June 18, 2008
Well, I'm glad I ain't scared to be lazy.

A nice spoiler free article in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette about MBV3D with quotes from producer, Jack Murray and a new pic of The Ackles for all those on Team Jensen.

Izzie Rain walks. First a disclaimer. Her mother didn't dress her. It was chilly at the Cannery Row so I snatched a backup tie-dye from under the Bugaboo. I thought I would get points for layering. Apparently not. But that don't matter. The creature hath walked. Her journey to full cylon awareness is almost complete. Sure she took her sweet time but we ain't exactly been pushing her. Sort of figured she'd get around to it when she was ready. And go figger. She did. We never had practice walking sessions. We play, we sing, we dance. We watch Backyardigans and Yo Gabba Gabba. We let her climb. And we let her fall. And kiss the booboo if it comes to that. Most of the time falling just pisses her off and she immediately climbs back up. That's my girl. Fact is, I'm pretty happy.

Of course, I can't wait for the revolution, the day the people take a stand against the corporate machine by downing all forms of communication and electric power, forcing all to return to the spiked club and the campfire so that I can just chill out with the girls. But until then...I got a lot of work to do. Too much work to do. Of the top of my head there are twelve. Four are pressing and screaming for attention. Monkey's Paw, Angeles, Devil's Raiders, Argonauts. I write these down so that 20 years from now I can refer back to this journal and show my daughter what I was doing while she grew up.

Speaking of growing up. I guess I'll never get over the small fact that my little brother is "doing it". But evidently he is. Because he and his lovely wife gave birth to Izzie Rain's very first cousin, Skyler Jorn, 8 pounds 3 ounces. A size which both Mel and Izzie quickly proclaimed "sissy". I said this earlier to my father who asked, "What's that supposed to mean?" I replied, "You know, because Izzie was so big." He had no clue. "Dad, Izzie was 11 lbs, 10 oz." He did not understand the words that were coming out of my mouth. Nada. These are not the droids you're looking for. Like a deer caught in the headlights. Elevator to the penthouse has been closed for repairs. Three cheers for paying attention.

But all in all, life is good. Messengers II wrapped. I'm hearing great things. Spoke with Martin, the director, today. He's a couple weeks away from heading to LA to start cutting it together. MBV is nearing the finish line. Nothing but good news from the set. Spoke with Patrick several times since returning from Pittsburgh. Just this morning he mentioned a scene they shot and how awesome it went. Yup, life is good.

Which is most likely why someone sent me an email today which said simply, "Hey, have you seen the message boards at the imdb about you?"

Why no. I had not. Didn't even know they existed. Thanks for the head's up. I simply don't know how I've managed to make it this far in life without the detailed love and support that the readers of the imdb have to offer. Why, let's just take a moment to relive some of them.

by f-slocum (Sun Mar 19 2006 14:49:45)
"Face it the man is untalented,He just borrowed the ideas and stuff form video games and just put them inot his screipt for Jason X.proves how untalented he really is(there's more but I'm not going to say it)I am giving Todd Farmer one mroe chance on Psychopath but if it sucks he should retire now and work at a gas station in Texas,cause that's the only job he looks like he cna do."

by bloody_axe_boy (Sat Feb 3 2007 15:59:31)
"John Carpenter should of never let this guy help him write his nexted movie, did any of you seen Jason X? yea...boring! lame! and just plane old sucky"

by Croc-O-Dyle (Sun Jan 27 2008 16:39:51)
"Not untalented - that only implies lack of talent. This scum is actually *antitalented* - he sucks even the tiniest potential of goodness out of anything that he approaches. He's one of the many black holes of the industry. Fortunately, it's a very small and insignificant black hole, no bigger than a hedgehog's back orifice."

That one's my favorite. Scum. Hedgehog's orifice. How proud I must be. Hey, Izzie Rain. come here. Read this. See how stupid it makes daddy look.

ToddIzzieOz.jpg

Eh, nevermind. I spend half my life looking stupid without any one else's help.

Of course for every sun there is a moon. For every Vader there is a Kenobi. And there were those who said kind words and defended the black hole that is me. Thanks for that. I doubt you'll ever find or see my thanks from my hidden little place in the web so I'm sending good thoughts and as a result perhaps your Venti Mocha will be spontaneously free tomorrow.

And to those of you that hate me. Eh, may your mocha be free too. Life's tough enough without holding grudges. But you should know, not everyone hates me. There are, in fact, those that...well...love me. At least I think it's love.

by myersfreak78 (Fri Jun 27 2003 12:56:32)
"Oh im so in love..."

by billyxix (Wed May 26 2004 06:15:22)
"I am in TOTAL agreement! I dunno if your a man or a woman, but I'm a guy, and he is my total type of guy I find incredibly hot!"

Smoke'em if you got'em I say. Thus, here's one for the ladies...ahem...guys.

ToddIzzieJune08.jpg

Posted at 03:21 AM | Comments (6)
June 13, 2008
It really is sort of Supernatural

One time I was sitting at a red light thinking. I do that sometimes. Think. The light turned green. But I didn't go because, as I mentioned, I was thinking. Finally I realized my error and started to pull forward as WHAM! This massive SUV ran the redlight ahead! Was it luck? Good judgement? Karma that kept me alive that day? Dunno, but whatever it was, it's still watching over me. Because I shudder to imagine what would have happened had I said an ill word toward young master Jensen Ackles in my previous post. Well, I don't have to imagine. I know what would have happened. It would have started slowly. I would have noticed people who looked out of place. On the street corner. Across from the Red House Cafe. More and more as the day went on. Like the first chapter of Sorcerer's Stone. Except where the Dursley's were seeing wizard robes and pointy hats. I would have been seeing Supernatural T-shirts and glaring faces. This would no doubt have resulted in my being dragged out into the streets by a posse of Jensenites. Using mythology from the show I would have been proclaimed some form of demon. I'm nearly certain someone would have shot me with a salt filled shotgun.

