2ND UPDATE (below): I can report exclusively that the Writers Guild recently decided the credits on The A-Team, the movie based on the ’80s TV show and opening this weekend. There were 11 screenwriters who worked on the film — 5 single writers and 3 teams of two: Kevin Broadbin, Bruce Feirstein, Jayson Rothwell, Laurence M. Konner and Mark Rosenthal, Michael Brandt and Derek Haas, Skip Woods, Joe Carnahan & Brian Bloom, Mathew Carnahan. And that’s with the interruption of the writers strike. The final credit now reads: “Written by Joe Carnahan & Brian Bloom and Skip Woods. Created by Frank Lupo & Stephen J. Cannell.” In other words, 11 writers, and in the end, the director and his partner get first position credit. The WGA has a history of idiotic credits decisions. But the story behind these 11 writers that interests me most is how Alex Young lost control of The A-Team.
The pic comes out Friday following almost 10 years in development, millions of dollars in script costs, all for a movie version of a forgotten TV show that 20th Century Fox already is predicting to reporters may not gross more in its opening weekend than the recent 4th installment of the Die Hard franchise. Not since examples like Sister Act and Armegeddon and G.I. Joe have so many screenwriters labored so much to produce so little. (This is not about whether the movie’s any good. It’s about yet another unoriginal movie idea emanating from Hollywood and how it was developed.) So I chuckled when I read a trade review today that started out: “Beginning with the sound era, studios and films producers have longed for a way to eliminate the screenwriter from the filmmaking process. By and large, writers are prickly personalities who absorb too much time, demand too much credit and need to be kept clear of the set, where they might interfere with the director, who is, after all, the real auteur of the film. With The A-Team, a Fox film derived from a 1980s TV series, this dream now is a reality. The film seems nearly writer-free. Absolutely no time gets wasted on story, character development or logic.”
Some believe in the fish-stinks-from-the-head theory of studio politics. But in actuality I know that Tom Rothman wasn’t that close to the tortured A-Team development process itself. Instead, everyone lays the responsibility squarely at the feet of Alex Young who took charge of the pic while an SVP of production at 20th in 2002 (after the expensive rights had been bought by Fox 2000 and then moved over to main Fox). Young, one of the most disliked movie execs inside and outside Building 88 but for whom Rothman always had a soft spot. Young, who rose to become co-president of production at 20th with Emma Watts in 2007, and then crashed and burned last October only to become a producer on the lot. But not before making sure to wrangle himself a producer’s credit on The A-Team. And there he was at the A Team premiere, “smug on the Red Carpet, giving bro-hugs with everyone in the production,” a source related to me. ”He lucked out and got put on it as producer, which is ironic because in development he almost destroyed it. If it’s a hit he gets to take a victory lap as if he’s the man who assured its success. I think it was just the opposite.”
So what in god’s name was his problem? Why so many stops and starts and about-faces? And how could there have been so many writers? One Young defender tells me, “TV shows into movies usually take years and years, and often never emerge at all. I don’t think it was inordinate. Indeed, there is only one writer and a writing team credited on the movie, and for a summer action film, that’s not a lot these days. I don’t really know what went on in the early development years with it, but those credits do accurately reflect the version of the movie that got made. But bottom line, it’s terrific fun and all of a piece, more so than most ‘Action Jacksons’.”
But talk to insiders, and you’ll hear a very different story of panic, lies, and mimicry by the executive. Young is not untalented: he oversaw several of Fox’s money-making guy movies. But go back through the development process and he tried to make The A-Team anything but the A-Team — when that’s what the studio expected to release as the start of a badly needed action franchise. I’m told that, at various points in the process, Young declared that A-Team should be “gritty like Bourne” (a big hit at the time) or “in the style of 24” (he considered hiring that TV show’s writers) or ”Hard R like Tarantino” (which is “ridiculous because Tom Rothman would never have allowed that. Rothman hates R-rated movies more than anything for box office reasons,” a source reminds me.)
