Where to find Natural Born Killers novelization
I was just reading your site in hopes of finding out more about your novelization of the film Natural Born Killers. It appears as though the book can still be found in some circles but at exorbitant prices. Do you happen to know of anywhere that I could order this book?
– MJD
The best advice I could give you is to save your money, because the book isn’t very good. You’re much better off reading Quentin Tarantino’s original screenplay. The only copy on the net I’ve found is an awkwardly-formatted HTML version, but it’s certainly better than nothing. [Update: A kind reader forwarded [this link]( http://www.dailyscript.com/scripts/NaturalBornKillers.PDF) to a proper .pdf.]
The things you love can hurt you the most, and that’s certainly the case with Natural Born Killers. I first read Tarantino’s script in the fall of 1992, when I was in my first year of grad school at USC. His was probably the 10th screenplay I ever read. The moment I finished it, I flipped back to page one and read the whole thing again. It was that good.
So I counted myself incredibly lucky to get to work on the movie the following year. Oliver Stone had directed a heavily-rewritten version of it, and I was hired as assistant to the two producers while the film was in editing. Even though I was mostly answering phones and writing coverage, it was exciting to be one office away from a big motion picture in post. When I finally got to see the cut, I was disheartened: so much of what I loved about Tarantino’s screenplay had been changed. It was like waiting all year for Christmas and finally opening that big wrapped box to discover what you hoped was an Atari was actually Sears Pong. Same idea, but disappointingly different.
I know there are people who love the movie, and with good reason, but to me the film is too much of too little.
Then, remarkably, I got the opportunity work on the novelization. Penguin had hired writers to do it, but the editor wasn’t satisfied with what they were producing. After reading my first script and talking with my bosses, she asked me to write a new book. It gave me a chance to go back to Tarantino’s original script and incorporate things that had been dropped from the movie, and add new sequences that detailed other pit-stops on Mickey and Mallory’s trail of terror.
I wrote the book in three weeks, while finishing my master’s thesis and working full-time. I slept three hours a night — but you can do that when you’re 23.
I was really happy with the book I wrote, but before the draft went to Penguin, one of my bosses decided to rewrite it. And rewrite it poorly. That’s not just my opinion; on a purely objective level, the text is a mess. Because there was no time for proper copy-editing, characters’ names are spelled different ways in different chapters.
It’s frustrating to have my name on a book that I hate. But I try to look for the positive: I was paid $7,000 to write the book, which was enough money to get by for six months before I got my next writing job. (That next job was HOW TO EAT FRIED WORMS, a charming kid’s book for which Natural Born Killers was a terrible, terrible writing sample. I owe Ron Howard a lot for even considering me.)
I can’t put my original draft of the novel in the Downloads section, because the publisher controls the copyright. But if anyone reading this post is an enterprising young editor at Penguin, I’d love to show you what the book could have been.







October 13th, 2004 at 12:29 pm
Amazon isn’t the only source. Check out Powells website for a good price on this. http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?inkey=1-0451182642-4
October 14th, 2004 at 8:37 am
Thanks for sharing that story! I’m working on a feature script, my first big one, and the director who will most likely direct it prides himself on rewriting all the scripts he touches, often taking away most of the subtleties. It’s reassuring to see that a writer can be associated with projects that he/she is not fully satisfied with but manages to keep a good name and still get a great career.
I wonder though: with time, as your reputation grows, do you find yourself having more say in the final films/books that you write?
October 25th, 2004 at 6:10 am
Hi.
Came across your site by accident, and have been reading loas of stuff. A quesiton abuot “Natural Born Killers”. Have you seen the Belgian B/W shocker “Man Bites God” (”Cela s’est pass?© pr?®s de chez vous”)? Always struck me that NBK was following in its tracks.
October 26th, 2004 at 2:13 am
yeah, but there was always BONNIE & CLYDE and BADLANDS before it too - all three based on the same true story…
NBK is a good example of where if you have a great script even a story that’s been plenty done can be done again.