How I accidentally changed the way movies get made Franklin Leonard

This weekend,

tens of millions of people
in the United States

and tens of millions more
around the world,

in Columbus, Georgia, in Cardiff, Wales,

in Chongqing, China, in Chennai, India

will leave their homes,

they’ll get in their cars
or they’ll take public transportation

or they will carry themselves by foot,

and they’ll step into a room

and sit down next to someone
they don’t know

or maybe someone they do,

and the lights will go down
and they’ll watch a movie.

They’ll watch movies
about aliens or robots,

or robot aliens or regular people.

But they will all be movies
about what it means to be human.

Millions will feel awe or fear,

millions will laugh and millions will cry.

And then the lights will come back on,

and they’ll reemerge into the world
they knew several hours prior.

And millions of people
will look at the world

a little bit differently
than they did when they went in.

Like going to temple
or a mosque or a church,

or any other religious institution,

movie-going is, in many ways,
a sacred ritual.

Repeated week after week after week.

I’ll be there this weekend,

just like I was on most weekends
between the years of 1996 and 1990,

at the multiplex, near the shopping mall

about five miles from my childhood home
in Columbus, Georgia.

The funny thing is
that somewhere between then and now,

I accidentally changed
part of the conversation

about which of those movies get made.

So, the story actually begins in 2005,
in an office high above Sunset Boulevard,

where I was a junior executive

at Leonardo DiCaprio’s
production company Appian Way.

And for those of you who aren’t familiar
with how the film industry works,

it basically means that I was
one of a few people behind the person

who produces the movie for the people
behind and in front of the camera,

whose names you will better
recognize than mine.

Essentially, you’re an assistant movie
producer who does the unglamorous work

that goes into the creative aspect
of producing a movie.

You make lists of writers
and directors and actors

who might be right for movies
that you want to will into existence;

you meet with many of them
and their representatives,

hoping to curry favor
for some future date.

And you read, a lot.

You read novels that might become movies,

you read comic books
that might become movies,

you read articles
that might become movies,

you read scripts that might become movies.

And you read scripts from writers
that might write the adaptations

of the novels, of the comic books,
of the articles,

and might rewrite the scripts
that you’re already working on.

All this in the hope of finding
the next big thing

or the next big writer
who can deliver something

that can make you and your company
the next big thing.

So in 2005, I was a development executive
at Leonardo’s production company.

I got a phone call
from the representative of a screenwriter

that began pretty much the way
all of those conversations did:

“I’ve got Leo’s next movie.”

Now in this movie,
that his client had written,

Leo would play an oil industry lobbyist

whose girlfriend, a local meteorologist,
threatens to leave him

because his work contributes
to global warming.

And this is a situation
that’s been brought to a head

by the fact that there’s a hurricane
forming in the Atlantic

that’s threatening to do Maria-like damage
from Maine to Myrtle Beach.

Leo, very sad about
this impending break up,

does a little more research
about the hurricane

and discovers that in its path
across the Atlantic,

it will pass over a long-dormant,
though now active volcano

that will spew toxic ash into its eye

that will presumably be whipped
into some sort of chemical weapon

that will destroy the world.

(Laughter)

It was at that point that I asked him,

“So are you basically pitching me
‘Leo versus the toxic superstorm

that will destroy humanity?'”

And he responded by saying,

“Well, when you say it like that,
it sounds ridiculous.”

And I’m embarrassed to admit
that I had the guy send me the script,

and I read 30 pages before I was sure
that it was as bad as I thought it was.

Now, “Superstorm”
is certainly an extreme example,

but it’s also not an unusual one.

And unfortunately, most scripts
aren’t as easy to dismiss as that one.

For example, a comedy
about a high school senior,

who, when faced
with an unplanned pregnancy,

makes an unusual decision
regarding her unborn child.

That’s obviously “Juno.”

Two hundred and thirty million
at the worldwide box office,

four Oscar nominations, one win.

How about a Mumbai teen
who grew up in the slums

wants to become a contestant
on the Indian version

of “Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?”?

That’s an easy one –
“Slumdog Millionaire.”

Three hundred seventy-seven
million worldwide,

10 Oscar nominations and eight wins.

A chimpanzee tells his story

of living with the legendary pop star
Michael Jackson.

Anyone?

(Laughter)

It’s a trick question.

