Register   Login     Search  
Development Hell Screen Writing Movies Script


Register
Forgot Password ?

Development Hell
 Tell A Friend Minimize


  

 

Development hell.net is the only website featuring regular columns from bestselling authors and screenwriting consultants Linda Seger,Dave Trottier, and Michele Wallerstein, a Hollywood agent with over 20 years of experience.
 
 Subscribe for premium content including a monthly newsletter featuring new screenwriting markets: producers, agents, production companies and what type of material they are seeking; the latest information on screenwriting, daily script sales listings. You can get it all right here at The Devil's Guide to Screenwriting.
Development Hell News


Mathieu Kassovitz is pissed off. The French auteur, who first made waves in 1995 with La Haine, is supposed to be celebrating the passion project he's been nursing for the past five years. Instead -- the week before Babylon A.D. hits theaters -- he is nursing a grudge. "I'm very unhappy with the film," he says. "I never had a chance to do one scene the way it was written or the way I wanted it to be. The script wasn't respected. Bad producers, bad partners, it was a terrible experience."

  Read More...

For first-time screenwriter Graham Gordy, being tapped by Mike Meyers to co-write his new self-help-satire-meets-
potty-joke-jubilee, The Love Guru, was both outrageously good fortune and a serious master course in the science of funny.

Gordy, an NYU graduate, first hit Meyers' radar after the SNL alum and Austin Powers creator read a comedy script he'd co-written. After a series of in-person meetings, the two embarked on what would become a four-year process to script The Love Guru.

  Read More...

 

The new film version of the classic '60s small screen spy-medy Get Smart gives fresh worth to that shopworn saying, “the more things change, the more they stay the same.” While the original show, created by comedy luminaries Mel Brooks and Buck Henry, was driven largely by keen jesting in the face of taut national paranoia during the Cold War, the new adaptation, written by Matt Ember and Tom J. Astle finds itself, some 40 years later, making fun in the midst of an era of high national anxiety at the hands of global terrorism.

  Read More...

"Get Smart," the resurrected spy spoof from Warners and Village Roadshow, defeated the forces of boxoffice K.A.O.S., emerging as the top gun in the North American marketplace with an estimated $39.2 million this weekend.

  Read More...

Who knew that shtupping Matt Damon and Ben Affleck could be such a career booster?

"Jimmy Kimmel Live!" segment director Wayne McClammy, who helmed and co-wrote the popular short video spoofs "I'm Fucking Matt Damon" and "I'm Fucking Ben Affleck," has sold a spec titled "Le Car" to MGM that he co-wrote with "Kimmel" colleague Will Burke.

  Read More...

More Articles...

 An Agent's Perspective Minimize

 

New writers and often experienced writers,  have an unrealistic view of what their agent should be for them, and what they can and will do for them.  In the movie, Jerry Maguire, Tom Cruise was always there for the Cuba Gooding, Jr. character.  Cruise had dinner with Gooding’s family, he want to his games, he was constantly on the phone with him and he carried his bag.  NOT!!

  Read More...


Writers write for all sorts of reasons.  Some of these reasons are perfectly right and reasonable but many are heartbreaking mistakes. 

There are people who go to movies and say to their friends and families: “I could have written a better movie than that!”  Come on, admit it, you’ve all said it a few times.  But if that is your only real motivation, it is pure ego and narcissism.  Writing well is tough, grueling work.  It takes years to become a really good writer, to be recognized in the film community and to make a living doing it. 

  Read More...

 
Getting a screenplay down on paper is difficult, there’s no doubt about that. Yes, you search endlessly for that “different”story, for that unusual and fantastic arena that you are sure no one else has done or will do.

Writers often try to find and create unique situations that are so far out that they bear little or no resemblance to real life or real people. Trying to be unusual can be a trap for new writers as well as established pros.

  Read More...

Let MICHELE WALLERSTEIN'S Screenplay and Novel consulting services help you get your project ready to be seen by Industry professionals.  If your book or screenplay has the right stuff for the screen, Michele can get it to the right people at the movie studios, networks and agencies.  

  Read More...

Somewhere along the line someone will ask you to write something for free. The decision whether to do this, or not, is not as simple as it seems.

For members of the Writers Guild of America, it is not allowed, so there is no problem. For new writers it is a real temptation. After all, what’s the harm? Maybe it will sell and you’ll get paid then. It’s a great experience. This producer will “owe you”. There are so many thoughts running around in your head telling you that you should do this favor which might turn into a real bonanza for you.

 

  Read More...

More Articles...
Page 1 of 2First   Previous   [1]  2  Next   Last   


 Print   
 Establishing Shot Minimize

Establishing Shot
There has been a lot of talk lately about the new spec formatting style. Throughout the last two decades, there has been a movement towards "lean and clean" screenwriting: Shorter screenplays, shorter paragraphs, shorter speeches, more white space, and the omission of technical instructions. It should come as no surprise that this gradual evolution continues to refine spec style. Let's take a quick look at where things stand at this moment in time, so that you can make sure your script is ready for the marketplace in terms of its appearance. 
  Read More...

More Articles...


 Print   
 Advanced Screenwriting By Linda Seger Minimize

Writers vary in terms of how many ideas are floating around in their heads at any one time.  Pen Densham, (ROBIN HOOD:PRINCE OF THIEVES) told me he has hundreds of ideas all the time. Lawrence Kasdan (BIG CHILL, GRAND CANYON, etc.) told me he usually only has one or two. Obviously there is no right number of story ideas that determines whether you’re a great writer, or not.

  Read More...

Since the early 1980’s in the U.S. and the late 1980’s and early 1990’s in Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, there have been numerous seminars on Script Development. Why is it important? Who does it? How do they do it?

  Read More...



 Print   
 Image Minimize


 Print   
 
Copyright 2006 by Development Hell    Terms Of Use   Privacy Statement
DotNetNuke® is copyright 2002-2008 by DotNetNuke Corporation