Archive | September 2013

Christopher and Jonathan Nolan

Christopher and Jonathan Nolan <–PDF of The Prestige

“You would drink, too, if you knew the world half so well as I do.” ~Root

How I feel majority of the time (cept I don’t drink – anymore). What a true line, poured into a character. Christopher Nolan, is loved for a reason.

This is a much earlier draft of “The Prestige,” but it’s still, very, very, very, good. Better than the film (sorry Chris).

However, like I said things go wrong moving script to screen, they do.  But from reading this, it’s clear to see why anyone would funnel money into it. If I had money, I would have!

Fascinating read.

Talented family.

Geez.

Desert Sevenz – ‘Fly Back Home’

I love what he did with this, I believe in honoring our individual cultures in our art. In whatever way we can. Assimilation isn’t my thing. I like to see people’s colors (individual histories, traditions, expressions, values). Plus, he’s good. Yeah that’s important too. Gotta be talented at your craft too.

DesertPeaMedia's avatarDesert Pea Yarns

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The Diving-Bell and the Butterfly (Based on Jean-Dominique Bauby)

The Diving-Bell and the Butterfly (Based on Jean-Dominique Bauby) <—PDF of Script.

Jean-Dominique Bauby was a well-known French journalist, author and editor of the French fashion magazine ELLE.

On 8 December 1995 at the age of 43, Bauby suffered a massive stroke. When he woke up twenty days later, he found he was entirely speechless; he could only blink his left eyelid. Called locked-in syndrome, a condition where the mental faculties remain intact but most of the body is paralyzed. In Bauby’s case his mouth, arms, and legs were paralyzed, and he lost 60 pounds (27 kg) in the first 20 weeks after his stroke. Despite his condition, he wrote the book The Diving Bell and the Butterfly by blinking when the correct letter was reached by a person slowly reciting the alphabet.

In 2007, painter-director Julian Schnabel released a film version of it. This is the screenplay, and it is another beautifully written – adaptation this time. The “script,” just took my breath away.  What I’m getting as time goes on, from reading these rather gutsy, heart-filled, more perceptive than is sane, writers’… is…. this….

Ya better get in life, live it, let everything hit you and work on you. Feel every, any emotion, let the sun burn. Because…..it’s the only way you are going to have anything substantial to say and a way to say it that has substance.

Screenwriters (when they’re good) are the absolute kahuna in the room. And if I never make another film, there I said it.

So for every production person, producer, or actor that thinks they’re not? You’re kidding yourself.

This adaptation is so good, it could be framed.

I just saw the damn film.

Brilliant work Ronald.

Activism Can Be Talking About It. We Create Narratives With Our Conversations…

…and I say we have to start being our planet’s keeper. Including the life forms inhabiting it, along with us. When we don’t care, we fail to police greed, abuse, brutality and the balance of a system of survival which helps ours upon tracking. Yes people are now making a good living of this, but so are pimps of trafficked women and children in the world. Does that mean they should be able to continue so their houses can be decorated, or so that they are eating steak dinners at the expense of life or sanity somewhere else?

In my opinion, no.

The world community was doing really great, shunning the purchase of Ivory for a while. The demand for it went way down. When I was little it was the material of beautiful jewelry, but as I grew up, it suddenly became shameful, and I saw it no where. But when you did there was a strange ‘Ewww,’ sentiment attached. So the education, worked, once.

Once upon a time I lived in a region where ivory was ‘the’ material to have for jewelry. It was kinda the rage in Africa, then. Then time passed and the view transformed (as far as I saw).

Even when I moved to the U.S. it was still the rage. But from then to now, Ivory went from being openly displayed in stores to non existent on store shelves. It became shameful for stores to sell.

But desire for and the relationship to Ivory, is changing once again. Poaching has become a lucrative job again and acquiring Ivory “in,” for some in China. The New York Times recently ran a piece, tackling some of the issues with this and the U.S. is preparing to help tackle the problem, to bring it under control.

However I think we can all be a part of this shift, with our conversations, tweeting, blogging, even art work. Why should the planet continue to be victim to our emerging needs, which fuel systems we made up to begin with?

I say we say “No,” to the return of this trend.

AND…THERE’S MORE:

Help if you can.

MSNBC Chris Hayes Explains Obamacare For Dummies Fox & Friends

Important Commentary about Obamacare.

kstreet607's avatarThe Fifth Column

Mediaite

With the opening of state health insurance mere days away, and an apocalyptic fight over de-funding Obamacare raging in Congress, attention to the Affordable Care Act is at an all-time high, while accurate information about it remains at an all-time low in certain quarters. On Friday night,All In with Chris Hayes host Chris Hayes held a brief For Dummies-style tutorial for Fox & FriendsSteve Doocy, and called out his rival for failing to do his job.

Hayes introduced the segment with a clip from his Thursday night interview with Rep. Renee Ellmers (R-NC) in which the Congresswoman elicits priceless reactions of earnest dismay from Hayes with her rapid-fire delivery of Obamacare disinformation. Then, accompanied by a graphic of a For Dummies book entitled “Obamacare for Fox & Friends” (get it? They’re dummies!), proceeded to correct some of the show’s misimpressions about the law.

He…

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(I’m waiting for the lion too.)

(I’m waiting for the lion too.) <——–PDF here.

I read alot of screenplays. But not just because I have to.  I love screenwriters. I love the art and I think it’s an art – just like poetry, novel-writing, or journalism (when it’s good).

If you read this script, you’ll see what I mean. Suddenly you’re feeling something for these people who don’t exist, and worried about their futures, as if that future were real beyond the screenplay. That to me is a good writer, and this guy is great.

He’s…..GREAT.

So great, I want a moment of silence right now for him. I appreciate it so much, and though it’s what I do too, it’s my guilty pleasure. So when these guys are good? I’m in heaven.

Just be warned, this guy is goin’ to the pit of your belly, and you will not finish,  untouched….

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Writer – Mike Mills

Company – Focus Features

On What Makes Breaking Bad and Other Good Stories Great

mk340's avatarvivaviamedia

imageWhen asked how he pitched Breaking Bad to the networks, Vince Gilligan said that he wanted to take the audience on one man’s journey from “Mr. Chips (a fictional beloved school teacher) to Scarface.”    And it is this idea that makes the show compelling.  It asks the audience a question that we wish there was a clean-cut, straightforward answer to: how does a good person go bad?

Initially, we are given a protagonist (like the fictional Mr. Chips) we can all identify with, Walter White.  A man who, like many of us, desired to do what was “right” his whole life, making a few mistakes here and there, but overall, living honorably.   Unfortunately, in our society, careers centered around self-sacrifice and humility, like being a high school science teacher, are not often rewarded with riches and respect.   Yet, Walt seems content.  He loves his wife and son.  He has another…

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