Originally posted by Agentjon
Hello boys (and girls? do any still come around), I'm currently writing a movie (script, screenplay), and I have a few general questions that I would like to get some input so I can correctly write an accurate movie!
It's about addiction and revenge, don't wanna get too detailed about it cause you never know who could steal my idea!
Okay so question time,
(kinda hard wording this)
How much money (cash) would be a lot for you to get within 24 hours? That it would be a major problem and it would be on your mind a lot.
5k? 10k? 15k? 20k?
I asked my mom (yes my mom) she said 20k. What do you guys think? (The guy needing the movie is a police detective and his wife's job in the movie is unknown, she's actually a bank teller :p, but anyways, he's kinda in the upper middle class kinda I guess but not too extreme.
Next question,
How much do amphetamine pills cost (on the street)? Help me out drugies! Like for a bottle, I can figure out the math for large amounts later.
You can probably add the two up and say the detective needs money to pay off his dealer?
YES!
Now that you know that, what's a good amount for the two?
THANKS IN ADVANCE!!!
I say your movie should have a sad ending, just to go against the norms. If you want everything accurate, and it's about addiction, then it'd make sense that no positive resolve comes from the whole encounter. (Think like Italian neo-realism.) The detective ends up going to prison in the end, and doesn't escape the legal system, and everybody sees him as a crooked cop. Yadayadayada. That sort of thing, y'know. Happy endings are the norm and so overdone. A sad ending brings emotions about in the audience -- think: American Sniper, Fast & Furious 7, and Marley & Me. The utter sadness of the endings takes precedence over the positive elements. American Sniper, you're thinking, "Oh good, he finally came home and can settle down with his wife and kids...OH FUCK, HE GOT KILLED!!?? *tears*", Fast & Furious, "I mean everybody's so excited in the end, and they're all family, and that just makes Paul's death even more upsetting and replaces the positivity of the ending. *tears*" Marley & Me, "Marley died! *manly tears*" But it's whatever. Since it's your first movie, (I assume...
Spielberg, is that you?) why not submit it to film festivals (Tribeca, etc.) to get your foot in the door? And I hope you have avid knowledge of Adobe produces, as they are the standard in the film editing. (Sony Vegas is nice, as well :p)