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10 Rules of Scriptwriting

Joe Eszterhas, once the highest paid screenwriter in Hollywood, transitioned from journalism to screenwriting and created iconic films like Basic Instinct and Showgirls. He shares blunt advice for aspiring screenwriters, emphasizing the importance of honesty, originality, and resilience in the face of industry challenges. His rules encourage writers to trust their instincts, avoid unnecessary compromises, and keep writing despite setbacks.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
65 views2 pages

10 Rules of Scriptwriting

Joe Eszterhas, once the highest paid screenwriter in Hollywood, transitioned from journalism to screenwriting and created iconic films like Basic Instinct and Showgirls. He shares blunt advice for aspiring screenwriters, emphasizing the importance of honesty, originality, and resilience in the face of industry challenges. His rules encourage writers to trust their instincts, avoid unnecessary compromises, and keep writing despite setbacks.

Uploaded by

thrune
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Legend has it (okay, well, actually it was theLos Angeles

Times) that Joe Eszterhas once sold a script written on


the back of a cocktail napkin for 4.7 million dollars.
And it makes sense when one learns that once upon a time good ol’ Joe was the highest paid screenwriter in
Hollywood. Eszterhas made the not-unheard-of transition from reporting to screenwriting after serving as the
senior editor forRolling Stone from 1971-1975. Three short years later, Eszterhas’ first script,F.I.S.T, starring
Sylvester Stallone, was made into a feature film. A series of iconic Razzie-award-winning films followed over his
three-decade career: Flashdance, Basic Instinct, Nowhere to Run, Showgirls, and Jade. On top of all this,
Eszterhas has written six books, including his most recent enticing read, Heaven and Mel, an account of his time
working with Mel Gibson on a script about the Maccabees.

Eszterhas’ golden rules may just be our most colorful yet—aside from troublemaker Seth MacFarlane’s. His foul-
mouthed suggestions for screenwriters young and old are blunt yet informative, making for an amusing and
illuminating read.

1. Don’t see too many new movies. Most movies in theaters today are awful. They will depress you. You will think
to yourself: How can they have made this abominable script instead of buying and making mine? Spare yourself
the anguish. Read a good book instead.

2. Don’t mince words. If the idea a studio executive gives you is a shitty one, don’t say “Well, that’s interesting,
but…” Say “That’s a really shitty idea.” The people you’re dealing with aren’t stupid—they’re just vain. Deep in
their hearts they know it’s a shitty idea.

3. Don’t let ’em convince you to change what you’ve written. A director isn’t a writer. Neither is a producer or a
studio exec. You write for a living. You’re the pro. They’re amateurs. Dilettantes at best. Treat them that way.
Make them feel that’s what they are.

4. Don’t pitch stories, write spec scripts. Why try to convince a roomful of unread egomaniacs that you can write
a good script about something. Just sit down and write the damn thing. It’s much more honest to do it well than to
promise to do it well.

5. Write it from your heart. Life is short; shorter than you think. Don’t do hack work. If a studio wants to give you
an assignment to write something, do it only if it rings spiritual, psychic or sexual bells inside you.
6. Always lie about your first draft. I told people I’d been working on the script of Basic Instinct for years when I
sold it for a record price. When the movie became the biggest hit of 1992, I told the truth: It had taken me 13 days
to write it.

7. Remember family secrets. If you’re stuck for something to write about, think of all those things your family just
doesn’t talk about. Somewhere in there lurks at least one good script.

8. In the company of the director, don’t bend over. No matter how charming he is, the director is not your friend
and collaborator. He is your enemy. He wants to impose his creative vision on yours. He wants to take what
you’ve written and make it his and then take credit for it.

9. Blacken your heart a little bit. My old and beloved agent, Guy McElwaine, told me “There is no heart as black
as the black heart of an agent.” Even though he’d been my agent for a long time—and even though I truly loved
him—the day came when I fired him.

10. Don’t let the bastards get you down. If you can’t sell your script, or if you sell the script and they bring in
another writer to butcher it, or if the director claims in interviews that he really wrote your script, or if the actors
claim that they improvised all of your best lines, or if you’re left out of the press junket, simply sit down and write
another script. And if the same thing happens to you on that one, write another and another and another and
another, until you get one up there that’s your vision translated by the director to the big screen.

Don’t forget to visit us next week for more movie knowledge! Previous Wisdom Wednesdays have shared the
expertise of Seth MacFarlane, Marc Forster, Billy Bob Thornton, Errol Morris, Brian De Palma, Julie
Taymor, Kevin Smith, Chris Weitz, Danny Boyle, Steve Buscemi, Jim Jarmusch, Zack Snyder, Gus Van
Sant, Neil Jordan, John Waters, Eli Roth, Neal McDonough, Randall Emmett and Wim Wenders.

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