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Directors Close-up

January 7, 2010 Los Angeles, News

I’ll be [moderating two panels](http://www.filmindependent.org/content/neil-labute-john-august-moderate-film-independents-10th-annual-directors-closeup) for Film Independent this February at The Landmark in West LA.

**February 3rd**
The Creative Collaboration – Moderator John August and panelists Jason Reitman (Up in the Air), editor Dana Glauberman, cinematographer Eric Steelberg and other members of the creative team will spend an evening exploring the collaborative process that takes a film from script to screen, including: research, production design, lighting, camera placement, and more.

**February 10th**
Sound Design – Moderator John August will converse with directors and sound designers about creating a powerful film soundtrack, from sound effects and location sound to the final mix. Panelists to be announced. ((I know who they’re trying to get, and if happens, I will do a Snoopy dance.))

The panels are part of a month-long series that include discussions about acting, casting and comedy. Passes for the whole thing are [available online](http://filmindependent.org/content/directors-closeup).

How ScriptShadow hurts screenwriters, cont’d

December 8, 2009 News

The comment thread on my [earlier post](http://johnaugust.com/archives/2009/how-scriptshadow-hurts-screenwriters) has mostly focussed on intellectual property and “fairness,” with [one good Nabisco analogy](http://twitter.com/johnaugust/status/6472455226) rising above the rest.

Lost in the discussion is that I never insisted ScriptShadow be shut down, but rather pushed it to stay true to its stated mission. ScriptShadow’s many defenders see the site as an invaluable resource for aspiring writers.

So far, few of them have addressed my two proposed changes:

1. Review screenplays of movies once they’ve come out.
2. Ask the writers before posting reviews of unproduced scripts.

“Carson” doesn’t review scripts after the movie has come out. Why not? If the purpose of his site is to celebrate writers and acquaint newbies with the craft, isn’t that in fact a more valuable exercise, showing how the words on the page translate to the screen?

I think we all know why he doesn’t want to review existing movies: he’d lose the buzz that comes with having the first opinion. It’s part of the reason we want to go to movies on opening weekend, or stand for hours in the Sundance snow to see a movie we wouldn’t walk across the street to see in March.

I’m not faulting him for human nature, but rather disingenuousness. It’s cool to be first. But don’t claim that being first on reviewing an old draft of Supermax is somehow improving the world for screenwriters.

The second point, asking writers before posting reviews, is an acknowledgement that some unproduced/unsold writers benefit from exposure.

Would they benefit less if Carson asked first? No.

There are many great scripts that never get produced, just as there are many great books that never get published. If Carson truly wants to shine a spotlight on these unheralded gems, he should have the courtesy to ask the writer first, rather than review whatever random draft he comes across. For all he knows, he’s reading the version written for the executive who insisted on heavy voiceover, “Y’know, so the audience will know what he’s thinking.”

On the point that ScriptShadow is letting readers outside Hollywood read screenplays: Google *”title of the movie” screenplay*. If the first page doesn’t have a direct link, another minute of searching will find huge libraries. Reading these scripts to actual films that got made will serve any aspiring writer much better than the second draft of a vampire dog thriller in development at Lionsgate.

Carson Reeves emailed this afternoon, asking that I remove his real name from the comments. I did so with the hope that he’ll address some of the concerns raised.

How I Became a Famous Novelist

August 4, 2009 Books, News

book cover
Add this book to your late-summer reading: How I Became a Famous Novelist,
by Steve Hely. It’s fast, funny, and will likely become the next movie I write and direct.

Here’s the official press release, with additional commentary:

> LOS ANGELES, CA (August 3, 2009) – Filmmaker John August has optioned How I Became a Famous Novelist by Steve Hely through his company Quote-Unquote Films. August optioned the hilarious novel with an eye to adapt and direct. The novel, published by Grove/Atlantic, has garnered excelled reviews across the board and was Amazon’s July 2009 title of the month.

