, The Fly II, and Hocus Pocus; or the one responsible for Small Soldiers, Underdog, and Mouse Hunt other than how produce junk and get paid for it. (And many of the others are attached as screenwriters to movies that have more to do with special effects and the directors than any real “story”, e.g. the remake of The Manchurian Candidate, Deep Impact, Beavis and Butthead Do America, Total Recall, Laura Croft, etc., etc.)Third, there is a fatalism that depresses me. This is best exemplified by the section at the end of Chapter Five: What’s Yours is Theirs. Each chapter ends with comments by an individual involved in the movie business, but not a screenwriter. In this case, the individual is a director of development for Jerry Bruckheimer – one of the greatest kings of schlock out there. This piece is a constant litany of how the director and producers are the geniuses and how they save every movie; how it takes a village to write a script; how the script is just an idea. This is everything wrong with the auteur theory, and the fact that this book seems to accept and deeply swallow this codswallop says everything you need to know about how wrong the book isAnd, that gets to the point - my ultimate problem with this collection. While it is, indeed, a collection of individuals speaking to how to succeed, it is also a collection explaining how to sell out. And, even worse, seeming to put forward the premise that selling out is the only way to go.