Most inexplicably, Young asked one seasoned writer to delete all the humor from the movie. Also to that end, I’m told Alex did everything possible to keep Stephen J Cannell, who made the TV show such a hit and had script and story approval, away from the project, to the point of lying to him continuously about where the project stood in terms of its development, and ordering writers not to talk to Cannell about their script if he phoned.
And Young lied to the writers, again and again and again. ”He flat-out lies, ‘We’re not thinking of firing you,’ and you read in the trades that you’ve been replaced,” one scribe told me. The structure of the movie was always the same: instead of committing a crime in Vietnam, this A-Team had committed a crime in Iraq. But Young would never even get back to scribes once they’d handed in a draft trying to move the story forward and expecting Alex’s notes in return. But the notes never came. ”It’s his personality. It’s not that he says ‘no’. It’s that he says ‘yes’, ‘I love the story’, ’the work is great’, and then you never hear from him again,” one scribe recounted to me.
Alex hired every kind of writer, from Feirstein an uber-experienced scribe who’d written several Bond movies during the Pierce Brosnan tenure, to Rothwell who was so young and inexperienced he got the gig only because he’d sold a script called Invaders to Warner Bros and used that as a writing sample. And then there were all the countless writers who tried and failed to get the gig. None were to Alex’s liking. Writers complained to agents who said and did nothing. As one of my insiders put it, “To the major agencies, it was another open writing assignment.”
What wasn’t to the writers’ liking was an executive so arrogant that on several occasions he actually “ran the script through his own typewriter,” one scribe tells me. “I’m not kidding. He wrote pages.” And another source confirms to me, “he was rewriting stuff personally.” Still another tells me: “He micromanages scripts (down to insulting writers about grammar, which he’s often wrong about), he rewrites scripts himself in violation of every guild rule, and along with fancying himself a screenwriter, he considers himself a story genius – without realizing that most of ideas are clichés he comes up with are all the latest clichés from the movie he saw last weekend.”
[UPDATE: Young's POV, according to sources, is that he wasn't able to really take the opportunity to pause in the movie's development, and reassess what it should be, until during the writers strike. Right afterward, he hired Skip Woods, whom Alex has credited as the one who "really cracked The A-Team", with Joe Carnahan and Brian Bloom "taking it home" by reworking the characters and dialogue when Carnahan signed on to direct. But by then the project was on fast forward and Young had to get out of its way.]
[2ND UPDATE: A Fox insider now tells me that Cannell was consulted on the pic after Joe Carnahan came aboard, and flew up to Canada once it went into production. "He has been closer to this movie than any rights holder has been," the studio emailed. But Cannell also is saying now that he'd been unhappy with previous drafts of the film.]
Along the way, Young met and married a TV actress in a fairy tale romance described as such in the pages of US and People only to find himself a seeming nanosecond later embroiled in an ugly divorce from Private Practice star Kate Walsh chronicled on the Internet. Yes, it was embarrassing for the studio to have a top executive badmouthed repeatedly by TMZ for trying to shake her down for every nickel. And it even entangled ABC Entertainment czar Steve McPherson whom Young was legally forcing to talk about the contract which the network gave Walsh. I heard Alex lost focus. “That started getting back to bosses, because people were complaining on the physical production side that he wasn’t returning calls,” an insider tells me. “And then he was getting caught in lies.”
[UPDATE: Young himself likes to claim "the utmost respect for writers" and consider "many of them my closest, closest friends", according to sources, and believes that as an exec and as a producer he likes "as much as humanly possible" to stay with one writer throughout.]
Others say Young’s relationships with writers are hanging by a thread. ”He doesn’t realize that all writers talk about executives. Even among writers who he’s made movies with, his rep is god-awful. There’s at least one who refused to work on a Fox rewrite unless they promised him Alex wouldn’t be involved. You can burn lots of writers if you’re good about it, and make good movies. People still want to work with you. But Alex isn’t good about it, and the movies he turns out speak for themselves.” As will The A-Team at the box office this weekend.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.