But it is a script called “Bubbles,”

that is going to be directed
by Taika Waititi,

the director of “Thor: Ragnarok.”

So, a large part of your job
as a development executive

is to separate the “Superstorms”
from the “Slumdog Millionaires,”

and slightly more generally,
the writers who write “Superstorm”

from the writers who can write
“Slumdog Millionaire.”

And the easiest way to do this, obviously,
is to read all of the scripts,

but that’s, frankly, impossible.

A good rule of thumb
is that the Writers Guild of America

registers about 50,000 new pieces
of material every year,

and most of them are screenplays.

Of those, a reasonable estimate
is about 5,000 of them

make it through various filters,
agencies, management companies,

screenplay compositions and the like,

and are read by someone
at the production company

or major studio level.

And they’re trying to decide
whether they can become

one of the 300-and-dropping movies
that are released by the major studios

or their sub-brands each year.

I’ve described it before

as being a little bit like walking
into a members-only bookstore

where the entire inventory
is just organized haphazardly,

and every book has the same,
nondescript cover.

Your job is to enter that bookstore

and not come back until you’ve found
the best and most profitable books there.

It’s anarchic and gleefully opaque.

And everyone has their method
to address these problems.

You know, most rely on the major agencies

and they just assume
that if there’s great talent in the world,

they’ve already found
their way to the agencies,

regardless of the structural barriers
that actually exist

to get into the agencies
in the first place.

Others also constantly compare
notes among themselves

about what they’ve read and what’s good,

and they just hope that their cohort group
is the best, most wired

and has the best taste in town.

And others try to read everything,
but that’s, again, impossible.

If you’re reading
500 screenplays in a year,

you are reading a lot.

And it’s still only a small percentage
of what’s out there.

Fundamentally, it’s triage.

And when you’re in triage,
you tend to default to conventional wisdom

about what works and what doesn’t.

That a comedy about a young woman
dealing with reproductive reality

can’t sell.

That the story of an Indian teenager
isn’t viable in the domestic marketplace

or anywhere else in the world
outside of India.

That the only source of viable movies
is a very narrow groups of writers

who have already found their way
to living and working in Hollywood,

who already have the best
representation in the business,

and are writing a very narrow
band of stories.

And I’m somewhat embarrassed to admit,
that that’s where I found myself in 2005.

Sitting in that office
above Sunset Boulevard,

staring down that metaphorical
anonymized bookstore,

and having read nothing
but bad scripts for months.

And I took this to mean one of two things:

either A: I was not very good at my job,

which was, ostensibly,
finding good scripts,

or B: reading bad scripts was the job.

In which case, my mother’s
weekly phone calls,

asking me if my law school
entrance exam scores were still valid

was something I should probably
pay more attention to.

What I also knew

was that I was about to go
on vacation for two weeks,

and as bad as reading bad scripts is
when it is your job,

it’s even more painful on vacation.

So I had to do something.

So late one night
at my office, I made a list

of everyone that I had had breakfast,
lunch, dinner or drinks with

that had jobs similar to mine,
and I sent them an anonymous email.

And I made a very simple request.

Send me a list of up to 10
of your favorite screenplays

that meet three criteria.

One: you love the screenplay,

two: the filmed version of that screenplay
will not be in theaters

by the end of that calendar year,

and three: you found out
about the screenplay this year.

This was not an appeal for the scripts
that would be the next great blockbuster,

not an appeal for the scripts
that will win the Academy Award,

they didn’t need to be scripts
that their bosses loved

or that their studio wanted to make.

It was very simply an opportunity
for people to speak their minds

about what they loved,

which, in this world,
is increasingly rare.

Now, almost all of the 75 people
I emailed anonymously responded.

And then two dozen other people
actually emailed to participate

to this anonymous email address,

but I confirmed that they did in fact
have the jobs they claimed to have.

And I then compiled the votes
into a spreadsheet,

ran a pivot table,
output it to PowerPoint,

and the night before I left for vacation,

I slapped a quasi subversive name on it

and emailed it back
from that anonymous email address

to everyone who voted.

The Black List.

A tribute to those who lost their careers
during the anti-communist hysteria

of the 1940s and 50s,

and a conscious inversion of the notion

that black somehow
had a negative connotation.

After arriving in Mexico,
I pulled out a chair by the pool,

started reading these scripts
and found, to my shock and joy,

that most of them
were actually quite good.

