The Devil’s Guide To Hollywood (30 page)

BOOK: The Devil’s Guide To Hollywood
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P
roducer David Geffen, discussing screenwriter Robert Towne: “Bob was a very talented writer, although an extraordinarily boring man. He always talked about himself. He used to go to Catalina to write and would describe to you in endless detail watching the cows shit.”

She wouldn’t have liked Bob Towne
.

H
edy Lamarr: “In my experiences with writers, I found that those who talk less are more talented. I sat a whole evening with Otto Preminger and Tennessee Williams and Mr. Williams said just ten words.”

It’s okay to plagiarize yourself
.

B
en Hecht based his 1958 film,
The Fiend Who Walked the West
, starring a young Robert Evans, on his 1947 hit film,
Kiss of Death
, starring Richard Widmark.

I based my 1983 film,
Flashdance
, on the Dutch film
Spetters
, directed by Paul Verhoeven. Then I based my 1995 film,
Showgirls
, directed by Paul Verhoeven, on
Flashdance
.

It might be fair then to say that my friend Paul Verhoeven was the creative spark behind both
Flashdance
and
Showgirls
. I’m certainly happy he didn’t direct
Flashdance
, though, because he probably would have had an affair with Jennifer Beals, and Lord knows how
Flashdance
would have turned out.

You can rob yourself blind
.

R
aymond Chandler did it all the time, turning sketches into short stories, stories into novels, and novels into screenplays.

As he said, “I am the copyright owner. I can use my material in any way I see fit. There is no moral or ethical issue involved.”

Chandler was once lambasted for plagiarizing himself—by a reader named E. Howard Hunt who, twenty years later, was one of the burglars involved in the Watergate break-in.

Hunt obviously didn’t have any issues with someone stealing from
other
people.

Eugene O’Neill plagiarized Raymond Chandler … or did Raymond Chandler plagiarize Eugene O’Neill?

M
y ideas have been plagiarized,” wrote Raymond Chandler. “Throughout the play
The Iceman Cometh
O’Neill uses the expression “The Big Sleep” as a synonym for death. He is apparently under the impression that this is a current underworld or half-world usage, whereas it is a pure invention on my part. If I am remembered long enough, I shall probably be accused of stealing the phrase from O’Neill, since he is a big shot.”

I swear I wasn’t influenced by reading Hungarian plays
.

O
rson Welles said, “Every Hungarian play is plagiarized from another Hungarian play.”

W
RITE WHAT YOU KNOW …
TELLING LIES IN AMERICA
I went to a Catholic high school in Cleveland, where I was the victim of a great deal of prejudice because I was an immigrant and because I was poor. I dreamed of overcoming all that animosity and becoming an American writer one day
.
Thirty years later, I wrote
Telling Lies in America,
the story of a kid at a Catholic high school in Cleveland who is the victim of a great deal of prejudice because he is an immigrant and because he is poor. He dreams of overcoming the marginalization and being a famous American writer someday
.
D
O YOUR RESEARCH …
FLASHDANCE
I researched a script about pipeline welders for a script about the Alaska pipeline. The script, called
Rowdy,
was never made into a film
.
Four years later, I used all the research I had done about the pipeline for the young woman that I made a welder in
Flashdance.

The most important part of what you write is what will be left out
.

T
he hell of good film writing,” Raymond Chandler wrote, “is that the most important part is left out. It’s left out because the camera and the actors can do it better and quicker, above all quicker. But it had to be there in the beginning.”

W
RITE WHAT YOU KNOW …
CHECKING OUT
In my midthirties, I suddenly began experiencing panic and anxiety attacks, during which I felt I was going to die. I wrote a script—
Checking Out
—about a man who begins having anxiety and panic attacks and is convinced he is going to die
.
After I wrote the film, I stopped having the attacks. I had cured myself with my own writing
.
When the movie failed both critically and commercially, I had a couple more attacks
.

The “asshole guy” might read your script
.

B
y writing screenplays for Hollywood production, you are writing for studio executives who don’t read anything, except maybe their readers’ summaries about scripts.

Oh, they might skim through
Vanity Fair
to see the new chichi Prada and Dolce ads. But they don’t read books or scripts. They are about as illiterate as most people who want to write scripts … as illiterate, maybe, as
you
.

Some go to the greatest lengths to avoid reading. I know a studio exec who gives the comedies his reader says he should read to his wife’s gynecologist and the dramas to his own proctologist.

I know another illiterate exec who’s made everyone believe that he’s got dyslexia; consequently, he has his assistants tape a script (even then he will sometimes fast-forward through it).

The fact that most studio execs don’t read books or even scripts isn’t good news … if you want to write a literate and literary script that the critics would praise but no one would see.

If, however, you want to write a script of a movie that everyone would see, like
Basic Instinct
and
Jagged Edge
and
Flashdance
, then these semi-illiterate and illiterate studio execs might be your perfect first audience.

