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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  • Thanks for the information. i was just wondering where can somebody get a lead to contact agents for movie makers?
  • Presenting a story to a massive audience for a take on the screen is more of a hassle than writing it on paper. But both take creative insight to market it on both of the fields. I agree on how he was describing the ways to get it out there
  • I appreciate the helpful presentation. Does anyone know how to contact Hallmark Channel or Lifetime, as they both have family orientated movies. I think the book I am submitting would make a good movie for those who enjoy the Civil War era and a good ghost story! Thanks!
  • I read with interest your comment about the novel based on your family. I have a large family with many scandals and skeletons in the cupboard. When I wrote my memoirs - Scalpel in the Sand, a constant feedback was to expand on the section about my origins and my family. Unfortunately, I cannot write about the family without hurting people. I have decided to write a fictional account with composite characters and anonymise the people. That will be my third book. I am completing my second book - The Silent Coup. It is abut Nixon, Watergate and China - next year being the 40th anniversary of his visit to China. The twist is that the Watergate was a right wing plot. Once it was sprung, the liberal press ran with it and successfully campaigned to have him impeached and to be the first president to resign in office winning 60.7% of the popular vote just a few months ago. The Watergate arrests was the third attempt at breaking in. More like a set-up rather than the conventional cock-up.
  • Excellent short presentation. Gave me an idea od writing to Oliver Stone or Roman Polanski about my next docu-fiction thriller -"Silent Coup". Relate Roman Polanski's Ghost to the revival of his "sexual crime" after all these years. I personally think, it was attempt to get him to desist filming the story. Next year is the 40th Aniversary of Nixon's trip to China. Also link the present financial crisis in the US to what Nixon did to dissociate the dollar from gold. But he did have two generations of Americans with excellent quality of life. As they say "Let the devil take the hind most." The same can be applied to Oliver Stone and his latest Wall Street film. Rene Chang. renechang@ntlworld.com