Disaster avoided.

Thank you for the comments and emails. All very kind. Well, except for that one email. Apparently I am forever damned to the seventh level of hell for only just now recognizing the brilliance that is Jensen.

I actually suck at playing Hollywood. I'm known to speak my mind much to my own detriment. If I didn't like something I'd tell you. But Jensen, Jaime, Kerr, Edi, Betsy...the entire cast...they really are just that good. Their performances make me look like a better writer. Sure, it's just a horror movie but man is it going to be a well done horror movie. I'm just proud to be a small part of it.

This is just a small thing but I found it endearing. I guess it was day one. I had not yet been introduced to Mr. Ackles. And there was no guarantee that I would be. Writers tend to drool, belch and break wind so the powers that be like to keep up away from the talent. Truth is, writers, we do our part early on. We may tweak a line or two during production or make a quick change due to budget restraints but our job is to stay out of the way once the cameras start rolling. We become both unseen and forgotten. So, I was well hidden in the shadows across the set from where Jensen was shooting a very intense scene. Cut. Then as the crew moved camera and lights for the next set up, Jensen crossed the entire set. I remember looking up and thinking, hmm, wonder where he's going. Turns out he was coming to introduce himself to me.

Looks, talent and just a wonderfully nice guy. Keep him safe, Fandom, he's one of the good ones.

Posted at 09:36 AM | Comments (12)
June 11, 2008
25,000 Feet

The Bloodiest of Valentines. Obviously the 3D cat is out of the bag. So, let me tell you this. It looks amazing. HiDef 3D is a gorgeous thing to behold. Wednesday’s arrival found myself and actress, Betsy Rue, in a van to the production offices. After a quick costume fitting it was back to the hotel where we unloaded luggage, ate, then caught another van to the set where EXT. NIGHT mayhem ensued.

DayOneSet0608.JPG

I greeted a glowing but very tired Patrick Lussier. Big smiles and an even bigger hug, so big I thought I’d broken his 3D glasses. We met the ladies in make-up, I got nosy trying to sniff out the on-set juicy gossip but was shut down. I would have to prove myself before being taken into the inner circle.

AtkinsLethal.png

Betsy and I watched actor, Tom Atkins, shoot a couple of scenes, entertained a collection of extras and stayed up as late as we could in an attempt to get our bodies and minds on the night time schedule. Then we grabbed Pat, who would later become our regular and most laid back driver, and journeyed back to the hotel for some fast sleep.

KerrSmithMBV.jpg

I was up by ten and hit the gym. On my first day I met actor Kerr Smith. And I was very happy about that. Kerr is a Dawson’s Creek grad. And more recently Mel and I had TiVo’d Justice for its short run and were impressed with how easily he held his own against Victor, Jenny Garner’s daddy from Alias. From early on, Patrick had given me access to the auditions. No director has ever done this for me. But that’s Patrick. And Kerr was a stand out. You know, it’s always fun to hear your words flow from the mouth of a great actor. But when that actor takes your words and delivers them in ways you never even imagined…well, that’s sort of dreamy. Anyway, since I’m an opinionated son of a Kentuckian, I, of course, shared my favorite with Patrick. Go figger. His favorite too. No surprise. Because that’s when the Hollywood machine actually works. I’m nothing special. My opinion is nothing special. But when you get a bunch of like minded people around, magic nearly always results. And Patrick is brilliant at surrounding himself with like minds. Anyway, I thought Kerr’s auditions were great. Magic beans compared to what he’s doing now. You can’t help but marvel at his performances and wonder just how long before this cat is a household name.

JensenAckles49.jpg

And speaking of dreamy…Jensen Ackles. Good lord. No fella should be that good looking. And that deep voice of his? Swoon. Mel adored him on Smallville, which led to our watching Supernatural where I was introduced to his talent. I like Supernatural. I like him in the show. But I just didn’t expect the performances I’ve been seeing. I guess I was prejudging the good looks. Sue me. We’re all bastards in our own way. His role is one of those challenging roles that can be played vanilla or stunning. It’s a risk for an actor to take on a role like this. I once saw an actor not only lose his job but I personally rewrote his character out of the script because the actor had gone with vanilla. Jensen went with stunning. I watched him shoot a scene on night two that gave me goosebumps. Patrick refers to him as a young Steve McQueen.

jaimeking.jpg

Jaime King was off this week so we didn’t meet. Make note of what I’m about to say because I so rarely admit fault but I had written her character a little too harshly when we first meet her. Fortunately Patrick caught my mistake and I made the fixes last week. I saw some of that footage while here. Well, not here. Currently, here is bouncing up and down in first class as we swing around a big storm. But the footage was awesome. She was stunning. Both to look at and in her performance. She is amazingly perfect in so many ways. A buddy of mine said he saw her last week and she was commenting that Patrick Lussier was the nicest director she’s ever worked with.

EdiGathegi.jpg

It’s pretty amazing just how talented this cast is. Which brings us to Edi BigLove Gathegi. If you watched House then you know of whom I’m speaking. Just before I flew in, Mel and I saw him in Gone Baby Gone. He’s a chameleon. I ran into he and Kerr near the trailers shortly after we’d shot our first scene together. In one of my attempts to sound witty while talking to actors (and trying not to let my fanboy show), I was telling Kerr and Edi that Edi’s part and their banter got both longer and better after they were cast. For the simple reason that Patrick (and myself) really liked them together. Patrick told me pretty much exactly how he saw them in his head and I went home and pretty much wrote exactly what he wanted. But when I said this to Kerr and Edi, Edi knew me only as some noname day-playing actor who had suddenly walked up and started talking like he owned the place. He was like, “Uh…I don’t see it that way.” Then turned to Kerr, “Do you?” So I tried to explain myself by saying the script used to be this and that, which did little more than baffle Edi as to how in the big wide world did this bald moron of an actor read early versions of the script? Finally, I think Edi said something along the lines of, “I’m sorry, who are you?” Which is when Kerr jumped in and said, “He’s the writer.” So, in my attempt to give these guys a compliment, I made one of them feel silly. Nice stringing together of your words, Mr. Farmer. Keep it up. You should be a writer or something. A simple, “Hey, Edi, I worked as a writer on the movie. Your and Kerr’s auditions were so good, we ended up making your scenes together bigger.” I guess that would have been too easy. Not nearly complex and confusing enough.