Mission accomplished.

What I didn’t and couldn’t have expected

was what happened next.

About a week into my time on vacation,

I stopped by the hotel’s
business center to check my email.

This was a pre-iPhone world, after all.

And found that this list
that I had created anonymously

had been forwarded back to me
several dozen times,

at my personal email address.

Everyone was sharing this list of scripts
that everyone had said that they loved,

reading them and then
loving them themselves.

And my first reaction,
that I can’t actually say here,

but will describe it as fear,

the idea of surveying people
about their scripts

was certainly not a novel or a genius one.

Surely, there was some unwritten
Hollywood rule of omertà

that had guided people
away from doing that before

that I was simply too naive to understand,
it being so early in my career.

I was sure I was going to get fired,

and so I decided that day
that A: I would never tell anybody

that I had done this,

and B: I would never do it again.

Then, six months later,
something even more bizarre happened.

I was in my office, on Sunset,

and got a phone call
from another writer’s agent.

The call began very similarly
to the call about “Superstorm”:

“I’ve got Leo’s next movie.”

Now, that’s not the interesting part.

The interesting part
was the way the call ended.

Because this agent
then told me, and I quote,

“Don’t tell anybody, but I have it
on really good authority

this is going to be the number one script
on next year’s Black List.”

(Laughter)

Yeah.

Suffice it to say, I was dumbfounded.

Here was an agent, using the Black List,
this thing that I had made anonymously

and decided to never make again,

to sell his client to me.

To suggest that the script had merit,

based solely on the possibility of being
included on a list of beloved screenplays.

After the call ended, I sat in my office,
sort of staring out the window,

alternating between shock
and general giddiness.

And then I realized that this thing
that I had created

had a lot more value

than just me finding good screenplays
to read over the holidays.

And so I did it again the next year –

and the “LA Times” had outed me
as the person who had created it –

and the year after that,

and the year after that –
I’ve done it every year since 2005.

And the results have been fascinating,

because, unapologetic lying aside,
this agent was exactly right.

This list was evidence, to many people,
of a script’s value,

and that a great script had greater value

that, I think, a lot of people
had previously anticipated.

Very quickly, the writers
whose scripts were on that list

started getting jobs,

those scripts started getting made,

and the scripts that got made

were often the ones
that violated the assumptions

about what worked and what didn’t.

They were scripts like “Juno”
and “Little Miss Sunshine”

and “The Queen” and “The King’s Speech”

and “Spotlight.”

And yes, “Slumdog Millionaire.”

And even an upcoming movie
about Michael Jackson’s chimpanzee.

Now, I think it’s really important
that I pause here for a second

and say that I can’t take credit
for the success of any of those movies.

I didn’t write them, I didn’t direct them,
I didn’t produce them, I didn’t gaff them,

I didn’t make food and craft service –

we all know how important that is.

The credit for those movies,
the credit for that success,

goes to the people who made the films.

What I did was change
the way people looked at them.

Accidentally, I asked
if the conventional wisdom was correct.

And certainly, there are movies
on that list that would have gotten made

without the Black List,

but there are many
that definitely would not have.

And at a minimum, we’ve catalyzed
a lot of them into production,

and I think that’s worth noting.

There have been about 1,000
screenplays on the Black List

since its inception in 2005.

About 325 have been produced.

They’ve been nominated
for 300 Academy Awards,

they’ve won 50.

Four of the last nine Best Pictures
have gone to scripts from the Black List,

and 10 of the last 20 screenplay Oscars
have gone to scripts from the Black List.

All told, they’ve made
about 25 billion dollars

in worldwide box office,

which means that hundreds
of millions of people

have seen these films
when they leave their homes,

and sit next to someone they don’t know
and the lights go down.

And that’s to say nothing
of post-theatrical environments

like DVD, streaming and,
let’s be honest, illegal downloads.

Five years ago today, October 15,

my business partner and I
doubled down on this notion

that screenwriting talent
was not where we expected to find it,

and we launched a website
that would allow anybody on earth

who had written
an English-language screenplay

to upload their script, have it evaluated,

and make it available to thousands
of film-industry professionals.

And I’m pleased to say,
in the five years since its launch,

we’ve largely proved that thesis.

Hundreds of writers from across the world
have found representation,

have had their work optioned or sold.

