Welcome to Josh Sully’s World

It must be a decade since I first read those words.

And now I’ve seen the trailer. The Boy watched it with me – he was a little bemused by my admittedly reverent whisper of Awesome. Mr Ebert has seen a fifteen minute preview (twice, the lucky sod) and has reserved judgement on the finished product.

That’s okay – I’m a little jealous of their innocence.

The Avatar scriptment has been a treasured D F Mamea Script Library item for the past ten years, something I often referred to in my early writing career as a kind of ‘how-to’ bible.

Yes, the finished product will be whatever it will be. But until then, anticipation and expectations are high.

Postscript: Late in 2008 Motorbike Steve asked what I was looking forward to in the new year. I shrugged and mumbled that maybe there was Watchmen but otherwise… nah. My outlook didn’t really change until around last month. Besides, obviously, Avatar, there’s Michael Mann‘s Public Enemies I want to find time for, and Pixar’s Up next month. ‘S nice.

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Hair

Lately I’ve noticed that when I’m driving about, I’ve been hunched over the wheel, peering over my knuckles.

My eyesight’s okay. Ditto my back.

It’s my hair.

The same hair I haven’t referred to since last freaking month. What’d I say back then? Piece of piss. O sham modesty – meet my life.

It’s not that my hair is so long that it’s hanging over my eyes.

It’s that it feels weird whenever I lean my head against the headrest. Scratch weird: this amount of hair is bloody unnatural.

So. Now that the film festival is out of the way, marauding parents have returned to their usual place of residence, and a couple of large-ish paid tasks have settled down… I’ve got until the end of the month.

Hoo-ah.

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Point & Click

Kinda flat out.

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Walk This Way

Had to walk from a project recently.

I’m grieving just a little about that part of my life. I’m a people-pleaser by nature upbringing and when relationships have gone south my default position has been to grin and bear it and eventually resent it.

It certainly started well enough. After some ah, exciting and interesting collaborations in the past, this time around, I made sure I did everything right:

  • a collaboration agreement was drafted, agreed, and signed;
  • a development plan was negotiated, drafted and agreed – concept -> treatment -> first draft;
  • a three-year timeline was negotiated, drafted, and agreed;

– and work commenced with enthusiasm aplenty, creative hearts leavened with the knowledge that a workload shared is a workload halved.

WRITER

Okay. What is The Project about?

COLLABORATOR

It’s a story... about THE WORLD.

WRITER

Yes. Okay. That’s a bit of a big concept for our audience. We need to somehow personalise or personify it somehow.

(thinks)

What if it was a love story?

COLLABORATOR

(nods excitedly)

Yes. Yes! A love story... about THE WORLD –

WRITER

– with automatic weapons.

Growing pains are part of the process of collaboration. As is walking before you run:

WRITER

– and then... with Fluffy the mastiff at his side, our protagonist kills everyone in the room –

COLLABORATOR

– and he doesn’t get a single scratch. YES!

WRITER

Well, there’s the small matter of physics –

COLLABORATOR

Oh, you’ve seen “Wanted” –

WRITER

I hated “Wanted” –

COLLABORATOR

Look – why don’t I just write it up –

WRITER

We don’t know how it ends yet!

COLLABORATOR

It’s part of the JOURNEY, man! I’ll just write it up –

WRITER

No –

COLLABORATOR

– because I’m bored with all this plotting/storylining/conceptualising shit. THIS ISN’T WRITING!

Nutting out the story, push-pulling over the actual writing – these are the joys of collaboration. I’m not kidding. You’re not alone. You’re bouncing ideas. You’re spitballing. You’re chugging down beers or flat whites and you’re riffing on former lives, past black-outs and relationships, dredging unashamedly for material.

It’s when the burden shared is a burden halved thing begins to pale. Emails or calls don’t get returned. Deadlines come and go.

WRITER

Hey, stranger –

COLLABORATOR

Oh man, I’m so sorry I haven’t gotten back to you –

WRITER

No problem.

COLLABORATOR

... What’re you -?

WRITER

‘S okay. I’ll uncuff you when you’ve answered some questions.

I’m cool with people getting busy with family or buried under other work commitments. That’s life.

It’s when I realise, after a number polite emails and gentle but firm phone calls, that I’m doing the pushing. I’m the Bad Cop. I don’t want to be the Bad Cop. I want to be liked. I want to be Good Cop. ‘S why I have a manager so that I always come out looking sweet and innocent. Or something.

And so you have a sit down. Lay the cards on the table. Your collaborator agrees that maybe they haven’t been holding up their end of the bargain – but they need you to push because it keeps them honest, keeps them sharp.

You can strap in for the long haul and wherever that may take you. Or you can move onto another project. It’s not necessarily about the project with the best odds of being made; sometimes it’s about the project you can put your best energies into.

I walked*.

John August said it nicely somewhere on his blog about how time spent on a project that stalls is time you could have spent on another project. Yes, I mourn. Just a little.

But I need to keep moving, keep hustling. Keep writing.

* Notice how I switched between first- and third-person perspectives these last few paragraphs? I can run but I can’t hide.

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“To’ona’i” – Grading

(Or Feedback – Another Thought.)

As an audience member, the film or television series or theatre piece that I derive the most pleasure from is the one where I have to work hard at keeping up with the story, busily making connections not spelt out, and putting the pieces together. It makes me feel smart.

Imagined ego-stroking aside, I like the experience where I’m not a passive observer of events, where I have to read more into the nuances and subtext of what I’m seeing and hearing.  I don’t have to be sitting on the shoulder of the protagonist throughout. It’s like I’m… physically in the middle of the action wherever it takes – still invisible, still passive – and I have only the information available to the characters around me, and… discovering the story as it unfolds.