The title of this sequel might be “Dawn Steel Resurrection”. Or, “Harry Cohn …”. Or ….
In any other art/craft it would seem ridiculous to have the project done by committee. Hey Picasso, we’re going to call in Warhol to draw the eyes. He’s good with eyes. Hey Dylan, you’re great with political lyrics but when it comes to relationships with fathers and sons we like Desmond Child so we are going to change up a couple of lines. CAN YOU IMAGINE? But with screenwriting everyone has their two cents.
STAY THE FUCK OUT OF THE WAY! INCLUDING DIRECTORS! WRITERS WRITE THEIR STORIES. Nobody ever learned anything while talking…so sit down and shut the fuck up in your next meeting. Have the balls to say absofuckinlutely nothing! The smartest guy in the room is usually saying the least…
The A-Team is a mess. From the beginning it had dumb people involved. Has anyone mentioned who one of the first producers involved was? Dumb Dumb Dumb Dumb Dumb…Somebody who wanted credit…Somebody who = Ponzi Scheme waiting to happen.
Thank you.
I wish YOU would STAY THE FUCK AWAY. Since you like to hear yourself talk so much, why don’t you create your OWN website so you can talk to yourself there without staining these message boards.
Thank you.
I second that.
The truth hurts. See, the numbers spoke. Bomb!
Thank you.
I know it seems impossible, but Nikki went too easy on him.
Wow,Hollywood sounds a lot like Entourage but with even more a-holes. As everyone knows,more hands making the bread usually equals
less dough in the end. I will see the A-Team because it does look like a great summer movie. I hope I’m right!
Young isn’t the only one at Fox who thinks he’s a story genius. Who writes dialogue. Who calls you on it if you don’t type it in VERBATIM. Who always believes he’s right and nobody else could possibly have a smart idea. Fox should hire typists, not writers. Unfortunately, thanks to Avatar, Fox in its current incarnation, will be with us for a long, long, long time.
Coming from the videogame industry, I can assure you that this guy would be a superstar. A lot of so-called Producer in videogames are exactly as descibed above. Alex, if producing features doesn’t work out, I’m sure EA or ACTIVISION would gladly welcome you in.
To quote my prediction.
Even with no promo, the Karate Kid-reboot kicks the A=Team’s ass from coast to coast, country to country.
Now that I know they did ten plus writers I hope the public flushes this ( want to be a remake not down the toilet but that they grind it through the garbage disposal).
We don’t want it coming back to life.
As for that actor who dropped his manager, you better hope Saundra B, signs you up again for another All About Steve.
I don’t like the guy but WHAT THE F?!? This is such a non-story designed to get all the haters to come out and blast the crap out of Alex. I can’t believe I’m defending him but this really crosses the line. This is not journalism. This is a hatchet job. Back the F off, Nikki.
What!
You some kind of Fox Studio flack or flunky? A D-Boy brown-noser?
Nikki performs a vital function in a dysfunctional cannibalistic industry! Back off my a**! You pipe up, flunky … .
To encourage (indeed demand) self-censorship about the seamy, seedy ugly underside of Business Affairs (why? To keep Rupert, Kwant-o, and the Great Ari Z. E. happy ???) is the worst sort of hypocrisy.
Ignore per a general rule, anyone who uses terms such as “hater” or similar is simply wandering the planet wasting oxygen…(and nowhere on the planet will you find more adults using such childish terms as LA)
What is getting missed here, is that Alex is just a product of the Fox system, one that doesn’t respect writers, directors or even their own employees. This is a system that stinks from the top, with Rothman, and Alex was just a stoodge to Rothman and did what he thought he needed to do to get ahead, and look, he got ahead. Despite Avatar and years of success, I doubt you will find a studio with lower morale among the rank and file as Fox…everyone is treated like shit and ground down. It’s amazing they are able to have the success they have, with such limited staff, resources and moral support, while working under such tyrants as Rothman, Watts, et al. The irony is that despite autocratic rule, sexcapades amongst top execs and no sense of commaradarie, the studio has some of the best creative, marketing and publicity minds in the business. The issue isn’t that Alex hired a lot of writers, who cares? Every studio does it these days, it’s about a system of fear and bullying where talent is squashed and managing up (all the way up, if you know what I’m talking about…) gets you ahead. The other irony in all this is that their movies actually have gotten better, but for some reason their marketing is worse.
