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Showing posts with label Screenwriter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Screenwriter. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Casting Call: At Love's Bidding by Regina Jennings





Every author dreams of seeing their work portrayed on the big screen, or even the small screen. When the time comes I want to be as helpful as possible, so here are my suggestions for the cast of the blockbuster production of At Love’s Bidding.

Natalie Portman as Miranda Wimplegate
Miranda is a beautiful woman, but she prefers to stay behind the scenes. She is most comfortable surrounded by the majestic works of art in her Boston auction house. When she travels to the wilds of the Ozark Mountains with her ailing grandfather, she’s forced to speak for herself and deal with an impossible situation. 

Scott Eastwood as Wyatt Ballentine
Wyatt Ballentine is the manager of the local livestock auction in Pine Gap, Missouri. Feeling like an outsider in his own town, he works tirelessly to prove himself. His older brother Isaac takes delight in antagonizing him and when the auction is bought by some stuffy Bostonians, Wyatt fears that his dreams to run his own business are coming to an end.
And here’s another picture of Wyatt, because, Wy-not?

Sean Connery as Grandfather Wimplegate
Grandfather is a dignified gentleman who embodies kindness and intelligence, but Grandfather is losing his edge. Lately he’s made some unexplainable mistakes that have put Miranda and her parents in jeopardy. Sir Connery would be able to handle this role with grace and dignity.

Johnny Lee Miller as Isaac Ballentine 
Wyatt’s older brother is a poet at heart. Isaac makes a great first impression and uses his considerable charm to oppose baby brother at every turn. When the lovely Miss Wimplegate and her grandfather come to town, Isaac gleefully welcomes them knowing that they are the last people Wyatt will want around.

Elle Fanning as Betsy Huckabee
Betsy Huckabee is a twelve-year-old terror. Part angel, part wolverine, Betsy is everywhere, gets into everything and spies on everyone. Miranda can’t make a move without Betsy reporting it to Wyatt.

William Moseley as Josiah Huckabee
Betsy’s big brother Josiah has a reputation as a prankster. He’s finding it hard to stop fooling around and be responsible, but if he wants to catch Katie Ellen Watson’s eye, that’s just what he’s gotta do.

Matt Smith as Cousin Cornelius
Miranda’s Cousin Cornelius is a doctor. He’s a phrenologist to be more exact, and that means that he can read your character and intelligence by measuring the shape of your skull. Cornelius has done an examination of Miranda and assures her that she does not have the capacity for courage. If Wyatt ever meets him, he’ll want to put a few new lumps on the doctor’s noggin.

John Mortlock of Cambridge and Abington Hall as the Painting of Monsieur LeBlanc
This is the painting that starts it all. This is the painting that sends Miranda and Grandfather on an adventure, but Wyatt’s life will be forever changed as well. Although technically an inanimate object, Monsieur LeBlanc has a lot to say about his journey. He was one of my favorite characters to write.
What do you think of the casting? Is there someone else you’d rather see in a movie version of At Love’s Bidding?


To see more inspiration for the cast and the setting of At Love’s Bidding, visit my pinterest page:https://www.pinterest.com/reginaljennings/novel-at-loves-bidding/

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Me? A Mighty Hero? You Gotta Be Kidding!

Lori Marett

Maybe I’m paraphrasing, but that’s the gist of my attitude when, as a writer with an interest in screenplays, I knew that getting into Hollywood was about as likely as jumping off a cliff, waving my arms, and flying like an eagle. My thoughts began to stir that somebody should bring together those in the media arts.

How? Who? I felt like my dad’s favorite biblical hero, Gideon, when the angel of the Lord appeared and said, “Mighty hero…I am sending you.” As I and my husband, Rodney, prayed and pondered, we wondered if the project was possible for us and behaved like Gideon when he said, “Show me a sign.”

We laid out our fleece, wondering if it would be wet or dry as we contacted persons we’d met at writers conferences including Dr. Ted Baehr, founder/CEO MovieGuide, Ken Wales, producer of Christy, Amazing Grace and others, and Linda Seger, leading Hollywood script consultant who approved our venture, would participate, and promote.

Carrying the banner of the Lord who said, “I will be with you,” we started the Gideon Media Arts Conference and Film Festival six years ago to give Christians a place to encourage their talents, a venue to meet, learn, network and get advice from experts in the industry, and the opportunity to develop working and personal relationships that extend long after the Gideon is over.

The faculty is comprised of Christian writers, producers, directors, graphic novelists, musicians, actors. DJ’s, performers, speakers and teachers chosen for their expertise and servant hearts. Workshops are designed to stretch the attendees’ minds and help them discover the path God has placed in front of them.

