Note: This post has a Spanish version below.
Nota: Este artículo tiene una versión en español abajo.
Yes, I know, it's just a tweet, it's only 119 characters. Yes, this story may end up with hundreds of authors... but I'm one of them! Yesterday I read the news about Tim Burton (Big Fish, Batman, Corpse Bride, etc.) inviting the Twitter world to co-write a story through tweets. And there I am; Part 21 was my idea:
“...began to bubble. The air got dense and hot. Stainboy closed his eyes and held on to the chandelier as hard as he could."
Tim Burton is one of the filmmaker that I admire the most. I can't tell you how happy I am for collaborating in this project. Now it's your time. Go to BurtonStory, and share your ideas. I have no doubt this literary experiment will turn into a marvelous story. Like any of Burton's.
Sí, ya lo sé, es sólo un tweet, son sólo 119 caracteres. Sí, puede que esta historia termine teniendo cientos de autores... ¡pero yo soy uno de ellos! Ayer leí una noticia sobre Tim Burton (El Gran Pez, Batman, El Cadáver de la Novia, etc.) invitando al mundo Twitter a co-escribir una historia a través de tweets. Y ahí estoy; la Parte 21 fue mi idea:
“...comenzó a burbujear. El aire se hizo denso y caliente. Stainboy cerró sus ojos y se agarró al candelabro tan fuerte como pudo.”
Tim Burton es uno de los cineastas a los que más admiro. No puedo decirles cuán feliz estoy de colaborar en este proyecto. Ahora es su turno. Vayan a BurtonStory, y compartan sus ideas. No tengo dudas que este experimento literario se convertirá en una historia maravillosa. Como cualquiera de Burton.
Artwork above:
Tim Burton's Stainboy
© Tim Burton
Yes, it's too good to be true. But it's true...
Amazon.com is today not only the biggest shopping mall in the world, but also a case-study of the most accurate e-commerce model—with the best customer service. They revolutionized the world of retail since their beginnings, and revolutionized the world of e-books a couple of years ago with Kindle. But this wasn't enough, because they realized that they could make money and help artists, so they defied publishing and record companies offering much better deals through their self-publishing venture CreateSpace. And on November 16, they took a new step, this time for screenwriters and filmmakers.
Amazon Studios will award filmmakers and screenwriters $2.7 million with the purpose of developing movies under a first-look deal with Warner Bros. This new deal has three amazing features:
1) They will give $20,000 monthly awards to the best scripts submitted, and $100,000 for movies. That's more than most international film funds offer.
2) They will provide feedback! It's not clear yet how this will be instrumented, but it's usually a service that many screenwriting contests or script doctors provide for a fee.
3) They are opening the doors to the film industry for unknown artists—you know how difficult is to step foot if you're unknown, even to work as a production assistant.
My main question is, how commercial your script should be to be considered. And that's not a minor point, especially if you believe in independent cinema. But let's leave that for later. Now get writing, go out and shoot your film, and forget, at least for a couple of months, about the tons of film festivals and contests that promise fame, awards and feedback... for $$$, of course.
Following, the original press release:
Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) today launched Amazon Studios (http://studios.amazon.com), a new online business that invites filmmakers and screenwriters around the world to submit full-length movies and scripts to make money, get discovered and get their movie made. Through the monthly and annual Amazon Studios Awards, Amazon Studios will offer a total of $2.7 million to the top submissions received by Dec. 31, 2011, and will seek to develop the top Amazon Studio projects as commercial feature films under its first-look deal with Warner Bros. Pictures.
Writers are invited to add scripts to Amazon Studios. Filmmakers are invited to add full-length test movies to Amazon Studios. Test movies may be made from your own original script or from any script submitted to Amazon Studios. Test movies must be full length (more than 70 minutes), but they don't have to be "full budget." While test movies must include imaginative stories with great acting and sound they don't need to have theatrical-quality production values. Film fans can review Amazon Studios scripts and test movies, or even upload alternate, revised versions. Full-length test movies will introduce public test screenings to the earliest, formative stages of the movie development process; the Amazon Studios test movie process is intended to guide a film's development and assess its potential. Amazon Studios has produced five test movie samples, in different styles and genres, which can be found on its Getting Started page (http://studios.amazon.com/getting-started).
"We are excited to introduce writers, filmmakers and movie lovers to Amazon Studios," said Roy Price, Director of Digital Product Development. "Full-length test movies will show stories up on their feet and attract helpful feedback at an early stage. We hope that Amazon Studios will help filmmakers experiment and collaborate and we look forward to developing hit movies."
It is the goal of Amazon Studios to produce new, full-budget theatrical films based on the best projects and it will give Warner Bros. Pictures first access to the projects Amazon Studios wishes to produce in cooperation with an outside studio. Under the Amazon Studios development agreement, if a filmmaker or screenwriter creates a project with an original script and it is released by Amazon Studios as a theatrical feature film, the submitter will receive a rights payment of $200,000; if the movie makes over $60 million at the U.S. box office, the original filmmaker or screenwriter will receive a $400,000 bonus. If Warner Bros. Pictures is not inclined to develop a particular project, Amazon Studios can then produce the project in cooperation with another studio.
Winning screenplays and full-length test movies will be selected on the basis of commercial viability, which will include consideration of premise, story, character, dialogue, emotion and other elements of great movies. The first Amazon Studios industry panelists will include: screenwriter and chair, Writing Division of the USC School of Cinematic Arts, Jack Epps, Jr. ("Top Gun," "Dick Tracy"), producer Mark Gill (former president of Miramax and Warner Independent Pictures), screenwriter Mike Werb ("Lara Croft: Tomb Raider," "Curious George," "Face/Off," "The Mask") and producer and chair, Production Division of the USC School of Cinematic Arts, Michael Taylor ("Bottle Rocket," "The Pursuit of D.B. Cooper").
"Amazon Studios is a great idea. Getting feedback is essential for creative artists to improve their work," said Jack Epps, writing chair for USC School of Cinematic Arts. "By letting anyone submit a movie or screenplay to be considered for a major motion picture, Amazon Studios is really opening the doors to Hollywood."
In the 2011 Annual Awards, Amazon Studios will award $100,000 to the best script and $1 million to the best movie submitted by December 31, 2011. To be eligible for the first monthly awards, test movies and scripts must be uploaded by January 31, 2011. Winners for the first monthly awards will be announced near the end of February 2011-- $100,000 for the best full-length test movie and $20,000 each for the two best scripts. The rights payments associated with releasing a full-budget commercial film (the $200,000 referred to above) are separate from and come on top of any money awarded to top submissions through the monthly and annual Amazon Studios Awards.
To learn more about Amazon Studios, check out our video at http://studios.amazon.com.