You know what I don’t like? Lightning at umpteen thousand feet. Don’t like them big sudden drops out of the sky much neither.

JackPatrick0608.JPG

I had spoken with producer, Jack Murray, several times on the phone before meeting on set. Jack is not only the coolest looking bastard on the planet, he’s also exactly what you want in a producer. When I’m on the set, part of the fun is stealthing back and watching. It’s that whole…who you are when no one is looking. I watched Jack make the rounds. I watched Jack go out of his way to make Patrick’s job easier. He didn’t seem to be doing it for praise. He was doing because that’s what a great producer does. I’m not used to that. On my first movie the producers were the enemies. They spent ALL of their time creating obstacles for both myself and the director. Creativity dried up because we were busy putting out their fires. But on this set I saw Jack put out several fires, many before they’d even started. Many before Patrick even knew they existed. When I witness someone watching out for my brother…well…it earns my loyalty. Good man, Jack.

I met cinematographer, Brian Pearson. I knew he was something special because this wasn’t the first time Patrick had worked with him. It’s sort of amazing. They are starting to sound alike. Both soft spoken. A similar cadence to their voices. I watched a couple of playbacks and Brian’s visuals are stunning. The man has managed to make me look even better than I naturally do. I’ve always been a 10 but Brian has turned me up to eleven. While watching the playbacks I found myself wanting to make out with me. He’s just that good. And like Patrick his passion and workaholism is unending. Even at lunch their conversations would drift into upcoming shots. These are men incapable of halfassing. Phoning something in is simply impossible for them. It’s not in their nature. It’s actually inspiring to watch these two together. I think this is one of those partnerships we/they will still be talking about decades down the road.

Then there’s Gary Tunnicliffe. Gary’s a Brit with blood. His prosthetic creations are…well…just one big ol’ lighting bolt away from…It’s Alive! Alive! Gary’s a little intimidating. You’ve met those people who are jacks of all trades? Gary’s sort of like that but he’s more a King of all trades. It’s a little creepy. Not only can he mix up a mean batch of blood but he’s an incredible writer. He told me the story for a screenplay he’d written which both blew me away and made me jealous that I hadn’t thought of it myself. And then there’s the sense of humor. The man keeps you in stitches. For instance, Producer Jack brought the Coffee Guy to set one night for the crew. The Coffee Guy was exactly what you would expect…a one man Starbucks. One by one, everyone made their way over to his table to order assorted specialty coffees. Except our stuntman. Who for one reason or another couldn’t get there. So he grabbed a union radio and ordered an espresso with a pump of vanilla. Pump. Of. Vanilla. This phrase crawled up Gary’s backside and dug in like a lime carrying tick. Pump of effing Vanilla? You’re the bloody stuntman! Shouldn’t you be tossing back a shot of Wild Turkey? Not a bloody Pump of Vanilla! You’d never catch Hooper ordering a pump of vanilla. Then he proceeded to quote 73 percent of the dialog from Hooper. Before the end of his rant, the stuntman had been forever dubbed, POV (Pump of Vanilla). I love Gary. I love him because he gave me a pillow. I wish I could explain what that means. In March perhaps.

BetsyPatrick0608.JPG

Then you have actress, Betsy Rue. Brave doesn't begin to describe her. She came to Pittsburgh ready to work and beware any all that get in her way. She kept the crew in stitches and within three minutes of entering the makeup trailer the girls were calling her a breath of fresh air. Spunky and tells it like it is. If war breaks out on a movie set, you'd better end up on Betsy's side or you are going to get wounded. I fully expect her to be a huge star and she's already got that whole hiding from the paparazzi thing down.

Fact is, the whole experience was humbling. The crew is simply phenom. The actors are great. And the story is unbelievably good if I say so myself. And although I knocked much of it out of the park, the praise must go to Patrick first. Because, as always happens, great projects always end up getting screwed by studio egos. Does this mean studio executives have nothing but bad ideas? Not at all. I’ve used some great ideas that came from executives. Even the yoyos at Lions Gate came up with some good ideas from time to time. But here’s the rub. Not ALL of their ideas are good. Can they market a movie? Sure can. In fact, they excel at it. I would even go as far as saying Lions Gate is one of the best in the business when it comes to marketing. If one of their movies fails, the one department you can’t blame is marketing. The one department you can blame is development. Patrick overcame. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve watched a script reach that point where it takes a step backwards. Many times that step backwards becomes a simple freefall. I witnessed the big step backwards. I saw it happen. Patrick saw it happen. He told me he’d stop it. He told me he’d fix it. And. He did. Not only did he keep his word, but the story is actually better than before the backslide. He’s a freaking genius. Patrick, Jack, the actors…somehow they managed to get the rotting apples out of the batch. It just so rarely happens.

I’m so very proud to be a small part of this movie. As the end of the month nears, the film will wrap. Patrick and Cynthia will attack the editing and eventually Lions Gate’s Marketing will take over. I couldn’t be happier. I remember what those New Line morons did to Jason X. So nice to have access to a department that knows what it’s doing. In fact, I met Lions Gate’s Head of Marketing. She stopped at the Doubletree to pick up her friend Selena, with whom I was chatting. Earlier I noticed Selena and I had the same call time and assumed we would be riding in the same union driven van. Not so. Rightfully so, I wasn't allowed in the grown up van. But no worries. When we got outside there was a resounding roll of thunder, the sky lit up, the heavens opened and Bob arrived. Or Roberto as he was often called when he drove Robert Duvall around. I don’t recall Bob’s proper title, but he was the union bossman. I leapt into Bob’s Mini and we sped away.

