Sterling Terrell

smart ideas from books (mostly)

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On Slowly Making Movies (And Blog Posts)

On Slowly Making Movies (And Blog Posts)

Crazy how the movie business works like this.

Someone has an idea – or a book.

An option is purchased and a script is written.

But then interest wains, or financing falls through. The project is put on a shelf and only a glimmer of it remains.

Until one day. Someone dusts it off, finishes it, and ships it!

Honestly, this is not unlike some of my drafts I have here in WordPress.

All posts start as a simple idea. But some never take off in my mind for whatever reason.

My oldest unpublished draft today is from four years ago!

Slowly Making Movies

I mean, I think this was going to be a listicle of books I think 18-year-olds should read.

Maybe I a collection of interviews?

But there it sits, waiting for its day in the light.

Tom Hanks did the same with my novel Boone’s Lick, before leaving it sit on the runway, more or less. Redford may have done the same thing with the Cantrell story. We chatted about it at a party in Austin—a big star keeping in distant touch with a project that might someday go. Clint Eastwood bought Unforgiven and put it in a drawer for seventeen years; then he took it out of the drawer, did it, and did it well. Very few stars are directors who can afford this kind of wait, but when they can a lovely picture often results.

-Larry McMurtry, Hollywood (Amazon)

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Filed Under: PotpourriTagged With: #Blogging, #Hollywood

The Sadness Of Movie Sets

The Sadness Of Movie Sets

Hmmm.

Is there a sadness to movie sets?

This passage stood out because I read something once about the sadness of the carnival – all of the time – but particularly in the daytime.

I think it’s something about the fake and temporary nature of it all.

Come to think of it, I find that the temporary nature of this life brings a certain sadness with it too.

Thank goodness for hope.

Hope, and this awesome family…

There’s an innate sadness on movie sets that I never fail to register. It could be, I suppose, that the sadness is in me and is merely intensified by the temporariness of a movie set, the muddle, the flimsy-seeming nature of everything that’s happening. People from many places, from homes that are stable and happy, enter a kind of purgatory, in which home rules don’t apply, and where, for maybe sixty days, they joust with shadows, only a few of which you will be responsible for. The set life is composed of loneliness and muddle, relieved only now and then by flashes of brilliant work by an actor, a cameraman, a member of the crew.

-Larry McMurtry, Hollywood (Amazon)

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Filed Under: PotpourriTagged With: #Hollywood, #Hope

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