After reading "A Boy's Life", I instantly began to visualize it on the big screen as if I never saw it before. The screenplay is well written, easy to read, as well as being able to connect with the characters. Seeing the movie in my head, I knew that the budget would be one of the harder things to pitch. However, I wouldn't avoid this until the last minute of the pitch. I would make it aware that money is going to be spent; and as the saying goes, "if you give, you shall recieve", somewhere along those lines... I would also mention something along the lines of "Do you remember when you were young?" What sort of child has never wanted a friend from space? Every child wishes that they were the ones that were chosen, that they were the special one. That they could be the star of their story. After all, every parent reads a stories to their children about being chosen. So now we have a new story, one that most children today can relate too. This being one of the main reason this would be a marketable movie. Children would obvisously want to go. We have aliens, flying bicycles, what more could a kid want. But, what about adults? Again, I might mention what it was like being young, imagining being special. Adults could be kids again.
?'s
1. Do you think adults TOOK their kids to the movie, or WENT with their kids to the movie??
2. How would you inform them about the the large budget?
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
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1 comment:
I think the parents dragged their kids to the film and the kid's dragged their parents to the film, but in the end they both loved it.
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