Sarah was there because both her friend and her dog are in our movie. Her dog, which I innocently referred to as, Louis the Pug, much to her horror. I had just insulted the most powerful person at Lions Gate. She promptly informed that it was, in fact, Louise the French Bully. It should be noted that the Mightie Louis’s trailer was the same size as mine. Some might be offended by this. But I know how important Mightie Louis is so I gotta think my career is on the rise. And while it would have been easy to just shove both friend and dog into the script and call it a day, they both take part and add to what will be one of the coolest set pieces in the film. Of course, this is a film with a dozen brilliant set pieces. But the point is, nothing was ever phoned in.

It was a crazy, even surreal night. All in all, I didn’t want to like Sarah, Head of Marketing, because she’s a suit. I’m just so used to suits being the enemies. But I couldn’t help it. I liked her. Because you know what I love? Competence. I love people who are good at their jobs. Not just good, but great. Sarah is great at her job. Probably the best. As a result she demands and deserves respect. You know what I don’t love? Incompetence. There are a lot of people who think their position makes them deserving of respect. Sadly, for every Sarah, there are two morons skating under the radar of incompetence. It disgusts me actually. I honestly wish I didn’t care so much because they are everywhere and hard to detect sometimes. We have a great director. A great crew. A phenomenal cast. Gary’s FX are disgustingly perfect. Paradise’s 3D is a gorgeous thing to behold. Clever writing and a top notch marketing department ready to sell this thing from Scranton to the dark side of the moon. And right slap in the middle we had some asshats who very nearly sank the boat before she left the dock. All because of ego, fear and incompetence. In a previous post I said I didn’t want to work with Lions Gate again. Isn’t that crazy? Lions Gate is a strong company. How about we just cut out the bad apples? Joe Drake? You got your ears on good buddy? That’s trucker lingo cuz I play a trucker, after all.

I’ve just grown weary of the BS. Yes. Hollywood can sell movies. And as nutty as it may sound. Bloody Valentine is going to be one of the good ones. One of the films that slipped through the minefield to become something wonderful. I just think it’s time to get rid of the mines once and for all. I’d like to think a change is coming.

IzzieChai0608.JPG

Plane landed in San Francisco safely. I returned to my wife and child. We walked the ocean. We watched a Panda fight with mightie Kung Fu. And as crazy as it was…6 day weeks, 16 hour days…I didn’t really want to leave. It’s so wonderful to be a part of something when you can see it’s working. And oh was it working. Of course, I missed Mel and Izzie. They’re my life. And in the five days while I was away my daughter decided to walk. I missed it.

IzzieWalks0608.JPG

But even now, as it is barking up 6 AM in Pittsburgh, I wish I was there, standing in a cold wet mine shaft. Tweaking a line here and there. Or offering a smile to a weary crewman or crewwoman. Or chatting with Bomba about his 31 years working for Mr. Rogers. I mean, how cool is that? Of course, I’d want Mel and Izzie snoozing in the hotel for my return. But that’s just how I roll.

PGSunset0508.JPG

Posted at 02:56 AM | Comments (7)
June 01, 2008
Pittsburgh

I gotta start blogging more. The whole point of this was to be able to one day look back and chuckle at the adventure. Which means I need to get to work.

As far as Hollywood is concerned, I’m told that one should keep politics to his or her self, unless you want to destroy your career. Of course, since I’ve spent years reinventing ways of destroying my career…why stop now?

I am a Republican voting for Obama.

I have not switched parties despite the Bush administration’s many tireless efforts to convince me to do so. If Hillary bests Obama then McCain gets my vote. Although I don’t see that happening. Despite my alma matter, Kentucky’s, best efforts. When Kentucky was asked upon leaving the exit polls, why didn’t you vote for Obama, twenty-five percent responded, “Cuz he’s black.” Kentucky. Bless their hearts. Always the last to jump on board the Politically Correct train.

Messengers II has wrapped.

One script entered. Two movies leaved. At times it was frustrating writing and rewriting for such a low budget. But it sure was fun. And the notes were smart. The discussions were smart. The process was…wait for it…enjoyable. I had fun writing it. I had fun rewriting it. I would, with no hesitation, gladly work with Ghost House and Mandate again. I am really looking forward to seeing the finished product.

My Bloody Valentine is currently shooting and shooting in 3D. That last detail has turned the production into a monster. Huge lights, giant cameras and eons to set up shots. Welcome to the digital world. They have switched to 14 hours a day, six day weeks. I’ve been tweaking lines along the way. In fact, I polished last night what will shoot tonight. And I am loving Patrick Lussier. But then I always have. Not only is a friend…he’s simply a pleasure to work with and I consider it an honor being one of his commandos. Would and will happily work with him again. As for Lions Gate…nah. Not if I can help it. There are plenty of hungry writers in the world. I don’t mind sharing. Let somebody else have a turn. And one day I’ll tell the behind-the-scene story. An epic adventure of a handful of heroes who do battle with a team of villainous morons. But that is a story for another day. Suffice it to say, the good guys won…although a few of us lost limbs.

I leave on Wednesday for Pittsburgh. I am playing a small role in the film.

As for Monkey’s Paw…if you recall from my last post, I had proclaimed it perhaps the best script I had ever written. Risky and bold and a throwback to the way movies used to be made, to the way stories used to be written. Yeah. Well. So much for that. I’m currently doing a page 5 rewrite. That means the first five pages are the same…everything else brand new. I’ll make it work because that’s what I do.

I used to think my job as the screenwriter was like a novelist, in that he/she writes a story and Hollywood does everything in its power to nurture, protect and bring that story to fruition. Rrright. When monkey's fly out of Bob Barker's butt. No, like it or not, in today's Hollywood the Screenwriter's job is to take many different opinions, ideas, visions and work those into a cohesive and compelling story. No, that's not easy. And yes, the truth hurts. But I'm not here to blow smoke up your hoohoo.