W
RITE WHAT YOU FEAR …
BIG SHOTS
While I was having my panic attacks, I worried what would happen to my ten-year-old son, Steve, if I died. So I sat down and wrote a script called
Big Shots,
which is about a ten-year-old boy who loves his father very much and whose father dies
.
When they were about to film the script, the producer met my son Steve and wanted to cast him in the film as the kid whose father dies. I stopped it because I was afraid that if Steve played the kid whose father died, then
I
might die
.
When Steve graduated from high school, I gave him the Rolex Submariner that I always wore, and which was featured in the movie. It was the watch that the fictional kid always wanted and which he got after his father died
.
I felt odd giving Steve the watch … since I was very much alive
.

You’ll probably be rewritten
.

I
n some ways, this has always been the case in Hollywood. Witness what F. Scott Fitzgerald said during his Hollywood years: “If one writer on a picture is good, ten are ten times better.”

I was very fortunate in this regard: Of my fifteen films, I had sole credit on nine.

Francis Ford Coppola caused the carpet bombing of Cambodia
.

T
he night before American fighters carpet-bombed Cambodia, Richard Nixon watched
Patton
in the White House over and over again.

Paddy Chayefsky got Arnold elected
.

T
hanks to his line—“I’m mad as hell, and I’m not going to take this anymore!”—Arnold Schwarzenegger was elected governor of California.

James Cameron has blood on his hands, too
.

H
asta la vista, baby!” Cameron wrote in
The Terminator
. It, too, became a slogan of Arnold’s gubernatorial campaign.

W
RITE WHAT YOU KNOW …
BETRAYED
I attended every one of my son Steve’s Little League games and found racist and anti-Semitic epithets carved into some of the grandstands—in liberal Marin County, northern California
.
I wrote a script about the rise of neo-Nazis in America
, Betrayed.
It was filmed in Lethbridge, Canada, and one day during filming, missing Steve, I wandered down to a local field and watched some Little Leaguers play a game. And I noticed that the grandstand I was watching the game from had the same kind of anti-Semitic epithets on it that I had seen in Marin County
.

Don’t try to discover the hot new thing
.

M
ike Medavoy: “I’m always suspicious of the hot new thing. You can really get burned attempting to make films like the ones that worked last month or last year.”

Write what your heart tells you to write
.

I
t might lead you nowhere. I’ve always loved old-timey honky-tonk country music … Ernest Tubb and Hank and Ray Price and George Jones.

I decided one day that I was going to put my love of real country music up on the big screen. I wrote an old-timey country musical, called
The Honky-Tonk Opera
, which was more a stage musical than a movie. Once I had the script written, I didn’t know what to do with it. For one thing, somebody would have to write the music—all I had were the words.

I sent the script to Tom Ross, who had been the head of CAA’s music division. He loved it. He said he could envision stage versions of
Honky-Tonk
produced in places like Nashville, Vegas, and Houston after the movie’s release. Tom felt we needed “a country music partner,” so we made a trip to Nashville, trying to convince country-music record executives Tony Brown, Joe Galante, and Mike Curb to come aboard as coproducers. Curb, the former lieutenant governor of California, went for it. He was a huge name in country music—among his artists at Curb Records were Tim McGraw, Faith Hill, and Jo Dee Messina.

With Ross and Curb attached to the project, my agents went out to sell the script. They got nowhere. Potential buyers didn’t know what to do with it. Old-timey Hank Williams country music? Say what? A tear-jerking celebration of love and America?
Huh?
By the guy who wrote
Basic Instinct
and
Showgirls
? Oh boy. Where was the sex? (There was no sex.)

I went to David Geffen, who’d produced both films and plays, and asked him to read the script and tell me his opinion. He read it and told me that it was “unproducible.”

I thanked him and put
The Honky-Tonk Opera
into a drawer. It’s still there … where my heart had led me.

Only shitheads do shitwork
.

O
scar-winning screenwriter Bill Goldman: “Screenwriting is shitwork. Brief example:
Waldo Pepper. Waldo
was basically an original screenplay of mine. I say ‘basically’ because the pulse of the movie came from George Hill, the director, and we worked for ten days on a story. … Okay, we open in New York and three daily papers are split—two terrific, one pan. In neither of the laudatory reviews was my name even mentioned. But you better believe I got top billing in the pan. I had screwed up George Hill’s movie. Nothing unusual at all about that—it’s SOP for the screenwriter. That is simply the way of the world. You do not, except in rare, rare exceptions, get critical recognition.”

The moral of the story: Don’t work with any director for ten days trying to come up with a story. Don’t let the screenplay be “basically” yours. Make sure the “pulse” of the movie comes from you and not the directing.

If you do all those things, you won’t be doing shitwork.

Do your research
.

B
en Hecht: “The producer wanted my script to top all the other gangster pictures. So I had my secretary go out and see all the gangster pictures playing. She scouted up all the dead people in each picture. In one film nine people were bumped off, so I went to the producer and said, ‘We’re going to kill twenty-five people!’ ”

BOOK: The Devil’s Guide To Hollywood
3.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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