From Page to Screen: Taking Your Story to Hollywood - article

I’m always in awe of anybody who has managed to write a novel. I find the idea overwhelming and quite wonderful. In the movie business, people look to other people’s success to guide them in their choices about what movies to support and what movies to develop. If you’ve created a book, there’s going to be admiration for that—you’ve already met with some success. There’s no guarantee that anyone will take notice unless it’s a bestseller, but it’s a tangible asset.

So say you’ve written a book and are hoping to get some people in the movie industry to look at it. How do you approach them? Well, you look at their body of work. If there’s a director you like, and you see that the kinds of projects they do are in the style of your book, you write them a letter. In the letter, you let them know you’re familiar with their work and that you think your project would be a way for them to grow their creativity. People tend to send out letters to thousands of people, and that makes everyone feel anonymous. If you want people to pay attention, you need to approach them personally and figure out how to translate your project into something they can discover and get excited by.

You should be aware that you’ll have to sign a release form. Before we look at your project, we make you sign a form that gives us your first born, your house, your ownership of the moon, and so forth. We’re in a business where people frequently sue because they think someone has stolen their ideas. But an idea is not the same thing as a finished project, and the release form is a way of protecting ourselves in case we’re already working on something that’s similar to an idea someone sends us. Out of my whole career, I’ve seen very, very few stolen pieces. It’s really not worth the effort, because if you actually did steal someone’s idea, by the time you got to the release of the movie, you would have millions or even tens or hundreds of millions of dollars at stake. If the original owner of the idea turned up at that point, it would cause a panic among the people financing the movie. So people go out of their way to make sure everything is above board. My feeling is that there’s no real danger in signing a release, and it gives you an opportunity to get people to read what you’ve created.

If you have someone willing to look at your book, you need to manage their perceptions of it, because it’s all about perception in this game. You need to sum up your story in a catchy and appealing way (Alien was pitched as Jaws in space, for example) so that the buyer sees it as a financial opportunity. That’s part of our responsibility as creators. We have to put as much creativity into the act of selling our material as we do into the act of creating it. Part of that means finding allies—if you don’t have an agent, maybe your lawyer can sign a letter and send it for you. Maybe you have a professor or a friend who is a well-known author who is willing to sign off on what you’ve created. If your letters are personal and show that you’ve done your research, sometimes those kinds of endorsements can be enough to get someone interested. And you can try going to actors, many of whom have production companies. Go to the actors’ agents and managers, people who the actors are paying to find them great roles. They’re not hard to get to.

One of the things I do at USC is to make my MFA students read How to Win Friends and Influence People. What does that have to do with writing? Well, we’re human beings telling stories to other human beings, and we have to reach out to them. That’s true when you’re writing your story, and it’s also true when you’re trying to sell it. You have to show people that you know something about them and appreciate what they’ve done. If you can make your project seem like the logical next step in their personal journeys, they’ll definitely take a look at it.

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  • Mr. Densham provides a very straight forward discussion on how to approach people in the film industry with your work. For many authors, especially those without representation, approaching a director, producer or film studio with a completed written work can be mysterious and very intimidating. Mr. Densham takes the mystery out of the process and helps bring the process down to human terms making the thought of pursuing film a more attainable goal. Thank you Pen Densham. Maybe your words will help me to bring my own works, "United Earth: the Revelation" and "The Harvest" to film in the near future.
  • Wonderful. Thank you I'm doing research in writing a book about my life-experience during the genocide in Rwanda as well as making a movie about my life experience and how /what I'm doing in term of helping Rwandan orphans and why I choose to help Rwandan orphans while me too I need help & deserved somebody to help me as a Rwanda- genocide orphan survivor. Please give me so guidelines or advisers. Peace My work is at www.whydoiexist.org Please give me so guidelines or advisers. Peace My work is at www.whydoiexist.org ------- Marie Claudine Mukamabano Rwanda genocide- orphan survivor Founder/CEO Why Do I Exist?/ KUKI NDIHO RWANDA ORPHANS SUPPORT PROJECT Ambassador for Peace www.whydoiexist.org E-MAIL: claudinepeace@gmail.com ---- Marie Claudine Mukamabano,a genocide orphan survivor has received recognition from the Assembly of the State of New York for turning a life of hardship into one of Leadership and Advocacy for founding KUKI NDIHO RWANDA ORPHANS SUPPORT PROJECT
  • I am very interested in Hollywood perhaps picking up my book. This prersentation was very well done. For being such a short presentation it was packed full of useful information.
  • hi my name is john. its an honor to finally be able to write something for you i am a big big fan of yours, i have recently published my book which is called judgment day the rise of the dragon and the beasts, its an ultimately amazing story i can guarantee you that, its available on xlibris and amazon and barnsandnoble.com site also on my own site www.judgmentday-theriseofthedragonandthebeats.com, please have alook at it, this is the 1st part of my story and it can easily turn into a movie or a comic book as the main character becomes a hero with ultimate powers. my email address is: forever.victory@yahoo.com and contact number is (403)460-3204 it will be an honor if you take a look at my work please thank you so much have a great day
  • Thank You Pen Densham, your ideas on approaches that will get you noticed are great. As a matter of fact, I have tried in very similar ways to get attention to my work because I've heard it recommended in quite the same way. However, I do have a question. Did You say that an attorney's signature on your intro letter to a studio, producer or actor would be sufficient?. I feel really certain that my story would make a great movie. Thanks for your information in the clip.