Free Updates

Let us tell you when new posts are added!

Email:

Navigation

Categories

Search

Archives

<November 2008>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
2627282930311
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30123456

Blogroll

 ...By Ken Levine
The world as seen by a TV comedy writer
 Brian A. Klems' Questions & Quandaries
Let this WD columnist answer your most pressing grammatical, ethical, business and writing-related questions.
 Children's Writer's & Illustrator's Market blog
 Chuck Sambuchino's Agents Blog
 Complications Ensue: The Crafty TV and Screenwriting Blog
The craft of screenwriting for tv and movies by a working screenwriter... with forays into life and political theater.
 Daily Script
A huge online of screenplays and TV scripts... often including different drafts of the scripts!
 Deadline Hollywood Daily
News for, and from, industry insiders... by L.A. Weekly columnist/blogger Nikki Finke
 Drew's Script-O-Rama
Hundreds of downloadable TV scripts and movie screenplays
 FishbowlLA
A blog about the Hollywood creative community and L.A. media
 Internet Movie Script Database
Produced movie scripts to read online
 Jane Espenson.com
A terrific blog from "Buffy" and "Battlestar Galactica" writer Jane Espenson, who offers everything from practical advice to writing tips to Hollywood commentary.
 John August.com
A ton of useful information about screenwriting... from the writer of "Corpse Bride," "Charlie & the Chocolate Factory," and "Charlie's Angels"
 Kung Fu Monkey
Hollywood commentary from screenwriter/producer John Rogers (Catwoman, Cosby, Transformers)
 Maria Schneider's The Writer's Perspective
 Morning Call Time
The only daily podcast designed specifically for the entertainment industry! We not only give you today's industry headlines... we tell you how the trades are reporting them.
 News From Me
Mark Evanier's blog about TV, movies, comics, theater, news, politics, and other forms of fantasy
 Novel & Short Story Writer's Market blog
 Past Deadline
Hollywood commentary from columnist/reviewer Ray Richmond (The Hollywood Reporter, The Pulse)
 Poetic Asides
 Script City
A great site where you can buy produced scripts for hundreds of produced movies and TV episodes (they also have various drafts of different scripts)
 Simply Scripts
Tons of free downloadable screenplays and TV scripts
 The Artful Writer
Information, theory, and debate for the professional television and film writer
 The Thinking Writer
"A conversation about screenwriting" with a bonafide ntertainment lawyer and screenwriter
 The Unknown Screenwriter
A wonderful (and bit mysterious) meeting place for screenwriters looking for writing tips, Hollywood business advice, or fun commentary on the art and craft of screenwriting.
 This Writer's Life by Kevin Alexander
 TV by the Numbers
Daily TV ratings, analysis, and commentary
 Without A Box
Streamlines the distribution process both for filmmakers seeking contests, festivals, & distribution and for distributors searching for content
 Wordplay
Screenwriters Ted Elliott & Terry Rosso (Aladdin, Shrek, Pirates of the Caribbean) offer advice on everything from the art of screenwriting to the science of pitching. They also have guest writers like Walter Parkes and Nina Jacobson.



 Tuesday, March 25, 2008
THINGS THAT INSPIRE ME: "Under the Same Moon"
Posted by Chad

Hey, screenwriters—

So, I figure this is a screenwriting blog, right?  Which means we should not only be discussing great screenwriting tips, advice, and opportunities, but we should be talking about—what else?!—great screenwriting, whenever we see it!  

I mean, presumably, that’s why we’re all here, right?  Because long ago, we saw a movie, TV show, or even a play that made us say, “I wanna do that.”  And presumably, we’re still seeing those great things—movies, shows, plays, books, articles, essays, poems, songs, comedy routines—that remind us why we love writing and force us to raise our own bar even higher.

So I’m gonna kick it off today, because I saw a great movie last night, but feel free to send in your own thoughts about pieces of writing (on or off the screen) that move and inspire you.  I always love hearing what inspires other writers… it helps me think differently about my own work, and it also allows me to see others’ work in new ways.  And as writers and artists, I think we all love discussing other great pieces of art and writing, even if we don’t agree on them.

SO… last night my wife and I went to see Under the Same Moon (La Misma Luna), written by Ligia Villalobos and directed by Patricia RiggenUnder the Same Moon tells the story of nine-year-old Mexican boy, Carlitos (Adrian Alonso), who sets off on his own to cross into America and find his mother, Rosario (Kate del Castillo), who has been working illegally in L.A. for the past four years.  

This movie doesn’t necessarily break any new ground… it uses a formula we’ve seen a million times in everything from The Odyssey and The Incredible Journey to An American Tail and The Journey of Natty Gann (oh my God—I can’t believe I just referenced that—I used to love Meredith Salenger).  Yet what’s great about Under the Same Moon is that while it hits notes you’ve seen before… it hits them all perfectly.  (It even has the obligatory characters-sing-together-in-an-obligatory-musical-number iscene, but it skirts just far enough away from corniness to keep you from rolling your eyes.  Also, Adrian Alonso is so adorable you can forgive a couple quick moments of cheese.)

In fact, Ligia Villalobos’s script is almost flawlessly executed.  It is storytelling at its simplest and most effective: an indomitable character desperately wants something (something both tangible and emotional)… and will stop at nothing to get it.  It follows a pitch-perfect three-act structure, brilliantly setting up every storyline and character, and it deftly plucks every emotional chord necessary.  (Also, the movie does a tremendous job of showing how its two main characters, Carlitos and Rosario, truly ache for each other, so the audience is as painfully invested in ther hero's quest as he is.)  Screenwriting teachers should show this film as an example of how a movie should work… or, for that matter, how any story should work.

(To be fair, the one little story bump—and this won’t give anything away, but it’ll make sense once you see it—is: why didn’t they just use a phone book—or the Internet—to look up all the Domino’s pizza places?)

Also, to its credit, the film never becomes a statement or treatise on illegal immigration.  While it certainly illustrates the plights of many illegals, it simply uses illegal immigration as the setting for Carlitos’s road trip.  We certainly sympathize with the characters, but the movie never gets on a political soapbox.

Anyway, I don’t wanna say too much.  But go see it.  It opened last week, making $2.6 million at only 266 U.S. theaters, making it America’s biggest opening over for a Spanish-language film.  I have a feeling it be around for a while.  And for screenwriters, it’s a dead-on refresher course in what a brilliantly constructed script looks like.

In the mean time, please feel free to share movies, books, plays, TV series, albums-- anything!-- that inspire you, make you want to write, help you think about story, character, emotion.  You can email me at WDScriptNotes@FWPubs.com, or simply post your thoughts in the comments section below!


UNDER THE SAME MOON TRAILER


Things That Inspire Me
3/25/2008 2:13:11 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]