Seven have even seen their films made
in the last three years,

including the film “Nightingale,”

the story of a war veteran’s
psychological decline,

in which David Oyelowo’s face
is the only one on screen

for the film’s 90-minute duration.

It was nominated for a Golden Globe
and two Emmy Awards.

It’s also kind of cool
that more than a dozen writers

who were discovered on the website

have ended up
on this end-of-year annual list,

including two of the last three
number one writers.

Simply put, the conventional wisdom
about screenwriting merit –

where it was and where it could be found,

was wrong.

And this is notable,
because as I mentioned before,

in the triage of finding
movies to make and making them,

there’s a lot of relying
on conventional wisdom.

And that conventional wisdom,

maybe, just maybe,

might be wrong
to even greater consequence.

Films about black people
don’t sell overseas.

Female-driven action movies don’t work,

because women will see themselves in men,
but men won’t see themselves in women.

That no one wants to see movies
about women over 40.

That our onscreen heroes have to conform
to a very narrow idea about beauty

that we consider conventional.

What does that mean when those images
are projected 30 feet high

and the lights go down,

for a kid that looks like me
in Columbus, Georgia?

Or a Muslim girl in Cardiff, Wales?

Or a gay kid in Chennai?

What does it mean for how we see ourselves

and how we see the world
and for how the world sees us?

We live in very strange times.

And I think for the most part,
we all live in a state of constant triage.

There’s just too much information,

too much stuff to contend with.

And so as a rule, we tend
to default to conventional wisdom.

And I think it’s important
that we ask ourselves, constantly,

how much of that conventional wisdom
is all convention and no wisdom?

And at what cost?

Thank you.

(Applause)

本周末,美国

数以千万计的人,以及全球数以千万计的人

在乔治亚州哥伦布市、威尔士卡迪夫市

、中国重庆市、印度钦奈市,

将离开家园,

他们将进入 他们的汽车,
或者他们会乘坐公共交通工具,

或者他们会步行

,他们会走进一个房间

,坐在
他们不认识的人或他们认识的人旁边

,灯会熄灭
,他们 会看电影。

他们会看
关于外星人或机器人、

机器人外星人或普通人的电影。

但它们都将是
关于作为人类意味着什么的电影。

数百万人会感到敬畏或恐惧,

数百万人会笑,数百万人会哭泣。

然后灯会重新亮起

,他们会重新出现在
几个小时前他们就知道的世界。

数以百万计的
人看待这个世界

的方式会
与他们进入时有所不同。

就像去寺庙
、清真寺、教堂

或任何其他宗教机构一样,

看电影在很多方面都是
一种神圣的仪式 .

一周又一周地重复。

这个周末我会去那里,

就像我在
1996 年和 1990 年之间的大多数周末一样,

离我童年
在佐治亚州哥伦布的家大约 5 英里的购物中心附近的综合大楼。

有趣的是
,从那时到现在,

我不小心改变

关于制作哪些电影的对话的一部分。

所以,故事实际上开始于 2005 年,
在日落大道上方的一个办公室

,我是

莱昂纳多迪卡普里奥
制作公司 Appian Way 的初级主管。

对于那些不
熟悉电影业如何运作的人来说,

这基本上意味着我是

为镜头背后和镜头前的人制作电影的少数人之一,

你会知道他们的名字
比我认得好。

从本质上讲,您是一名助理电影
制片人


负责制作电影的创意方面的乏味工作。

你列出了

可能适合
你想要存在的电影的作家、导演和演员的名单;

你会见他们中的许多
人和他们的代表,

希望能在
未来的某个日子里讨好。

你读了很多。

你读的小说可能会成为电影,

你读的漫画书
可能会成为电影,

你读的文章
可能会成为电影,

你读的剧本可能会成为电影。

你从作家那里阅读剧本,
这些剧本可能会

改编小说、漫画书
、文章,

并且可能会重写
你已经在写的剧本。

所有这一切都是为了
找到下一件大事

或下一个大作家
,他们可以发表

一些能让你和你的公司
成为下一件大事的东西。

所以在 2005 年,我是
莱昂纳多制作公司的开发主管。

我接到
了一位编剧代表打来的电话

,几乎
所有这些谈话都是这样开始的:

“我有 Leo 的下一部电影。”