In addition to workshops for all the arts, writers can improve their craft, even if they don’t intend to write scripts. Included are:
            How to Discern God’s Leading in Career Decisions
            Dynamic Ways of Creating Character – work through acronym CROWS for a                                technique taught from The New York Conservatory of Dramatic Arts
            From Book Pages to Movie Screen
            Creating a Compelling Protagonist and Antagonist – primary and secondary                                  characters, avoid stereotypes, develop motivation and growth, write a bio of your characters
            The Art of Collaborative Writing – share the fame or the blame – navigate                                        through the sometimes-choppy waters of writing as a team

Many testimonials have been given by attendees such as this one from Deborah Raney, award-winning novelist and movie, A Vow to Cherish. She writes:
            I’m sure it wasn’t really all about us, but when Ken and I look back on the Gideon it seems like God must have orchestrated it to become a part of our lives just when we needed it most! Ken had just been laid off from his job of 25 years, and we were in deep disagreement about what to do next. Ken felt strongly that the Lord was asking him to step out in faith and use his gifts of illustration and graphic design to start his own business. I wanted the security of a “real” job.
            What I discovered at the Gideon changed my mind and changed my heart. There, I got to know a whole bunch of people just like Ken. Fellow creatives brave enough to step out in faith, to walk in obedience to a calling, and dedicated to using the gifts and talents God gave them to tell the world about Jesus. And to tell it in a quality way.
            It’s hard to adequately describe how God used the Gideon to direct our paths, but we look back at the journey God took us on (still has us on!) and we see that at each critical juncture, God allowed us time at the conference. And every year it was a time of encouragement, spiritual growth, growth in our marriage, and of evaluating where we were headed––and whether it was the direction God wanted us headed.
            We heard so many wonderful testimonies of how God had provided for others in our shoes. We heard such inspirational and motivational talks that helped us make important decisions. We watched films that encouraged us. We made friends who will always have a precious place in our hearts. And we formed prayer partnerships that I have no doubt made all the difference.
            It was clear to us that God had paved the way for us to be there, and we will always look back on the Gideon Media Arts Conference and Film Festival as a gift from His hand.”
            Maybe you, like Gideon, Rodney and I, the Raneys, and other Arts Festival attendees have said, “Me? A mighty hero? You’re going to use me?”
            Then listen for His answer of, “I will be with you.”
Lori Marett and her husband, Rodney, direct the annual Gideon Media Arts Conference & Film Festival held in Orlando, Florida. Her publishing credits include articles published by Focus on the Family. Her screenwriting career began two decades ago when she won and/or was finalist in regional and national contests. Her first adaptation was of Yvonne Lehman's novel, In Shady Groves, which led to her adapting a feature film screenplay, Sea of Glory, a novel by Ken Wales, producer of Christy, Amazing Grace, Pink Panther, and other movies. Her first feature film, Meant To Be (co-written with producer/director Bradley Dorsey) was released in January, 2013 and is a best-seller for the Family Christian online stores. Her screenplay for Jenny L. Cote's novel, The Ark, the Reed, and the Fire Cloud is in pre-production for an animated feature film for projected release in 2015. Lori lives with her husband and three daughters in Black Mountain, North Carolina. www.gideonfilmfestival.com




Lori Marett and her husband, Rodney, direct the annual Gideon Media Arts Conference & Film Festival held in Orlando, Florida. Her publishing credits include articles published by Focus on the Family. Her screenwriting career began two decades ago when she won and/or was finalist in regional and national contests. Her first adaptation was of Yvonne Lehman's novel, In Shady Groves, which led to her adapting a feature film screenplay, Sea of Glory, a novel by Ken Wales, producer of Christy, Amazing Grace, Pink Panther, and other movies. Her first feature film, Meant To Be (co-written with producer/director Bradley Dorsey) was released in January, 2013 and is a best-seller for the Family Christian online stores. Her screenplay for Jenny L. Cote's novel, The Ark, the Reed, and the Fire Cloud is in pre-production for an animated feature film for projected release in 2015. Lori lives with her husband and three daughters in Black Mountain, North Carolina. www.gideonfilmfestival.com

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Randall Wallace, screenwriter, director, and now novelist

Randall Wallace is an American screenwriter, director, producer, and songwriter, who came to prominence by writing the screenplay for the 1995 film Braveheart. His work on the film earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay and a Writers Guild of America award for Best Screenplay Adapted Directly for the Screen. His other films include The Man in the Iron Mask, Pearl Harbor, We Were Soldiers and Secretariat. Randall Wallace also wrote the lyrics to the song Mansions of the Lord, which is featured in the movie We Were Soldiers and was the closing hymn at Ronald Reagan's funeral.

 In much of your work, perhaps all, I find the heroes all display a tenderness not often found in books. Is that part of your mission? Do you have a mission statement? If so what is it?

I have a mission statement in a certain way. It’s more of an approach. It’s that if this story doesn’t move me, if this story doesn’t speak to my heart, it can’t possibly speak to anyone else’s. So all I know how to do is to tell the story that inspires me, to tell the story that matters to me, and then to trust. As I say in The Touch, you offer your hand to God and whether God uses it is up to Him.

Did your screenwriting experience help or hinder you as a novelist and in what way? Do you have some practical advice for those of us who don't know the first thing about screenplays ... how thinking big screen can help us tell a sensory story?

Being a screenwriter has helped me with my novels. It’s interesting that I became known as a screenwriter before I was widely known as a novelist, but I was a novelist before I was a screenwriter.