Anyone who frequents movie message boards will see the trend. The general public knows. Movies aren’t as good. Most poeple don’t know why. Heck, sadly even Hollywood doesn’t know why or somebody would change the current trend. I think, and of course I could be wrong, but I think the answer is simple. The people who know how to make movies aren’t the ones making the movies. The writers aren’t in charge of writing the story any more. Executives are. And I’m not talking about high-level power executives. I’m talking about all executives. Even the kid fresh out of film school. The directors are losing their directorial power. This may come as a surprise but at many studios it’s the Marketing Department who has final say over casting.

I and other believe that movies on the whole have suffered. The quality of the story has suffered.

Don’t believe me? Test the theory. Look at the top ten movies of 2002. Then compare those to the top ten movies of 2007. Which year has your favorites movies? And pay no attention to box office. Studios have that down to a Science. They know how to sell movies. They just forgot to let the talent make the movies.

Remember when all Oscar movies used to be made by studios? Not anymore. Juno. No Time for Old Dudes. Now Oscar goes to the independents. Why? What has changed? Pretty simple really. Writers and directors still control the movies in the independent world. Not so much in the studio world. But what about Iron Man? It was great! And it was huge! Everyone loved it! Yes, it was. But Iron Man wasn’t made by a studio. It was an independent. Marvel paid for it. Marvel controlled it. Not a studio. What about all the Pixar movies? Toy Story. Monster’s Inc. Finding Nemo. Again independent. Until recently. Will that change now that they are with Disney? If Disney is smart they’ll stay out of the way.

So, what else is going on? Well, once I have Monkey’s Paw behind me (I should finished when I return from Pittsburgh) I have a TV pilot to finish. Then I’m going to write a spec for Thomas Jane based on a Tim Bradstreet idea. Too early to get into details but it will be fun.

And even though imdb removed Psychopath from its listing, Carpenter is still attached and it’s still happening. It’s going to be a comic book first…as I have mentioned before. The comic will come out before the end of the year through…eh…I forget the publisher. It’s one of the independents. I’ll find out and post later.

I guess I could ramble on, but perhaps shorter, sweeter and more consistent posts are the new thing.

Posted at 03:23 PM | Comments (6)
March 27, 2008
Please and Thank You are the secret of the Nile

A day became a week and a week became a month…blah blah blah.

3MonthHatDec07.jpg

Last Christmas, our good friends, the Handman's sent young Ms. Izzie Rain a Santa hat. Since we love the Handman's way more than our daughter, we shoved the three month old hat onto our daughter's 15 month old head.

Two of the companies I was working with pre-strike ended up cutting deals with the WGA so I went back to work early. As a result Messengers II starts shooting mid-April. And I’m awaiting notes on RKO’s Monkey’s Paw. At some point, Lions Gate cut a deal and I ended up rewriting My Bloody Valentine. It starts shooting May 12th.

First, let’s acknowledge the snotty emails. Yes. My Bloody Valentine is a remake. No. Choosing what movies are and are not made is not up to me. How about we all ease up on poor ol’ Toddly. Yes. I’ve a brainfull of new ideas but Hollywood don’t want original right now. They want safe, name recognizable remakes and sequels. And as much as I hate Corprate Hollywood the numbers don’t lie. The Descent was a grrreat movie. But nobody went to see it. Slither was a grrreat movie but nobody went to see it. That said, between Zane Smith, Patrick Lussier and yours frakking truly, My Bloody Valentine is a grrreat script. And trust me, that’s not been easy. It would be a very safe bet that along the way we have avoided more than a dozen dungbombs lobbed at the story. Welcome to the new Hollywood.

ShatMarch08.jpg

Okay, that should cover all the negative emails, and by the way, they were in the minority. To all those who sent happy emails of congratulations, thank you.

My managers mentioned Bloody Valentine to me back before the strike and…eh…I wasn’t really interested. Then I hard Lussier was going to direct. That peeked my interest. With Patrick running the Bloody show, I’m completely happy. If everyone stays out of his way there’s no doubt in my mind this will be the best of the remakes.

IzziePandaJan08.jpg

Young Ms. Izzie Rain loves Panda Express. I mean, like creepy fan girl Hannah Montana kind of love. It’s the potstickers that get her. And truth be told, her daddy loves the orange chicken. Desert Island, sunblock, Mel in a fig leaf, Izzie climbing a cocoa nut tree and all the orange chicken I can eat and I’m happy man. I like chicken just fine but this stuff is addictive. I just know I’ll be sitting there wolfing it down when one day some guy will burst through the doors and proclaim that “Orange chicken is made of people! Orange chicken is people!”

AppleJuiceDec07.jpg

In other Bloody news, Jaime King is now onboard and I couldn’t be happier. Sure she’s a fan favorite and looks great in Maxim but her rehearsal tapes were incredible. And I hear from a buddy that she’s fantastic in The Spirit as well. This morning I chatted with Kyle, Jaime’s hubbicans and director of Fanboys. Seems like anytime I mentioned Jaime someone would say, “Oh yeah, Kyle’s a good friend of mine.” If we end up on the Bloody set at the same time we’ll perhaps test some Pittsburghian beer.

BikeDayFeb08.jpg

Messengers II starts shooting on the 21st of April I think. Might be the 22nd. It’s shooting in Bulgaria because when you think rural American farmland, of course, you think Bulgaria. As anyone who suffers through this journal knows, I am ze king of bitching about Hollywood and the morons who ruin it…I mean run it. But in this case I need to stop bitching long enough to give some praise.

I turned in my Messengers II first draft a few weeks before the strike. Then there was a string of meetings with Andrew (line producer), JR (Ghost House exec) Sam Raimi (exec producer) and a couple of execs from Mandate and all of this with director Martin Barnewitz on the phone from Denmark. Those meetings were…well, they were fun. Actually made me feel young again. Like what I foolishly thought Hollywood was before I’d been kicked in the balls so many times. And all of this for a small little movie that would likely never see more than a direct to DVD release. We bantered and brainstormed and I never felt like I was being forced to make a change I didn’t agree with. I can’t tell you how rare that is. After three or maybe four meetings I had several pages of notes.