现在在
他的客户写的这部电影中,

里奥将扮演石油行业的说客,

他的女朋友是当地的气象学家,
威胁要离开他,

因为他的工作
导致全球变暖。

由于大西洋正在形成飓风

,威胁着从缅因州到默特尔比奇造成类似玛丽亚的破坏
,这种情况已经达到了顶点。

利奥对即将到来的分手感到非常难过,

他对飓风进行了更多

研究,并发现在其
穿越大西洋的路径中,

它将经过一座休眠已久的
活火山

,该火山将向它的眼睛喷出有毒的灰烬

, 大概会被鞭打
成某种

毁灭世界的化学武器。

(笑声

) 就在那时,我问他,

“所以你基本上是在向我推销
‘狮子座对抗

会毁灭人类的有毒超级风暴吗?’

”他回答说,

“好吧,当你这样说的时候,
它 听起来很荒谬。”

我很尴尬地
承认我让那个人把剧本寄给了我

,我读了 30 页才
确定它和我想象的一样糟糕。

现在,“超级风暴
”当然是一个极端的例子,

但它也不是一个不寻常的例子。

不幸的是,大多数脚本
并不像那个脚本那么容易被忽略。

例如,一部
关于一名高中生的喜剧

,当她
面临意外怀孕时,

她对她未出生的孩子做出了一个不同寻常的决定。

那显然是“朱诺”。

全球票房两亿三千万,

四项奥斯卡提名,一项胜利。

一个在贫民窟长大的孟买青少年

想成为
印度

版“谁想成为百万富翁?”的参赛者怎么样?

那很简单——
“贫民窟的百万富翁”。

全球 3.77 亿人,

10 项奥斯卡提名和 8 项胜利。

一只黑猩猩讲述了他

与传奇流行歌星迈克尔杰克逊一起生活的故事

任何人?

(笑声)

这是一个诡计的问题。

但这是一个名为“泡泡”的剧本

,将由

《雷神3:诸神黄昏》的导演泰卡·维蒂蒂执导。

因此,作为开发主管,你的大部分工作

是将“超级风暴”
与“贫民窟的百万富翁”分开

,更笼统地说,
将编写“超级风暴”

的作家与可以编写
“贫民窟的百万富翁”的作家区分开来。

显然,最简单的方法
是阅读所有脚本,

但坦率地说,这是不可能的。

一个好的经验法则
是,美国作家协会每年

注册大约 50,000 件新
材料,

其中大部分是剧本。

其中,合理的估计
是,其中大约有 5,000 部

作品通过各种过滤器、
代理机构、管理公司、

剧本创作等,

并被
制作公司

或主要工作室级别的人员阅读。

他们正在努力决定
他们是否可以

成为每年由主要制片厂或其子品牌发行的 300 部令人失望的电影

之一。

我之前曾将其

描述为有点像
走进一家仅限会员的书店

,那里的整个库存
都是随意组织的

,每本书都有相同的、
不起眼的封面。

你的工作是进入那家书店

,直到你在那里
找到最好和最赚钱的书才回来。

它是无政府主义的,而且是不透明的。

每个人都有
解决这些问题的方法。

你知道,大多数人都依赖主要的机构

,他们只是
假设如果世界上有优秀的人才,

他们已经找到
了进入机构的途径,

而不管首先

进入这些机构
实际上存在结构性障碍。 .

其他人也经常

互相比较他们读过的东西和好的东西

,他们只是希望他们
的同类群组是最好的,最

有联系的,并且在城里有最好的品味。

其他人试图阅读所有内容,
但这又是不可能的。

如果你一年读了
500 部剧本,那

你就读了很多。

而且它仍然只是其中的一小
部分。

从根本上说,这是分流。

当您进行分诊时,
您往往会默认采用传统智慧来

判断哪些有效,哪些无效。

一部关于处理生殖现实的年轻女性的喜剧

卖不出去。

印度少年的故事
在国内市场

或印度以外的世界任何其他地方都不可行

可行的电影的唯一来源
是一小群作家

,他们已经找到了
在好莱坞生活和工作的方式,

他们已经在业界拥有最好的
代表,

并且正在撰写非常
狭窄的故事。

我有点尴尬地承认,
这就是我在 2005 年发现自己的地方。

坐在
日落大道上方的办公室里,

盯着那家隐喻的
匿名书店,

几个月来除了糟糕的剧本什么都没读。

我认为这意味着两件事之一:

