Saturday, March 19, 2022

Weekend Post

 

It’s not uncommon for writers to get fired off of film projects. You turn in a draft, the phone stops ringing, and then you learn that someone else has been hired to rewrite you. Larry Gelbart, at a WGA membership meeting debating one of our many contracts, spoke to the crowd of about a thousand and said, “At one time everyone in this room will rewrite everyone else in this room”.  He's right. 

But how many writers have been fired even before they wrote a single word? Not many. The only two I can think of are me and my partner, David Isaacs.  What a dubious distinction!

It’s 1980. Director Randal Kleiser is hot based on an unlikely hit movie he megged (I love that bullshit Hollywood term) called BLUE LAGOON. A young nubile Brooke Shields (before becoming the toast of Broadway) and pretty boy, Christopher Atkins are trapped on a tropical island together. They frolic for two hours and this audiences wanted to see.

So Kleiser gets a big development deal at Columbia. He has an idea for a coming-of-age movie set in an amusement park. David and I are hired to write it. We do. He loves it. The studio loves it. Everybody loves it. No one makes it but everyone loves it.

While we are writing the screenplay, Kleiser is busy writing and preparing the next movie he was going to direct, SUMMER LOVERS. This classic starring nubile Darryl Hannah and pretty boy, Peter Gallagher, is about a gorgeous young couple who fall in love one idyllic summer in picturesque Greece. BLUE LAGOON with Lachanodolmades.

We turn in our screenplay to much praise and get a call from Randal. He’s going off to Greece in a week to begin principal photography of SUMMER LOVERS. But he’s getting a little nervous about the script. Would we be interested in doing a fast rewrite? Nothing major. No story or structure changes. Just round out the characters and maybe add a little humor and dimension. A messenger drops off copies of the script. We read it overnight, meet in the morning to discuss what we’d like to do, and then drive over to Burbank to confab (another favorite bullshit Hollywood word) with him in his office on the WB/Columbia lot.

The meeting goes swimingly. He loves our suggestions. He laughs at the jokes we propose. He couldn’t be more effusive and enthusiastic. What we pitch is just what the script needs he says. So he sends us off to write it, complete with his blessing and thanks.

We drive back over the hill to my condo on the Westside. Takes about a half hour. We walk in my place and immediately the phone rings. It’s our agent. No pleasantries. She starts out with, “Just what happened in that meeting?” I was sort of thrown by the question. “It went great. Why?” I asked. “Well, it couldn’t have gone that great,” she said, “Columbia just called. They fired you.”

"What?!"

"You're no longer on the project."

"Even if we were never on the project."

"Yep.  Your services are no longer needed."

"What services?  We never started service."

"You're fired!"

So that was that.  We never found out why. My guess is Randal didn’t like our suggestions but was just too much of a wimp (an expression I shall use in place of the one I really want to use but am taking the high road – although you know the word I mean) to tell us face-to-face. Randal went off to the make the movie. I never saw it. It bombed. I don’t think our rewrite would have made a damn bit of difference.

By the time he had returned, our amusement park project was dead. We learned later that Columbia had no intention of ever making it. They wanted another BLUE LAGOON, not a teen comedy out of Randal Kleiser. They were just indulging him.  We didn’t know it at the time but we were always just spinning our wheels (back in the days when studios still paid for the spinning).

There’s no real moral to this story. The only advice I could give writers so that this never happens to you is, I guess, don’t ever come home taking Laurel Canyon.

21 comments :

ventucky said...

Summer Lovers is probably my greatest guilty pleasure movie of the 80's. It is not a comedy by any means. I remember Casssavete's The Tempest, filmed in the Greek Islands sometime before Summer Lovers. It made then look desolate and cold. Summer Lovers made the islands look like one of THE greatest destinations on earth. The plot was the young couple, but what made the movie different, and one of the reasons most of my friends who saw it also liked it, was the plot line of the local woman who inserted herself as a sexual interest to the couple. It was the complete 80's male fantasy of paradise. I was in my early 20's at the time, so I may see it a little different quality wise now, but even my roommate sister at that time thought it was good.

Gary said...

I was working at our local multiplex the summer "Blue Lagoon" came out, and I remember we got an unusually large number of middle-aged men coming in alone to see it. Hats pulled down, collars turned up, and glancing around nervously like they were afraid of seeing somebody they knew. Those, at least, were the honest ones. The dishonest ones were the guys who bought a ticket for "The Empire Strikes Back," but tried to switch screens and sneak into "Lagoon" after it had started.

Kevin B said...

I worked at an amusement park for several years. I wish your movie had been made!