But, let’s back up. First off, this was a one step deal. Meaning I would get paid for one draft and that payment would be broken into two parts. I would get paid to start writing the script and I would get paid for delivering that script.

Of course, normally that’s all BS talk. That first payment...the one you get for starting the script…yeah, you actually never get that one until you finish the script and your agent/manager/lawyer calls the company and tells them that they can have the script as soon as the write a check. Check comes pretty quickly after that. I’m still not sure why they call it a commencement check. I guess the same reason you sell something for 4.95 instead of just saying 5 bucks. Anyway, that’s how commencement payment normally goes down. And after that you normally wait months and months to get that delivery check for the delivery you just made.

But that’s not how it went down on Messengers II. There was a strike looming and I just wasn’t interested in playing the accounting head games. So I broke every rule in the book and sent the script to the execs without blackmailing them for a check. What happened next was pretty odd. I got paid. I got paid for commencement AND delivery. And they paid fast. No theatrics, no angry phone calls. Seems silly to praise someone for doing what he or she said they would do, but oddly enough it really is rare.

So there I was sitting in a room with all these execs, including Sam freaking Raimi (and yeah, I might have geeked out a teeny bit) and getting all these notes when I had already been paid everything I was contractually owed. Of course, I did have an optional step. Which means, the studio could decide to keep me around for an additional draft. Of course, every contract I’ve had since ’96 has had that optional step included. And since ’96 no company has ever implemented it. No, I was pretty sure that last batch of notes would fall under the “free” rewrite category.

“Free” rewrites are all the rage here in Hollywood these days. You see, over the last ten years the gates opened and a bunch of young hungry writers flooded the market. They were so hungry to get their feet in the door that they wrote for scale (that means the lowest dollar value the Writer’s Guild will allow), they did dozens of “free” rewrites and they did whatever the executives/producers asked. As a result the business changed. Those of us with quotes started getting “take it or leave it” lowball offers. “Free” rewrite became the norm. And when you argued a story point with an executive, they looked at you like you had just started urinating on their mother. At least all those new writers got their feet in the door. We got that going for us. Although there are many who might argue that New Hollywood’s quality of movies have suffered.

In any case, I’d been paid for my one and only step. Nikki Finke was preaching to everyone that the strike was gonna happen Monday morning. And there I was sitting with a whole new batch of notes. So, I started writing. And I turned in the second draft at 8:30pm on Sunday night. 11:30 pm eastern. And as Nikki Toldja Finke predicted, we went on strike Monday morning midnight. There are no doubt some militants out there who might frown at my choice to turn in my draft. Eh, whatever. The fact was, not turning in the script would have been worse. I got no right to bitch about Hollywood being unaccountable if I am unaccountable. I may be a grumpy pain in the keester but I am accountable. I did my job and I’d do it again.

And was I rewarded for my hard efforts? I got an email of thanks from one of the executives. Two weeks later I got a letter from Sony informing me that due to the strike my services would no longer be needed. It basically meant that optional pass would never happen. It basically meant I would never get paid for killing myself to turn in that last draft. Of course, there are some militants out there who would say I got what I deserve. And I would agree.

Because a week later I received a check for commencement and delivery of the optional step. Yes. They paid me. Now let’s take a moment of silence and think about that.

They. Paid. Me.

They never “officially” commenced me on that optional step. We’d gone on strike. Sony had already sent the official letter telling me to go fly a kite, yet, they paid me. I’ll be honest, I walked around pretty stunned for a couple days. My writer buddies with whom I shared this information walked around stunned for a few days. You see, this just DOES NOT HAPPEN! But in the case of Ghost House, Mandate, Sony…it did. I’m still stunned. Anyway, I felt this deserved some recognition. I’ve complained without stop about this industry, but in this case I’ve met a company that did simply, what they said they would do. And that’s amazingly rare.

IzzieNapFeb08.jpg

Then there’s Monkey’s Paw at RKO. Perhaps the darkest and in many ways, most challenging script I’ve ever written. So dark and so…unnerving that Mel didn’t like me for several weeks. Thing is, some stories are tough to write and in order to do them properly it requires you go to a dark place. That was the job. And so…I went there.

And by the way, as Abby Normal as this may sound, I got more praise to give out. Remember when I said that in 12 years I’d never received a commencement check before having a script ready to turn in? Well, RKO paid me a commencement check before the draft was ready. Only a week after they’d commenced me in fact. 12 years, two dozen gigs and that’s a first.

And the praise don’t stop there. Kevin Cornish is the executive at RKO with whom I’ve been dealing with the most. I think it is no secret that I consider most, if not all, executives to be little more than a company tax deduction. But Kevin has forced me to alter my thinking. From day one he has never had any interest in cookie cutter, follow the blueprint horror movie screenwriting. He wanted to make a classic. For Kevin it was all about doing something new. Doing what the Shining did before the Shining existed. Doing what Rosemary did before Rosemary existed. What Exorcist did and so on. You can make the argument that SAW and Hostel did those things and perhaps they did…they certainly pushed the envelope…but will they stand the test of time? Will they become classics? Only time will tell. But we know that the true classics did two things. They pushed the envelope and they drew us into an uncomfortable, sometimes never fully explained world. Well, that’s what Monkey’s Paw has become. I personally think it’s one of the best scripts I’ve ever written.

In the last ten years, just about every meeting I’ve ever taken has been some yoyo telling me to make it more like SCREAM, then it was more like THE RING, then it was more like HOSTEL. To suddenly have an executive telling me to show him something he’s never seen, to take him somewhere he’s never been, somewhere uncomfortable, somewhere foreign…sheesh…my head was spinning.

