Posts Tagged ‘Frankfurt Bookfair’

What is cinema for?

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

The suitcase and passport are packed away, I have no travel plans for the rest of the year. This is not really much of an achievement since we are nearly one week into December. But there are no trips planned for January (yet) either. After the Frankfurt Bookfair, the Cheltenham Screenwriters’ Festival, The World Conference of Scriptwriters in Athens, a terrific wedding in the north-west of England and the Black Nights’ Film Festival in Tallinn, all in about 6 weeks, home does not seem to be where you lay your hat.

This is further confounded by December being a short month. We always close the office for a couple of weeks and already demob fever is starting to surface as all the jobs that have been put off for ages jostle on the inevitable list.

The first of these is always reading articles in the papers that I rarely have time for. So I started this weekend to get into training. I wanted to catch up on what has been happening in French cinema as I am due to meet Philippe Carcassonne soon. So I read the interview by Jason Solomons with Jacques Audiard with great interest.

It was full of inspiring thoughts, ones that are repeated by many great teachers but so seldom seen in spec scripts one is forced to wonder what those writing the scripts read or study. “…cinema is all about…monumental figures, icons, male or female, people who are emblematic of their time, who are in their time and who define their time.”

The genius of great writing, in whatever format – film, television, the stage or novel – is that it enables us to experience that which we might not otherwise. Solomons describes Audiard’s films as “…intimate studies that draw the viewer in to the characters until we’re thinking like them, until we almost inhabit their skins, no matter how morally suspect their actions or intentions may be.”

Macbeth immediately comes to mind, as does Lady Macbeth. Audiard says: “The audience must fly with me, must go where the images take them. The film, as all good films should be, is rooted in realism, but you must not ignore the poetry, the fiction, the story. Film is abstract, not definite. It is a dream.”

No wonder films are hard to write.

The article ends up quoting Audiard again: “…every time you make a film these days, it’s a political gesture, like it or not. Every director must be conscious of the power of this tool we’re using. It’s a very shocking tool, cinema, and you have to ask yourself what you’re using it for.”

I ended last week attending a gathering organized by Amnesty International, focused on stopping the abuses of human rights by corporations. There was an inspiring discussion of real cases fought and won and even a quiet discussion about running a competition for scripts that focus on Amnesty campaigns. “Save the human” is one I am sure Audiard would agree with.

Festival-ed out?

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

It is now 48 hours since I returned from the Screenwriters’ Festival (and just over two weeks since the Frankfurt Bookfair, and less than a week before the World Conference of Screenwriters. I have not blogged recently because I have been overdoing the networking. With literally hundreds of meetings (true some are in the queue for Chai Latte or Honey Fluffies (yes that is what I wrote), the meetings still count.

James Schamus of Focus addressing the Screenwriters' Festival

James Schamus of Focus addressing the Screenwriters' Festival

I am trying to make sense of the patterns, of the state of the industry, of the temperature of optimism. Do we wind each other up at these gatherings just by being there, so we feel better about the industry? Many of the speakers are upbeat from the podium, a bit more realistic face to face.

The mood in Cheltenham was definitely positive. Even when an agent (often me) said that they were not actively looking for new writers, there were always a couple who sounded so interesting that the script or book mountain suddenly didn’t seem enormous.

The Film and Television Forum at Frankfurt was more meeting producers than writers; Cheltenham was both and I suspect that the Athens’ World Conference will be more about the politics and rights of writers than about business, though I see there are some producers there so I guess I will look for opportunities. We met with the London Bookfair and Frankfurt Film & TV organisers in Cheltenham to discuss events for the April 2010 London Bookfair.

Film and TV rights selling at the Frankfurt Bookfair

Film and TV rights selling at the Frankfurt Bookfair

What was so great about Cheltenham was putting carefully prepared information before hundreds of people who seemed to appreciate it. I must check out the audience response sheets as it is so difficult to know what a cross-section of the audience felt. Those that come up to you almost always say nice things. But – as when you get a compliment about a script – you should immediately ask ‘What was wrong with it and what can I do to improve it.’