要么 A:我的工作不是很擅长

,表面上是
寻找好的剧本,

要么 B:阅读糟糕的剧本是我的工作。

在这种情况下,我母亲
每周都会打来电话,

询问我的法学院
入学考试成绩是否仍然有效

,这可能是我应该
更加关注的事情。

我还

知道,我
要放假两周了,

和读烂剧本一样糟糕的是,
当它是你的工作时,

假期更痛苦。

所以我不得不做点什么。

一天深夜,
在我的办公室里,我列出了一份

与我共进早餐、
午餐、晚餐或饮料的人的名单

,他们的工作与我相似
,我给他们发了一封匿名电子邮件。

我提出了一个非常简单的要求。

向我发送最多 10 个

符合三个标准的最喜欢的剧本列表。

一:你喜欢这个剧本,

二:那个剧本的电影版到

那个日历年年底不会上映

,三:你今年发现了
这个剧本。

这不是对
将成为下一部大片

的剧本的吸引力,对
将获得奥斯卡奖的剧本也没有吸引力,

它们不需要成为
老板喜欢

或他们的工作室想要制作的剧本。

这是一个非常简单的机会,
让人们

有机会说出他们所爱的东西,

而这在这个世界
上越来越少了。

现在,我匿名发电子邮件的 75 个人几乎都
回复了。

然后实际上还有另外两
打人通过电子邮件发送

到这个匿名电子邮件地址,

但我确认他们确实
拥有他们声称拥有的工作。

然后,我将投票汇总
到电子表格中,

运行数据透视表,将其
输出到 PowerPoint

,在我去度假的前一天晚上,

我在上面贴了一个准颠覆性的名字,

然后从那个匿名电子邮件地址通过电子邮件将其发回

给所有投票的人 .

黑名单。

向那些

在 1940 年代和 50 年代的反共歇斯底里中失去事业的人致敬,

并有意识地颠倒

了黑人在某种程度上
具有负面含义的观念。

到墨西哥后,
我在泳池边拉出一把椅子,

开始阅读这些剧本
,令我震惊和欣喜的

是,它们
中的大多数实际上都相当不错。

任务完成。

我没有也无法预料的

是接下来发生的事情。

休假大约一周后,

我在酒店的
商务中心停下来查看我的电子邮件。

毕竟,这是一个 iPhone 出现之前的世界。


发现我匿名创建的这个列表

已经被转发
了几十次,

在我的个人电子邮件地址中。

每个人都在分享
这个每个人都说他们喜欢的脚本列表,

阅读它们,然后
自己爱它们。

我的第一反应
,我实际上不能在这里说,

而是将其描述为恐惧,

调查人们
关于他们的剧本的

想法当然不是小说或天才的想法。

当然,好莱坞有一些
不成文的 omertà

规则引导人们
远离这种做法,在

此之前,我太天真了,无法理解,
因为这还处于我职业生涯的早期阶段。

我确信我会被解雇

,所以那天我决定
A:我永远不会告诉任何

人我做过这件事,

而 B:我永远不会再这样做了。

然后,六个月后,
更离奇的事情发生了。

日落时分,我在办公室

,接到了
另一位作家经纪人的电话。

电话的开头
与关于“超级风暴”的电话非常相似:

“我有 Leo 的下一部电影。”

现在,这不是有趣的部分。

有趣的部分
是通话结束的方式。

因为这个
经纪人告诉我,我引用,

“不要告诉任何人,但我
有非常好的权威,

这将成为
明年黑名单上的第一剧本。”

(笑声)