I write in a visual way, but I also make movies in an internal and an emotional way. When I’m doing a film like Braveheart, I want to find those moments that make me have goose bumps, that make me weep or make me laugh, that make me feel joy and victory. And to do that, I think we’ve got to experience all the elements of a human life.

Well, that’s the way I write a story when I’m writing a novel like The Touch. I want to take the reader through the life of the character. I want them to know what that character is going through even when they’re not saying a word, what the character’s heart is doing, and let the reader have that insight into the secret life of the character so that they can feel what a young surgeon is going through when he knows that the only thing between life and death for that patient is as narrow as the blade he’s holding in his hand.

And for a young woman who looks at this guy and knows that the life she’s trying to hold on to is worthless unless she has love and faith, and she finds it through him, a gift even greater than life.

We're told to dream big. What is your dream as a novelist?

My dream as a novelist is to write the kind of story that someone else would feel spoke for them. There was a great thinker from Lebanon named Kahlil Gibran. When I was in college, I read a story he wrote called The Prophet. He was a deeply religious man. And he said, “A great singer is he who sings our silences.” And I hope, in some way, in my stories, that I am singing the silences of someone else’s heart.

What surprises you the most when you sit down to write and hit that sweet spot?

What surprises me most when I sit down to write is that I never know what’s going to happen. It’s never the case for me that a story unfolds, or even a day’s writing, a page, a line unfolds just the way I expected it to. It’s like I’m the first audience of the story and I am discovering the story for myself the first time.

Novelist or screenwriter, which process scratches the itch the best, and why?

The great thing about writing novels is that you get to take the reader inside the character’s lives. The great thing about writing movies is that you get to boil down the experience into a real clarity of what the audience can hear and what they can see the character do. And this makes for a union of all the great aspects of art. A movie is pictures; a movie is sound, music. But with a novel, you get to experience all of that inside.

I wanted The Touch to be a reading experience that took the audience into a life experience in which you felt that you were going through the joy of new love, the tragedy of loss, the fear of failure, the absence of faith, the rekindling of the hope that love and life could be vibrant again in what you were doing. I wanted to give the audience all of that from the inside experience—not that you’re watching a character have those experiences, but that you are having them yourself when you’re reading The Touch.

Far different than the sweeping epics Braveheart and Pearl Harbor (besides the fact they were screenplays and this is a novel), what sparked the idea for The Touch?

I was inspired in writing The Touch with the idea of having a gift. Braveheart was my first feature film and when it became a success story, I also understood that success could be one of the most dangerous challenges that I’d ever faced; that to have a gift, even if the gift is of where you happen to be in your life—not even a question of your own talent—but to have that gift of time and place means that God has entrusted you with something. And the question was how freely you could give it, whether you could keep it by trying to hold back or whether you gained it by giving. As the Bible says, you gain your life by losing it.

I wanted to explore that part of life. In my other stories—Braveheart, Pearl Harbor, We Were Soldiers, even in Secretariat—there’s a sense of struggle and tragedy. I wanted to have this story be one of affirmation, be one of joy, be a story that when we read it, it was as if we were hearing the “Ode to Joy” sung by a great choir.

Did anything unusual happen during the writing of The Touch?

During the writing of The Touch, I experienced a new ambition for writing novels. I wanted this story to be almost like a poem, like a song, like a movie that was highly efficient, a story in which every word mattered and that the reader could be right there every minute. There was no filler. There was nothing to scan over; you are right in the story from the very beginning in every page. Every word was something that went right to your heart.

You reached that goal for The Touch. It's one of the most beautiful stories I've read. What's the best advice you ever received as a writer?

The best advice I ever received as a writer was something an old writer told me as a kind of joke. He said, “Do you know what the hardest thing is to write on a page in human history?” And none of us knew what the answer was, and he said, “It’s to sit down with a page and write on that page, page 1.” And so I always believed in jumping into the story, and what that’s given me as a writer is a sense of adventure and exploration that the story is unfolding in front of me, to jump in and to see where it leads me.

Do you have any parting words of advice for aspiring novelists or screenwriters?

For an aspiring novelist, what I would recommend is that you follow your own heart, your own story. You are made in a unique way. God said, “This is you. This is your time.” But who that is is something that you can discover. I believe writing is an act of faith. Writing is an exercise in believing that something great can happen, even though we don’t know what it is. It’s an exercise in miracles. So what I would say to young novelists is believe in the miracle. Be open to it. You don’t know what’s going to happen, but you know for sure, if you don’t try, nothing’s going to happen.

The Touch

Andrew Jones is a young doctor with an amazing gift; his abilities in surgery are astonishing. But when he cannot save a young woman at the scene of a fatal car accident, Jones abandons his gift and shuns the operating room.

Lara Blair owns a Chicago-based biomedical engineering company developing a surgical tool that will duplicate precisely the movement of a surgeon’s hands, eliminating human error during surgical procedures. Lara has pursued the best surgeons in the world to test this tool and all of them have failed. 

Discovering Andrew’s unique surgical skills, Lara is determined to work with him. But Jones wants no part of it until he discovers the urgency behind Lara’s work . . . and somewhere, somehow, he must find the courage to trust The Touch.