I posted the picture above on my Facebook page Friday with the caption "what a movie looks like before it becomes a movie". It's a picture of the 11 page outline I'd created for the movie I've been working on for over five years now. It's the first script I wrote in film school at UCLA and then I later transformed it into a one-hour drama pilot. I love the characters and concept so much that I always hated that it sat in my portfolio, largely unread, so when I had the opportunity a few weeks ago to pitch some movie ideas to a friend who's also a producer, I jumped at the idea to pull LOVE AND EMBALMING FLUID back out. (Yep, that's the title of the movie.)
The central idea of the story never changed when I transformed it from movie to television. A story is a story is a story. (See how FX is right now making the TV show FARGO from the movie FARGO.) But the events, the pacing, actually a lot of the script does change. A TV show is written to have act outs that coincide with commercials. And it's written to be a story that unfolds over eight, 12, 15, or 22 episodes over one, two or 15 seasons. And when I wrote the pilot version of my story, I'd had a few more years of screenwriting under my belt.
Fast forward to last week. I got the go-ahead to work up a treatment based on the logline I'd sent my friend. So I set about figuring out what a treatment was. In short, it's a document that can range from one to 35 pages that tells the story of your script in prose form. So, I had to figure out how to combine everything I loved from both scripts (because the pilot had changed significantly from the movie) into one really good movie pitch (i.e., the treatment).
It took me all week. A week of outlining and reading and re-outlining. Dozens of written pages later I ended up with what you see in the photo above. An 11 page outline for a movie. A really good movie, in my opinion. From there I started writing prose. I figured I'd just write and write and then cut out some later, if necessary. My friend wanted a three to five page treatment this time around. So I started typing and when I finished?
It was five pages exactly. And I was even more excited by it.
I took the weekend to have Angela and Susie proofread, to let it sit and marinate and then I read it again this morning. Changed one word and sent it off to my friend. I'm excited. Things are moving forward. Do I have any idea if this production company will want to buy my script? Not really. Do I have any idea what's next? Nope. But I do know that I have a good story and I'm going to flesh it out. I'm going to write a new draft this week. Because that's what we writers do, we put our butts in the chair and we write. Movies, television pilots, outlines, treatments, anything and everything.
Christy Cooper
ReplyDeleteI love that you still write on this kind of paper. I think I'm gonna handwrite my entire thesis, hole punch it, and put it in a binder.
Sarah Knapp
I use paper a lot. And I use 3x5 cards and old pieces of cardboard and post-its and I type too. I love how different ways of writing make me think differently!
Cheryl Mccann-Croxen
Sarah, when will we see it.
Sarah Knapp
If I had my way, soon! But we'll see. I have a friend who's pitching it at a production company for me in the next few weeks so fingers crossed!
Cheryl Mccann-Croxen
Is it good luck or brake a leg? Best thought ever for you.
Sarah Knapp
I'll take it all!
Cheryl Mccann-Croxen
You got it and more.