是的。

只能说,我傻眼了。

这是一个代理人,使用黑名单,
这是我匿名制作

并决定不再制作的东西

,将他的客户卖给我。

仅基于被
列入心爱的剧本列表的可能性来表明该剧本具有价值。

通话结束后,我坐在办公室里,
有点盯着窗外,

在震惊
和头晕之间交替。

然后我
意识到我创造

的这个东西

比我
在假期里找到好的剧本阅读更有价值。

所以第二年我又做了一次

——《洛杉矶时报》把我
列为创造它的人——

之后

的一年,之后的一年——
从那以后我每年都这样做

  1. 结果令人着迷,

因为,毫无歉意地躺在一边,
这位经纪人完全正确。

对许多人来说,这份清单证明
了剧本的价值,

而且我认为,一个伟大的剧本具有更大的价值

,我认为这是很多人
之前预料到的。

很快,
那些剧本在那个名单上的作家

开始找到工作,

那些剧本开始制作,

而制作的剧本

通常是
那些违反了

关于哪些有效和哪些无效的假设的剧本。

它们是诸如《朱诺》
、《阳光小小姐》

、《女王》、《国王的演讲》

和《聚光灯》之类的剧本。

是的,“贫民窟的百万富翁”。

甚至还有一部关于迈克尔杰克逊黑猩猩的即将上映的电影

现在,我
认为我在这里停顿一下

并说我不能把
这些电影的成功归功于我是非常重要的。

我没有写它们,我没有指导
它们,我没有制作它们,我没有给它们装腔作势,

我没有提供食品和工艺服务——

我们都知道这有多重要。

这些电影
的功劳,成功的功劳,

要归功于制作这些电影的人。

我所做的是
改变人们看待他们的方式。

偶然地,我
问传统智慧是否正确。

当然,
该名单上的某些电影如果没有黑名单就可以制作

但也有
很多绝对不会。

至少,我们已经催化
了其中的许多投入生产

,我认为这是值得注意的。 自 2005 年成立以来,

黑名单上的剧本约有 1,000 部,

已制作约 325 部。

他们获得
了 300 项奥斯卡金像奖提名,

获得了 50 项大奖。

过去 9 部最佳影片中有 4 部
获得了黑名单

中的剧本,而过去 20 部奥斯卡剧本中有 10 部
获得了黑名单中的剧本。

总而言之,他们在全球创造了
大约 250 亿美元

的票房,

这意味着
数以亿计的人

在离开家

,坐在他们不认识的人旁边
,灯光熄灭时看过这些电影。

更不用说

诸如 DVD、流媒体和,
老实说,非法下载之类的后戏剧环境。

五年前的今天,即 10 月 15 日,

我和我的商业伙伴
加倍

强调编剧
人才不是我们期望的地方

,我们推出了一个网站
,允许地球上任何

写过英文剧本

的人 上传他们的剧本,对其进行评估,

并将其提供给成千上万
的电影行业专业人士。

我很高兴地说,
在它推出后的五年里,

我们在很大程度上证明了这一论点。

来自世界各地的数百名作家
找到了代表,

他们的作品被选中或出售。

七人甚至看过他们
在过去三年中制作

的电影,其中包括电影《夜莺》,

这是一部讲述退伍军人
心理衰退的故事,

在这部电影的 90 分钟持续时间内,大卫·奥耶洛沃的脸
是银幕上唯一的一张

它被提名为金球奖
和两项艾美奖。 在网站上

发现的十几位作家

最终进入
了这个年终年度榜单,这也很酷,

其中包括最后三位
排名第一的作家中的两位。

简而言之,
关于剧本写作价值的传统观念——

它在哪里,在哪里可以找到,

是错误的。

这是值得注意的,
因为正如我之前提到的,

在寻找
要制作和制作的电影的分类中,

有很多
依赖传统智慧。

而这种传统智慧,

也许,只是也许,

可能是错误
的,甚至会产生更大的后果。

关于黑人的电影
不卖海外。

女性主导的动作片是行不通的,

因为女人会在男人身上看到自己,
而男人不会在女人身上看到自己。

没有人愿意看
关于 40 岁以上女性的电影

。我们的银幕英雄必须
遵守我们认为传统的非常狭隘的关于美的观念

当这些图像
被投射到 30 英尺高

并且灯光熄灭时,

对于乔治亚州哥伦布市的一个看起来像我的孩子来说,这意味着什么

还是威尔士卡迪夫的穆斯林女孩?

还是钦奈的同性恋孩子?

这对我们如何看待自己

、我们如何看待世界
以及世界如何看待我们意味着什么?

我们生活在一个非常奇怪的时代。

而且我认为在大多数情况下,
我们都生活在不断分类的状态中。

信息

太多,需要处理的东西太多。

因此,作为一项规则,我们
倾向于默认传统智慧。

而且我认为重要的
是,我们要不断地问自己,

传统智慧中有多少是传统智慧
而不是智慧?

以及付出什么代价?

谢谢你。

(掌声)