The great reviews include one by [Janet Maslin in the NY Times](http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/13/books/13maslin.html), who quotes so many funny lines from the book that you might worry she’s spoiling it. She isn’t. She can’t.

Hely’s book has an unbelievably high joke-to-page ratio, the literary equivalent of a 30 Rock episode. (Which seems fitting, since Hely is now a writer on that show.)

> The book tells the story of Pete Tarslaw, an ambitiously underachieving college grad who writes a shamelessly maudlin and derivative Great American Novel for the sole purpose of upstaging his ex-girlfriend’s wedding. When the book becomes a bestseller, he finds himself sucked into a strange coterie of mega-authors and their attendants.

I wrote that summary, but it omits something that makes reading the book so worthwhile: excerpts from all the other mega-authors’ books, such as *Teeth of the Winged Lion* by Nick Boyle. It’s hard to write well, but writing badly well is a special talent.

The book also features special publishing-related miscellany, such as this [fake New York Times Bestsellers list](http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/marketing/abna/Hely-NYT-list.pdf), which even includes “Great Fish.”

> On the title, August said “It’s the funniest thing I’ve read in a really long time. Like Go, it’s about thinking you have the system all figured out, realizing you don’t, then faking it. Characters who do the wrong things for misguided reasons are the heart of comedy.”

Let’s break down my quote.

First, I restate that the book is funny, in case that gets dropped out of any stories based on the press release.

Second, I refer back to an earlier comedy I wrote, because a lot of folks might think of my credits as being more funny-peculiar than funny-ha-ha.

Finally, I try to restate the premise in a way that seems more universal: it’s not a funny book about books; it’s a funny book about a guy on a journey.

> Why he bought it himself: “It’s the kind of book I could hear studios saying is too smart. I knew I’d spend many meetings convincing them that it wasn’t nearly as smart as they thought it was. So I’d rather just give them a script so they can see what it is.”

There’s stuff in the book that’s funny only because it’s in a book, such as those great excerpts. The danger is that a studio exec reading it says, “Well, that part’s not cinematic.” And it’s true, some parts won’t translate as a movie.

But the premise, the characters and the plot of the book all translate really well. It’s better for me to show what I *can* do in a script than focus on what I can’t bring over from the book.

> Ken Richman, Esq, negotiated on behalf of August with Anna DeRoy of WME handling the novel.

It’s the first book rights I’ve bought since Big Fish in 1999 — and technically that was Sony buying it for me.

In case you think that this was all Hollywood-insider dealmaking, let me talk you through the process.

In May, I was in New York, working on a yet-to-be-announced project. The hotel I was staying at had USA Today, which I don’t normally read. But I happened to spot [this article](http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2009-05-06-summer-books-hely_N.htm) describing Hely’s soon-to-be-published book, and thought it sounded funny.

So I tracked down Pete Tarslaw’s blog on Google, figured it was probably Hely, and emailed asking for an advance copy:

> hey steve hely, can I get an advance copy of your book?

> By description, it sounds very, very great.

> — John August, the screenwriter

> ps. I will also pester you on Facebook.

He sent me the book. I read it the next day. A week later, I met with him at Susina, the coffeeshop featured in The Nines. Lawyers started talking, and eventually we got a deal in place. (So yes, there was Hollywood dealmaking. But it came very late in the process.)

As far as making a movie, that process is just starting now. I’ll be writing a draft, and then figuring out the how/when/where/who.

In the meantime, read his book. It is available pretty much everywhere, but it’s [cheap on Amazon](http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0802170609?ie=UTF8&tag=johnaugustcom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0802170609) ($10.98), and only [$8.80 on Kindle](http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B002DR48HY?ie=UTF8&tag=johnaugustcom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B002DR48HY).

I’d like to thank the Academy

June 30, 2009 News

I’ve been [invited to join](http://www.oscars.org/press/pressreleases/2009/20090630.html). Many thanks to the folks who nominated me, and the committee who selected me.

Again: Really sorry about Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle.

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