DBenson said...

Of course, what we really want to know is whether you got paid for either project.

There was the coming-of-age-while-working-in-an-amusement-park "Adventureland", which was okay but to these old eyes a bit formulaic: The young dreamer, the cool mentor who turns out to be an immature jerk, the rueful experienced girl, the folks-out-of-town party ...

Here's a free idea for whoever wants it: A Hollywood therapist has many top-level industry clients. He/she hears their fantasies, which they desperately want to be assured are not warped. The therapist teams with a writer, or a bunch of writers, who pitch scripts to those very executives subtly based on their own fantasies, which of course present them as okay and even heroic. Then somebody notices that the latest Hallmark holiday romances all involve festive kinks ...

Randy @ WCG Comics said...

Someone did make that movie…Adventureland.

maxdebryn said...

@Kevin B - Did you enjoy Adventureland ? I really loved the film; even the ghastly Ryan Reynolds is good in it.

Gary Conrad said...

Thanks Ken, I love this post. Summer Lovers is a total guilty pleasure for me but you definitely dodged a bullet. If you ever do watch it I'd seriously love to read your thoughts about it.

Honest Ed said...

Surely Kleiser was just as hot for directing Grease a couple of years before The Blue Lagoon?

Kevin B said...

@maxdebryn Yes, I did!

Jason Roberts said...

Great anecdote!

What happens if you live off of Laurel Canyon?!?

PS: I worked with Randal in 1996 on his personal film "It's My Party" which at one point we actually filmed at his house (it was low budget so we saved some money) and get this... it's atop of Laurel Canyon. Well really off of Mulholland closer to Runyon, but still....

D. McEwan said...

I have watched Summer Lovers twice, both times with the sound off. I played nice music, and it was pretty, soft-core porn. I have no idea who the characters are or what the plot is.

maxdebryn said...

"It's My Party" is a lovely film. Full of emotion, and really well done.

Leighton said...

"Roommate Sister" sounds like a great comedy. For all of the wrong reasons. I like the phrases "Uncle Dad," and "Aunt Mom," when visiting TN.

tavm said...

One of Randall Kleiser's early student shorts was something called Foot Fetish. It's a stop-motion one about a couple of shoes making love on the beach. I first heard of it when it was mentioned in his bio section of a promotional Grease book during that movie's first release called "The Grease Album". That was around early 1980 when I checked that book from the library. When "Saturday Night Live" had its sixth season premiere (the first without producer Lorne Michaels or his original "Not Ready for Prime Time Players") guest host Elliot Gould introed that short on the show. Quite amusing for what it was and they allowed all of it to be shown including some scenes that might have been censored if anyone paid attention to what was meant to be depicted...

Darwin's Ghost said...

I still want the 90 minutes back that I wasted watching Kleiser's Honey I Blew Up the Kid. What a piece of shit sequel to a classic.

Leighton said...

God, I had forgotten that Kleiser brought "Flight of the Navigator" to the USC film school in 1986, for a special viewing, prior to release. I remember that he was a very pleasant person.

I'm almost 60, so "Grease" was the epic film/soundtrack from high school.

"The Boy in the Plastic Bubble"..."The Blue Lagoon"...damn, all HUGE for my age group.

"It's My Party" - very emotional.

I MIGHT have seen "Summer Lovers," but Gallagher wasn't a huge draw for the gay community.

Leighton said...

Speaking of "Flight of the Navigator," I see that Bryce Dallas Howard is directing a "reboot" for Disney+, with the kid being a female, this time. Predictable.

benson said...

Summer Lovers was a pretty movie. The Greek Isles photograph well. It also had a wonderful actress, Valerie Quennessen, who died way too young, as the love interest.

Quennessen was in another wonderful late 70's movie, which somebody once said was American Graffiti set in France, "French Postcards". In fact, the same writer (Willard Huyck) wrote both films. It also had very young Debra Winger and Mandy Patinkin in the cast.

Gary Crant said...

"You're fried!" is possibly my favorite wordplay line of all time. And Ted Knight delivered it brilliantly.

maxdebryn said...

Willard Huyck also co-wrote/co-directed the very odd horror film "Messiah of Evil," which Is worth a look.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messiah_of_Evil

Mike McCann said...

Regarding your amusement park project: Since your script was reject and no picture was ever made, who owns the script? Who has rights (if any) to use the concept in the future? Is there an "exclusive rights" period, that could enable you and David to revive that script after five, ten or how-many years?

In some ways, it seems sad to see something you worked on dumped in the back of a file cabinet (or the digital equivalent thereof) never to see the light of day.