I feel… involved.

It’s a mean trick to do that.

So I’ve got this wee film that’s had a bunch of test screenings from rough cut to a graded and mixed cut, and the feedback and the comments I’ve received have been pretty consistent while I, for my part, have been just a leetle myopic in taking it all on board.  After each screening, I’ve swung tended one way or the other in trying to appease imagined audiences minimise narrative confusion.

Have I done too much?

Or not enough?

I don’t know.  I’ve written the dialogue with subtext and whatever it is that’s described as it’s what’s not said.  Its structure is classic – the finished product may require some concentration but the execution is consistent.  Amit says that I’ve hit the emotional beats.   James is sneaking in all sorts of filters, having quickly established how technically and aesthetically blind I am.

And thanks to the generosity and honesty of the test audiences, I think I’ve done all I can to tell the story the way I want to. I have to get over myself. How the audience watches the finished product is out of my hands.

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Box Watch: The Philanthropist

Two things struck me when I saw the title of this show last year:

1. the title, from a country who changed the title of the first Harry Potter instalment on the off-chance audience members didn’t know what ‘dictionary’ meant; and

2. the creator/writer/producer, Tom Fontana.

If neither of the above points compel you to consider The Philanthropist, the show, in a nutshell, is about a billionaire tycoon who saves the world one person at a time.

… That’s a bit trite. It’s both accurate and a disservice but….

I’d read the pilot courtesy of my far-flung connections. Yes, it’s about a rich white dude trying to make a difference – but the shaded characterisations and intelligent writing made it much more interesting.

… How about: Billionaire Teddy Rist, unable to dull the grief over his son’s death, tries to fill the void inside him by making the world a better place – not by using his considerable connections or his bottomless cheque book – but with only his guile, charm and heart.

Like I said: I really liked the script. I wanted to see the pilot.

And when I saw the pilot the other week… I thought I’d give it just one more ep.

And when I saw the second ep, whatever concerns I had with the show found a voice: Love the concept. Hate the execution.

The acting’s fab. The writing’s sharp (at least in the pilot). The production values are high.

But the whole “This week we’re in exotic, colourful, beautiful [INSERT FOREIGN LAND]” vibe really grates. It’s a slur to – my perceived – social heart of the series.

In the second ep, as Rist was horrified by the deplorable conditions of a Burmese mining camp in the second ep, I couldn’t help thinking, Gee, I wonder if the show will turn its attention to post-Katrina New Orleans or Baltimore’s projects.

Nah-ah.

I know it’s a fantasy. I know it’s on free-to-air NBC rather than cable. I guess if I want a show to fix the world in 45 minutes each week, I want it to fix a fictionalised, country-names-changed-to-protect-the-innocent kind of world. Anything else feels cheap and shallow and faintly insulting.

It’s probably just me.

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dfmamea.com: Year Three

Okay, I’ve met one deadline, I’ve pushed another, and this website is three years old.

Because my hair length is kinda tied to the pushed deadline, the silhouette has left George Hamilton territory and is moving at pace into Farrah Fawcett Land. Ten days. Piece of piss.

And yes: three years. Two hundred and thirty posts. One hundred and eighty nine comments. A small but growing New Zild online community of screenwriters.  Over half a million hits to date (granted, a lot of the spikes were when the @dfmamea.com addresses and blog comments were being offered se xxi al nite lonnng).

Life is good.  Good vibes to you all.

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Murh

Final page count: 56 pages including cover page.

Wrote through the night and flicked it through at 8:32 this morning. Yay.

The Goddess is heading out this evening so I could collapse into bed at oh, 7pm or something ridiculous, or, in anticipation of the premiere of Tom Fontana‘s The Philanthropist, I could sneak an ep or three of Oz.

… Nope. Started this post at 6-ish and… fell asleep at the keyboard.  It’s almost seven already.

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Pages

To borrow from the lovely Daily Screenwriter (and a nod to Phill Barron):

  • 16 June – Receive email from producer about a one-hour concept I pitched oh, almost a year ago: If you’re able to get me a first draft by June 26th…. Collapse to floor laughing/crying.*
  • 17 June – Rearrange workload. Start outlining (current fashion is to write in block letters on recycled paper).
  • 19 June – 22 pages of handwritten notes. Count ’em and weep.
  • 20 June – 4 pages (plus title page).
  • 21 June – 6 pages.
  • 23 June – 22 pages.
  • 24 June – 42 pages.

I only have tomorrow to finish it off but the numbers (and rate of progression) are heartening. And I’m taking a rain check on parts 2 and 4 of the McRae Cranial Therapy.

Just remembered this post was gonna be about superstition and how my hair is so long I think I look like George Hamilton… until my reflections and silhouette show that the hair is really more Krusty the Clown.

Next post. Maybe.

I already have a 30 June feature deadline to meet.

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Finger Drumming

Another live update from Planet DFMamea.

Finished a draft earlier this afternoon, saved it, did a quickie back-up of all my working directories and documents to a flash drive – and the Powerbook had a bit of a kernel panic:

Time for a full backup. Forty-five minutes, it said. That was an hour ago. In that time I’ve played fetch with The Dog, re-upped The Chickens, and picked up WALL-E for some family Friday night viewing. (The children have seen it, us adults haven’t – and since we adults are paying, we choose.) I also reported an idiot on a Vespa.

Meantime, the backup’s been sitting at 25 minutes for the past ten minutes.

Scratch that: sixteen minutes, it says now.

Suppose I could power up the Windoze laptop.

But would I still feel like A WRITER?

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