You can see the trailer we used for the original pitch [here](http://johnaugust.com/archives/2009/pitching-prince-of-persia).
Every villain is a hero
A helpful thing to remember when plotting out stories with a clear antagonist: he probably doesn’t know he’s the bad guy.
* Alan Rickman’s character from Die Hard likely sees himself as George Clooney’s character from Ocean’s 11.
* In Michael Clayton, Tilda Swinton is struggling to protect herself and her company. She sees it as a survival story, with herself cast as the heroic victim.
* Even monsters, like the shark in Jaws or the velociraptors of Jurassic Park, can be heroes of their own story. In Aliens, the Queen is defending her brood. Once we understand that, the conflict is even stronger.
Whether you’re writing a thriller, a comedy or an action movie, always look at the story from the villain’s point of view. What is he trying to do? Besides the hero, what other obstacles are in the way?
Too often, we come up with the villain’s motivation (revenge, greed) and stop. Rather, look for what the journey is. We might only see a small part of it from the hero’s perspective, but knowing the whole arc gives us more to push against.
Have a little sympathy. Let your villain win a few times, but make him work for it.
Narcopalabras
Like English, Spanish has a knack for neologism. Ken Ellingwood’s article in the LA Times provides a [glossary of new words and phrases](http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-narco-glossary28-2009oct28,0,1009690.story) related to Mexican drug violence.
My favorite is *encajuelado*:
> **Encajuelado:** Based on the word for “trunk,” a body dumped in the trunk of a car. This is a common method for disposing of victims of a drug hit. Often, the bodies are bound and gagged with packing tape or are *encobijados*, wrapped in blankets.
When something is happening enough that *they made a word for it*, you know there’s a problem.
Ellingwood’s glossary explains that an encajuelado is sometimes accompanied by a handwritten *narcomensaje,* a scrawled drug message meant to threaten rival drug cartels or government security forces. Messages sometimes take the form of banners, known as *narcomantas,* and are hung from bridges or in other public places to demonstrate a gang’s audacity.
As a screenwriter, you have to be careful how much of this esoterica you try to use in your script. Particularly if characters are speaking English, trying to wedge a “narcomensaje” into dialogue is going to feel forced. Yet a reference to a character being encajuelado, once explained, is chilling.
Hulu is not dead to me
CNET has good [interview with Eric Garland](http://news.cnet.com/8301-31001_3-10383572-261.html), the CEO of media measurement company [Big Champagne](http://bcdash.bigchampagne.com/), talking about file sharing and the future of film and television.
Most of his points aren’t new, but they’re delivered in less-hysterical terms than you often see.
> The music people used to say, “How can you can compete with free?” And now you ask anybody in digital music and they’ll tell you, “I’m just trying to compete effectively with free.” They’ve embraced the very condition that up until very recently they said they would reject. I’m telling you, you are going to compete with free. Sometimes you’re even going to win, once you make the commitment to living in the marketplace as it is and not as you wish it were or as it once was.
Garland [shares my sympathy](http://johnaugust.com/archives/2008/more-on-the-torrents) for international viewers, who are often told to wait months for movies that the U.S. gets on day one. If you don’t give the audience a convenient and legal way to watch something, they’re going to find a convenient and illegal way. And it’s hard to blame them.
I have much less sympathy for users outraged that [Hulu is going to start charging](http://news-briefs.ew.com/2009/10/22/hulu-to-start-charging-in-2010/). “Hulu is dead to me” is the common refrain on messageboards and Twitter.
But here’s the thing: you don’t have a god-given right to free shows, just as you can’t walk into Barnes and Noble and start shoving books in your backpack. We’ve conflated the ideas of intellectual liberty and zero cost into a big bundle of entitlement.
While I disagree with many points in Chris Anderson’s Free
, he makes a useful distinction between flavors of “free.” I’d argue that movies and television need to be free as in accessible — by a global audience on their timetable. But you can have that kind of free without setting the price at zero. In fact, charging for something often makes it more accessible, by making it economically worthwhile to keep the systems running.
Right now, Hulu competes very effectively with free torrents on price. But if it chooses to move to a subscription model, it can ultimately offer more content at higher speeds, allowing it to compete better with free torrents on access.
Netflix is often seen as a tremendous bargain, offering a vast selection of movies and TV on demand for a low subscription price. That’s what Hulu may morph into, and that’s not cause for alarm.