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Imagem do perfil de wcmartell

wcmartell

Entrou em out. de 2004
William C. Martell has written nineteen produced films, including three HBO World Premieres (*Steel Sharks*, *Crash Dive!* and *Grid Runners*) two for Showtime (*Black Thunder* and *Droid Gunner*), five Cinemax Premieres (*Treacherous*, *Night Hunter* and *The Base*), plus a couple of USA Network thrillers (*Hard Evidence* and *Blind Trust*). He has sold scripts to Paramount, Warner Bros. 20th Century Fox, and MGM.

On February 20th, 2007 he had *two* new films released on DVD - one from Sony and one from Lions Gate - both landed in the Top Ten DVD Rentals in the USA.

He was on the jury for the London’s Raindance International Film Festival in 2001 along with director Mike Figgis and actress Saffron Burrows and in 2004 with actor Lennie James and returned to “jury duty” in 2006.

Recently he has taught screenwriting at the Aarhus Independent Film Festival (Denmark) and in Hong Kong (for the Hong Kong Film Festival) and at UBC in Vancouver.

He's the West Coast editor of Scr(i)pt Magazine and has written the "Independents" column for over a decade, a contributor to Writer's Digest Magazine, wrote the Screenwriting 101 column for the Independent Film Channel Magazine, his work was discussed on "Siskel & Ebert's If We Picked The Winners" Oscar show in 1997, and was featured in Variety's special Writer's Issue.

His book, THE SECRETS OF ACTION SCREENWRITING has been called "The best book on the practical nuts-and-bolts mechanics of writing a screenplay I've ever read." - Ted Elliott, co-writer "The Mask Of Zorro", "Shrek", "Pirates Of The Caribbean" (and sequels).

He is currently working on screenplays for studios.

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0551598/
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Soft Target

Soft Target

3,6
  • 20 de dez. de 2006
  • Read The Screenplay

    Here's the screenplay as a PDF file - read and compare the the finished film.

    http://www.scriptsecrets.net/screenplays/target.pdf

    The script was once under option by a studio-based producer who couldn't get their name actor to commit. After bouncing around town, they made this film from it.

    BACKSTORY ON THE STORY:

    SOFT TARGET is about a top secret hit-man who can get past police protection to assassinate witnesses against the mob. One person has seen the hit-man's face and lived - a woman. The reason why this hit-man can bypass police? He's a detective. So the police department grabs their two most trustworthy detectives to find the woman and take her *somewhere* (don't tell us where) and when the beeper goes off, take her to the grand jury to identify the hit-man. They pick a random motel and WHAM! they are attacked. So the big question becomes - who can you trust? And that's where my theme came from. Every character has a *story purpose* (like the chief of detectives or a minor assassin disguised as a hotel maid) but they also have a *theme purpose*, too - and that provides character and subtext.

    So here's how I came up with my characters... What traits make you *not* trust someone?

    Can you trust someone who never shows their emotions? Can you trust someone who turns everything into a joke? Can you trust someone who is more intelligent than you are? Can you trust someone who is really moody? Can you trust someone who is too slick? Can you trust someone who always agrees with you? Can you trust someone who has serious substance abuse problems? Can you trust someone who is...

    Each of these theme traits are great doorways into character. And they are ways to show the differences in character, ways that will pop up again and again in the script (because the story keeps putting characters in situations where they must trust each other to survive... and situations where they can't trust each other).

    Once I had the theme traits, I thought about what kind of person has these traits and how they came to have them. I created a backstory for the characters and that backstory had other character elements - say, some guy who was in the military where he learned how to go along to get along or some guy who was in an abusive home and learned to hide his emotions or some guy who... well, you get the idea. I came up with backstories that fit the theme traits and gave me other traits that define the character.

    Then I looked at how each character talked - everyone has a different vocabulary. Different pet phrases. Hey, some of these pet phrases may have something to do with theme! I was using theme to explore character *and* explore story *and* take a look at society (in a world where it's hard to find someone to trust, post 9/11).

    Next I looked at actions and reactions - everyone has a different method for solving problems or dealing with problems. Again, these are thematic, and also *show* character through actions.

    Then I looked at their world view - everyone sees the world through their past experiences.

    Then at the way they process information - everyone has a different type of "mental filing cabinet".

    I know my characters, they start talking to me in their own voices and I could see the world as they see it (rather than as I see it), and they all become individuals - their own persons.

    Now I had three dimensional characters who are helping to explore the theme - we're going to look at trust in our modern times and why we need to trust others instead of lock the doors to our lives and trust no one. Because the story for SOFT TARGET places the characters in a world where they really can't trust others... and they maybe can't even trust themselves (what if they *accidentally* gave information to a friend who ends up being the bad detective?) we can look at how hard it is to trust someone these days but how important it is to trust people... because we can't go it alone. We can't just isolate ourselves from the world and still have a life. If we're going to survive as a society we have to work together... and that means we have to trust people. Sometimes we have to trust strangers... and that's the point of the story.

    Then, they made some changes. Read the original script and tell me what you think. Did they improve it... or not?

    • Bill
    Criaturas que o Tempo Esqueceu

    Criaturas que o Tempo Esqueceu

    5,4
  • 9 de jan. de 2006
  • Great story - Bad FX

    I saw this film on a drive in double bill with THE LAND THAT TIME FORGOT - and had read the books when I was 11 years old (Ace Paperbacks). LAND has hand puppet dinosaurs that don't move and look silly, PEOPLE has men in rubber suits as dinosaurs that look silly. Both films change the Burroughs stories (probably for budget reasons), but PEOPLE does something interesting - it combines the 2nd and 3rd book in Burroughs' series, using Act 1 of PEOPLE and Act 2&3 of OUT OF TIME'S ABYSS. The Weiros from ABYSS have been changed into Nagaas - a volcano cult dressed in Japanese Armor. (The Weiros were humanoids evolved from Pterodactyls - hard to do on a $1.98 budget.) This way they could take the old prisoner from ABYSS and turn him into Doug McClure's character.

    PEOPLE is much better than LAND for a couple of reasons. LAND not only had crappy FX, it looked like it was shot on an indoor stage! So even when there isn't some bad process shot of a hand puppet T-Rex growling, the movie looks fake. PEOPLE was shot on location in Spain, and has some nice big panoramic shots - one amazing shot of the team crossing the crest of a mountain looks like something out of LAWRENCE OF ARABIA. The other reason why PEOPLE is better - cavegirls! If you read the books (with Frazetta covers) there were always half-naked cavegirls. As an 11 year-old boy, reading these was like discovering your Uncle's Playboy collection. Half naked girls! LAND has no cavegirls at all, PEOPLE has the Ajor character from the novel in a laced leather outfit that fits the drive in AIP scenario to a T.

    I love the books, and would love to do a modern adaptation (with today's FX).

    • Bill

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