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Screenwriter's Survival Guide
 
 

Screenwriter's Survival Guide (Paperback)

by Max Adams (Author) "this is a book written by accident ..." (more)
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Warner Books (Mar 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0446676225
  • ISBN-13: 978-0446676229
  • Product Dimensions: 20.4 x 13.4 x 2.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 975,266 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review
Are you looking for one of the secret decoder rings owned by all successful screenwriters? Or at least a map with a spot marked X? Sit down with Max Adams and The Screenwriter's Survival Guide. She'll tell you all about the writer's place in Hollywood.

Adams courteously assumes that you can already write or that you can at least get your hands on one of the zillions of books about writing techniques. She concentrates on what you really want to know. For example:

The screenwriter's uniform is (and this is unisex): jeans, high top sneakers, a plain T-shirt, and a loose casual jacket.... And the sneakers are always frighteningly clean, as in "they may be sneakers, but by gum they glow like they just came out of the box." Guys? No ties. No suits. I'm not kidding. If you wear a suit and tie to a meeting, people will mock you. Girls? No dresses. Actresses wear dresses. Screenwriters wear sneakers and jeans.
Her authority is unmistakable: after scooping up the prizes at a number of prestigious screenwriting contests such as the Nicholl Fellowship and the Austin Heart of Film Festival, Adams launched her Hollywood career with a big spec script sale (Excess Baggage).

The Screenwriter's Survival Guide delivers 64 pithy chapters, such as "Don't Write Batman" and "What You Really Get Paid". Other topics include pitching, the etiquette of "getting read", and the care and feeding of agents. Adams also provides lists of screenwriters' directories and organisations, a generic release form, format examples for cover pages and query letters, and other useful resources.

The book shines with Adams's streetwise attitude. She shares her worst Hollywood memories--the cold calls to producers, the credit arbitrations, and the meetings, meetings, meetings--as well as her victories. Do successful screenwriters ever stop feeling insecure? Check with Adams: "Every time I turn something in, I have this feeling of doom, like, Well, that's it, my career's over now." Max Adams has the inside story and she tells all. --Blaise Selby

Synopsis
An award-winning, veteran screenwriter takes readers through the steps of selling a screenplay and getting a movie produced, from writing a pitch and finding an agent to negotiating a lucrative movie deal, in a helpful handbook that also includes practical advice and sample letters, forms, contracts, and format pages. Original.


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this is a book written by accident. Read the first page
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars How to be a player and not get played, 5 Mar 2002
By A Customer
To be sure, there are scores of books that claim they will teach you how to write screenplays, how to write better screenplays, how to make good scripts great, and how to sell those scripts that have been made better by applying the lessons learned. Max Adams cuts through all that in "The Screenwriter's Survival Guide," in an engaging and witty style, with loads of useful information.

What makes this book unique and useful is that Max Adams has not just researched her subject, she's lived it. Max Adams, a Nicholl Fellowship winner (the Academy's big-time screenwriting competition) and a produced Hollywood screenwriter (Excess Baggage), is the protagonist of this piece, and takes the reader along for the roller-coaster ride of getting a spec script read, repped by an agent, sold, and after surviving the development and rewriting gauntlets, produced. In many ways this book is as much about the script's survival as it is the scriptwriter's.

All the stock characters play a part in "The Screenwriter's Survival Guide." If you've been around the block a couple of times, you've met some of them yourself, and if you're new to the scene ... hang on, you will. The bozos, the bad agents, the users -- they're all here -- and Max Adams tells you how they're all lurking in Hollywood, trying to keep you out, or trying to take advantage of you once you're in.

Adams covers everything from the spec pitch (getting them to read the script you've already written), to the concept pitch (getting someone to pay you to write the script that's still in you're head), writer's speak vs. mogul's speak, taxes, getting around in Los Angeles, agents vs. managers vs. entertainment lawyers, the agent horror stories (all writers have 'em) and so much more. Max Adams pulls no punches and even takes aim (boldly) at the Writer's Guild! But the mantra throughout is "get read." That's the most important hurdle you have to overcome trying to break into and remain in this business. First and foremost you must get read. If you don't get read, you're not going to sell, and if you don't sell ... you aint in.

Above all, this book is as hilarious as it is useful. The "dating metaphor" had me laughing out loud. The section on "parentheticals and other lies" had me nodding with delight. And I breathed a sigh of relief reading Adams's chapter on "the screenwriters' uniform." I was properly dressed for the occasion, in a well-worn pair of Levis 505s (writers should have many, in varying stages of wear), a "Fight Club" t-shirt, a newish pair of sneakers, and a sports jacket draped over the back of my chair. Screenwriters don't wear Armani. If I had to pick the single most important piece of actual "writing" advice in this book, it would be "[Screenwriters] write verb driven action sentences, free of clutter, that move story." That's it. Boy, if you can get a handle on that, you're halfway home. So while Max Adams doesn't get bogged down in telling you how to write a movie script, she provides a great example, as the book is written in the same staccato style as one of her screenplays.

Being someone who's written about screenwriting in Hollywood (Writing with Hitchcock), I recommend Max Adams' book highly. You'll love it.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A brilliant guide for the novice Screenwriter, 8 Feb 2002
Max Adams has managed the impossible, a well writen and amusing guide to entering Hollywood without screw-ups! Although this book contains little for the aspirong writer to grasp in terms of story or character guide Adams recommends many other wiriters for varying disciplines within Film. She explains everything from dress code to meeting tactics to how to gain an agent and how to get a producers attention. Without a doubt this has been one of the most useful books I've ever come accros for the genre. I whole heartedly recommend it.
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