I did not know that.These days the majority of younger actors play D&D, it's good practise.
Cannot name any though, as the only other one I know is Vin Diesel who is not young.
I did not know that.These days the majority of younger actors play D&D, it's good practise.
The problem is that paying a lot of money for a writer doesn't reliably get you a good writer. It gets you a writer who has previously made quite a lot of money, and/or a script which there's a bidding war over, which is something entirely different. Especially as most writers who have made a lot of money, did not get paid for writing, they created a show and were either showrunner, producer, or executive producer on it.The could have Daniel Day Lewis star opposite the necromantically reanimated Laurence Olivier and Katharine Hepburn, but it'll do them not a bit of good unless they've bothered spending a bit of that money on a half-decent script this time round.
The problem is that paying a lot of money for a writer doesn't reliably get you a good writer. It gets you a writer who has previously made quite a lot of money, and/or a script which there's a bidding war over, which is something entirely different. Especially as most writers who have made a lot of money, did not get paid for writing, they created a show and were either showrunner, producer, or executive producer on it.
Finding the good writers is the problem, not paying them. As @Vaalingrade says, they're cheap. They're pretty much petty cash compared to how much the stars, SFX, location costs, etc. will cost you. Hell, a solid non-star character actor may well set you back more than the script.
Literally the most expensive scripts ever sold were in $4m range and most of those lead to movies which are mediocre or bad both critically AND at the box office.
I mean, you remember the incredibly terrible Netflix movie Bright? The one which was a weirdly racist whilst trying to be anti-racist boring version of Shadowrun? Terrible movie, right? Netflix paid $3m for that. It's in the top 10 most expensive scripts ever. Money doesn't buy good scripts. Hell, in the top 10 most expensive scripts, literally the only big hit is Basic Instinct.
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The World’s Most Expensive Screenplays
First things first, the majority of scripts don’t sell, and if they do, it’s usually not for the kinds of prices you’ll see on this list! That’s just the honest truth. I’m not saying you’ll never sell a script, or you won’t sell it for a great price, because you may. I just want to emphasize...www.socreate.it
The most expensive ever was Deja Vu from 2006, at $5m. You probably don't even remember the movie, because it was profoundly mediocre and forgettable, and not hugely successful.
I'm aware - I was responding to the point on spending on the script. I also haven't watched Game Night, though I see it's fairly well-regarded critically. It's kind of savaged on IMDb (6.9) which given IMDb's raters (who seem to trend very old and rather humourless) is probably a good thing.Given the directors of the D&D 2023 movie wrote the final draft of the script themselves, I'm not sure how relevant this is. I really got to get around to watching Game Night.
I'm aware - I was responding to the point on spending on the script. I also haven't watched Game Night, though I see it's fairly well-regarded critically. It's kind of savaged on IMDb (6.9) which given IMDb's raters (who seem to trend very old and rather humourless) is probably a good thing.
I thought it was pretty funny. Jesse Plemmons is outstanding. A few jokes get beat to death, but a few others never get old.The trailer looked funny.
uh, yea. No. How many TV shows tell a decent story in 22 minutes? And others in 44 minutes? Zombieland did just fine at 88 minutes. Good Films, 90 Minutes or LessIt is very hard to tell a good story with only 90 minutes, and this as part of a franchise where they have to have a coherence with the continuity. And you can't ask a deep story for a aspirant blockbuster.