Kevin’s reasoning was simple. When he looked around at his heroes they were men and women who were constantly pushing the boundaries. They were constantly taking risks and trying something new. They WEREN’T scrambling to make a movie that looked like SAW or Hostel. Polanski, Spielberg, Kubrick…they didn’t follow any pattern or rulebook other than their gut and their faith in imagination. They took chances and sometimes they failed horribly, but when they did it right they did it unbelievably right.

So, here’s the thing, and Kevin and I have talked about this at length. We now have a script that does NOT fit the cookie cutter, analytical new Hollywood. As a result I gotta wonder if we’ll survive the hurdles ahead. But I do have a prediction. One of two things will happen. Young Master Cornish will either be beaten down and defeated by New Hollywood or he will drive the stake thru the monster’s heart and end up as one of the few that will save an industry. Either way, I have front row seats for the show.

NightmareMarch08.jpg

Doctor Lorey's Nightmare Academy released in the UK and is a big hit. Of all the covers this one is by far my favorite. Although Spain would run a close second. I don't have the Spain pic handy but it's up at Dean Lorey.com.

JellyDec07.jpg

Now let’s talk about Bluray. Love it! Awesome! Un…frakking…believable picture. Until our PS3 took a crap and our discs stopped loading. Well, that’s not true. Actually all they will do is load. The little teardrop in the right hand corner just spins and spins and spins. So, we’re sending it back to Sony. In the meantime we, perhaps foolishly, bought PS3 number 2. We’ll stick it in the bedroom if Sony does us right and ships us a new one. We figured why buy a player for the bedroom when the PS3 cost the same and gives you both gaming and internet? Of course, this all depends on whether or not this glitch of ours truly is a one in a million occurrence as Sony claims.

Oh, and by the way, Bluray won. Isn’t it…I don’t know…criminal for Best Buy and Target not to share this fact with their customers? They are still carrying HD players. They are still carrying HD discs. Hello? I’m just feeling a little buyer’s “almost” remorse because we bought an HD player before the original PS3. But we took it back because it wouldn’t work with our amp.

EDIT: As I sometimes do…I sent my ramblings to Mel to look over before posting. And she informs me that I’m wrong about Best Buy. That, in fact, they called us yesterday to inform us that Blu-ray, won. And even though we returned our HiDef player they are sending us a gift card for a discounted purchase of a Blu-ray player. Okay, I stand corrected. Nicely played, Bestest Buy. Shame on you Target.

Todd1.gif

Moving on, shout goes out to Protecious from Myspace for creating the creepy Todd gif.

Okay, so what else needs to be covered? The journal totally missed out on Christmas, no? Mel got one of those bright colored Science Fiction vacuums that Gordon Sumner sells on the TV.

VacDec08.jpg

I know at some point I had intended to journal about Britney’s vagina. And later I figured I’d have to mention Paris’s vagina. Then before I could get to those Britney’s sister got knocked up and by proxy her vagina made the news. But in looking back…ugh. Who cares about a bunch over-used vaginas.

OfficeDec07.jpg

I have an office now. An out of the house office. I just couldn’t get anything done at home because I’d end up wrestling the creature. And it’s hard to write dark creepy stuff with the Backyardigans singing “Float, flutter flyyyyy, float flutter flyyyy, Rock oh rock on hill top high, float flutter flyyyyyy,” in the background. See, now I got that song stuck in my head.

FarmerTargetDec07.jpg

Oh and Izzie isn’t the only challenge. I’m sitting at my home computer the other day and I can hear Cleaning Mode Melanie tearing up the kitchen. I was trying to rewrite the climax of Messengers II when suddenly Mel breaks into song (Now for this to work one must sing the lyrics to the tune of Queen’s “Another One Bites the Dust”).

Lust, lust lust, lustin for my butt.
Lust, lust lust, lustin for my butt,
And another one down,
And another one down,
Another one lusts muh butt.
Hey! Gonna get you too, another one lusts muh butt.

Needless to say, I left for the office shortly after.

Working at an office takes some getting used to. Especially since I’ve been a home office kind of guy for over ten years. And, of course, I worry about the girls if I’m writing late. For instance when they come to visit I insist that Mel IMs me the moment they get home to let me know they are safe. The other night they brought me dinner. We picnicked on the floor. Then they headed home. I looked up from writing and forty-five minutes had gone by. No IM from Mel. I’m a beast of imagination so I start worrying. I start IMing, "Hello? You there? Where are you?" I’m grabbing the phone and just about to call when. “Hey.” Pops up on the IM. I rip into Mel. Reminding her that she’s supposed to let me know she got home safely, that I can’t concentrate when I’m worried about them, that my imagination runs wild and I start worrying that they walked in on a burgler, blah blah blah…basically I let her have it. When I finished there was a long pause then came the reply:

“What makes you think I am really me?”

I can only hope that Jesus will smote her for that one.

IzzieJellyDec07.jpg

What else? I’ve written two different pilots for two animated TV shows, both based on video games. And both have been picked up by cable companies. I’m not really sure what details I should give at this time so I’ll keep it brief. The Scifi Channel picked up one of the pilots and Spike picked up the other. More on that after all the papers are signed.

I got a call from the Writer’s Guild today. A very polite fella was asking if I’d been invited to the set of The Messengers. Confused, as I often am, I assumed he meant Messengers II. I told him it hadn’t start filming yet. Suddenly we were both confused. It was a mess. Turns out he was, in fact, referring to the first movie, to which I told him, no, I was not invited to the set. He then asked me if I wanted to seek damages. Whufusamoo? Ovaservagie scuzemuth? That’s not what I said. But that’s what I thought. What I said was, “Uh…no.”

IzzieThinkingDec07.jpg

In addition to writing on Bloody Valentine and in addition to Patrick’s now being in Pittsburgh prepping the shoot, he and I are writing a four issue comic book series called Mass Destruction, based on one of our old film pitches. Don Marquez, the artist from Alien Pig Farm has agree to pencil it for us which is fantastic. We’re doing all of this with a new company headed up by Ludon Lee who led the digital comic versions of Bad Planet and Alien Pig Farm. More on that as it develops.