David Pearson and Kenny MacDonald did an astonishingly wonderful job of organising the Festival. The range and quantity of events and speakers was mind-blowing. They deserve medals and our eternal gratitude. The only shame is that the event is once a year. There is talk about regional one-day events organised as part of the Festival, all over the country.

If they can keep up the quality these, too, are not to be missed. I for one will be back next year (as many of the TwelvePointers posting in the TwelvePoint Forum have confirmed). I may feel daunted at the thought of another journey and so many new people passionate about scriptwriting in a few day’s time; but the adrenaline will kick in and already I am feeling less daunted and not a little bit excited. Bring it on.

Genre and the recession: is this the way forward?

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

It is always interesting to see if the world stopped while you went on holiday. Pleasingly it seemed to go on working (though some producers were not finalizing contracts as fast as desirable). The WGGB blog has the interesting story from Nick George, media partner, PriceWaterhouseCoopers LLP, who said:

“The recession has sent hoards of consumers to the cinema and therefore large scale, expensive films, such as Harry Potter, remain in production and eagerly awaited. However, due to the credit crunch, sources of financing for smaller indie films have dried up – meaning many plots remain on the story board.”

However, with digital technology bringing the costs of film-making down all the time, Nick George says that things should improve.

“The credit crunch has clearly made fundraising tougher for independent film makers but things tend to move in cycles, and the distribution of films like Colin and success of non-mainstream films like Juno and Slumdog Millionaire demonstrate a strong appetite for original, creative work, so in time we ought to see investors returning to the market.”

But on the upbeat side, in an interesting discussion about adaptation (I will chair a panel on adaptation at the Frankfurt Bookfair Film and Television Centre in October) I discussed with a writer that fact that some writers are good at adaptations, perhaps because they have the ability to stand away from the original material so instead of being tied to it they are inspired by it. www.frankfurt-bookfair.com

Thousands of editors attend every year and increasing numbers of producers are going, mainly in search of that novel which will make their next film. The Film and TV Centre is a hub of activity for anyone interested in books as the basis for films or TV.

An interesting discussion earlier in the day was about the fact that the British producers, under the cosh in the recession, are trying to develop material that is saleable to the US of A. This has always been a holy grail and with the exception of PBS channels not much British drama gets network showing in the States. But the cable channels over there are hot on genre and with the apparent lessening of ITV as a funder for Brit independents, there is a move to do high-concept TV movies that will work on small US screens.

Anything that helps us write and produce better genre stories is to be welcomed. After the UK Film Council’s not entirely successful 25 Words genre competition (ScriptWriter magazine published many articles explaining the different genres at the time) let’s hope that we do better this time round.

The privilege of being a writer

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Strange day today: every few months the book and film/TV departments at the agency sit down and go through the entire client list so the film/TV agents can tell the book agents what is happening re their clients. Nice to see today that there was rather a lot to report: the two very different worlds (book as opposed to film/TV) can have great synergy.

Now if only all those options would be exercised and all of them would go into production?

Then we did an annual tidy up, clearing out all the paper that we no longer needed to keep, partly because the new scanner scans at 70 pages a minute. We have also started preparing for the Frankfurt Bookfair (in October) as meetings are already being set up for visits from publishers and scouts in the weeks before the bookfair, since we cannot get all the meetings we need to have into the 5 days of the fair.

Because we are coming up to the August holiday season, when things slow down, we expect deals to go slowly. For once they seem to be piling in faster than ever so that the writers can get cracking over the summer break. That is a turn up…

And the writers’ enthusiasm and appreciation makes me feel that despite the difficulties I have talked about in the blog recently, it really it a privilege being able to make a living – even if it is a difficult one – as a writer. George Orwell may well have been right about this: apart from egotism he gave three other reasons for being a writer: immortality, getting back at people who had put you down and changing the world. How many jobs give you that satisfaction?

That satisfaction is one of the abiding memories I have of the Cheltenham Screenwriters’ Festival: writers getting together to share their experiences in a cameraderie that makes the delegate fees so well worth while.