IzzieMarch08.jpg

I wrote The Lycan, a four issue comic base on a Thomas Jane idea, shortly after Alien Pig Farm. With Dark Country wrapped Tom now has the time to concentrate on comics. He and Tim Bradstreet have found an artist and plans are underway.

SchoolMarch08.jpg

Yesterday Izzie Rain hit 18 months. That’s a year and a half in people years. She’s okay. I still like her mostly. Enough that we bought her some old school toys.

FarmMarch08.jpg

I quit smoking. I guess it’s been…5 months? Not really sure. I didn’t document it. I didn’t make a big deal about it. I just quit. I never really talked about smoking that much because I always knew it was this amazingly stupid thing to start doing and once I was hooked I believed all the BS that it would be hard to quit. It’s actually not hard. In fact, quitting was so foolishly easy that I feel…foolish for not quitting earlier. The problem is, I was told since birth that it was nearly impossible to quit. That smoking was as addictive as heroine! When I started smoking it was because I was on a self proclaimed path of destruction. I started smoking with the understanding that I would not be able to quit. Well as it turns out, quitting was easy. But in order to believe that you best pick up this book. “The Easy Way to Quit Smoking” by Allen Carr. There’s no preaching, no medical pictures of lungs or any of that crap. You know smoking is bad. You don’t need to be told what you already know. Carr goes about it in a way you won’t expect. I’ve tried to quit off and on for ten years. Just like every other smoker I know. But I never got close. Half way through reading the Easy Way I put it aside because I knew if I kept reading I would quit and I wasn’t ready. I went back to it a month later, finished it and walked away happy as could be. No shakes, no pains, no screaming at everyone in anger. I simply quit and was very happy about it. And by the way, this was in the midst of trying to finish several scripts with a strike looming. A very stressful time when I used to think I HAD to have a smoke. Walked away without a second glance back. Don’t believe me, read the book. Dare ya. Sissy.

American Idol. Yeah yeah, I know. But with TiVo you can watch a two hour show in 20 minutes. Least that’s how we Farmers do it. So let’s chat contestants.

Chikezie went home? Shame. His “She’s a Woman” by the Beatles was awesome. But Simon was right, his last song sucked.

Brooke White. Eh. Good voice. A little too goody two shoes for me.

Carly Smithson. Good voice. Lern2dress.

David Archuleta. I’m sorry. I know the girls dig ya but dude, you are creepy. And when I say creepy I mean, killing baby ducks and puppies and working your way up to the overweight neighbor girl who lives down the street.

David Cook. The most talented. I’ve yet to be let down. Have iTuned each of his performances. Hello blew me away. Eleanor Rigby as awesome. And this week’s Billie Jean was simply amazing. He may not win but he’s by far the best talent.

Jason Castro. Uh…dreamy. The whole aw shucks goofball thing may end up getting old but he’s the only other performer who’s tunes I have paid 99 cents for. I’m not exactly sure why the judges love that little anti-christ Archuleta while slamming Castro though. I guess because Archuleta is just fake enough to self promote himself while Castro is just too freaking ah shucks.

Kristy Lee Cook. Fine voice. Cute face. You could use some worldliness. Might think about calling your boyfriend and having him bring a box of condoms. I’m guessing both your voice and personality would improve after a good humpin.

Michael Johns. I like you. I could see hanging out with you. Good voice. Not sure I get who you are as a performer though. Not really a Daughtry, certainly not a Clay Akins. Dunno. I think I like that you are more mature than most of the twerps. At least you appreciated the Beatles while that cultist, Archuleta had never really heard of them.

Ramiele Malubay. Eh. Cute girl. Strong voice in such a small package. Pilipino pride FTW. If not for that you should probably go next week or the week after.

Syesha Mercado. Great voice. Pretty girl. Just never connected with me. I know the judges love you but something’s not there. Either you got it or you don’t and there’s a reason you were in the bottom three. The fact that Chikezie went home instead of you, surprised me.

BatmanandGil.jpg

Anyway, that’s why I like American Idol. I like playing sofa judge. But Idol is not my favorite show on TV. No, that award goes to BBC American’s Top Gear. If the freaking Brits would get with the program and put the past seasons on DVD I would already own them. This whole best of DVD crap they got going? It’s a travesty. You would think the Best show on television would get better treatment. The show is not easy to describe. Three guys, a DJ, a pianist and I forget what the other one used to do. Anyway they love cars. And every week they drive, test drive and review several. Mostly upper end stuff. Then there’s always some huge, unbelievably unpredictable challenge. Like all three having to build boats out of cheap vehicles then racing them across the English channel to France. Or turning a small British car (forget what kind) into a spaceshuttle (no kidding), which took off and crashed spectacularly. And then there’s always a celebrity who comes on the show and races around a track trying to beat the times of previous celebrities. Currently Simon Cowell holds the fastest time for this season, ahead of Ron Wood, Ewan McGregor, Hugh Grant, Helen Mirren and the list goes on and on. Anway, I still love House but as far as reality type or talk shows are concerned, Top Gear is in a league all its own.

AquariumMar08.jpg

This is what a bus does to the side of a building.

I ride my bike to the office on the days I don’t run to the office. I never drive so you hybrid owning numbnuts can blow me. Of course, my bike got stolen. A gorgeous Gary Fisher frame now gone. I was angry for about five minutes. Mel and I bought matching Gary Fishers when we lived in Thousand Oaks. But after Izzie clawed her way out, momma didn’t like the Fisher no more cuz she was so high off the ground. So we got her another bike. In the end it all worked out. Mel has a bike she likes to ride. I’m now riding her old bike and parking it in my office rather than chaining it downstairs. And some thief bought his kid Happy Feet on Bluray from the stolen Gary Fisher proceeds.

NapMarch08.jpg


Posted at 03:26 PM | Comments (2)


Archives:


 
home // essays // about // links // message boards