The Sweet Smell of Success (quick! name the movie!)
Fox was that way back when I was there (well before Dennis Stanfill took over from the Zanucks). Warners was that way under Steve Ross and his seamy acolytes (too numerous to name) — a snake pit extraordinare. But it was that way during the decades-long reign (of terror) of Jack Warner himself. Columbia was that way under Harry Cohn …. .
How ’bout RKO under Old Joe Kennedy?
“A cruel, impossible business devoid of loyalty or integrity” sums it up nicely.
Don’t know about the quality of the films, but you could not be more right about the morale and other points, Mr. Joyce. I would love to believe that there is a reckoning coming for TR and others, but probably not.
This is perhaps the meanest item I’ve read on this site. It’s an agenda in search of a story. I mean, I have no idea what the news is (studios hire multiple writers? New in town?) and it seems like you just want to kill a guy, who was doing his job.
Oh, Nikki!
TILDA WILL NEVER HOLD A CANDLE TO YOU, BABE!
NICELY DONE!
Hate to break it to you, but this kind of behavior amongst studio execs and producers is commonplace in this industry. You have to learn to deal with it to survive.
I sold a spec in a bidding war a few years ago that I put every ounce of my heart and soul into. I met with the studio execs and the producers and the whole thing was a lovefest.
They sent me off to do my rewrite based on their notes and while I was a week into doing my rewrite an agent who was trying to sign me called me to tell me the studio/producers were already calling around to line up other writers to come in and rewrite me.
One week into my first rewrite. They hadn’t even seen a page yet.
When I confronted them about that, they told me it was a lie and that the agent was trying to poison me and make me trust him to get me to sign with him.
I trusted them and went back to work on the rewrite where I learned for certain the following week they had actually sent my spec around to other writers to start reading so they could come in and give takes on it. The reason I knew for certain was a friend of mine was given the script at his bosses desk to send to a client.
When I confronted them again about this, they told me they were lining up a “closer” to come in and polish my script just in case my rewrite wasn’t perfect. They didn’t want to lose all the great momentum and they all were pulling for me and knew I would nail it.
I continued to write under these conditions and worked openly with the execs and producers to give them exactly what they wanted and make them a part of the process.
When I turned in the first rewrite I got a slew of congratulatory emails from the execs and the producers for nailing it over the weekend they read it.
2 days later, they hired another writer.
I then found out from the agent I signed with that the studio and producer gave me fake notes, i.e. they just slapped together some notes just for me to chase my tail for 8 weeks.
The real notes they had were given to the “closer” they brought in who rewrote the script for roughly 1.5 years until it died on the shelf where it’s currently buried.
The studio wasn’t Fox. It was supposed to be a writer friendly studio and the execs were all supposed to be stand up people and the producer on the project was supposed to be a real gentleman who cared about writers like his own family.
So when I read this piece I wasn’t shocked. This is how business is done in this town.
Is it a disgrace? Yes. Are these people scumbags? Absolutely.
But Alex Young isn’t exception. He’s the rule.
So why not name names? If this is the rule, they won’t even connect it back to you. Writers protect these people and these actions. Why? Because next time they might be hired as the “closer”?
Dear Writer:
Something similar happened to me ten years ago. Execs don’t get it… agents say they do….but when it is your baby and you pour your heart into it, you actually care. You are connected to it. It’s you on that page. I know it’s a business but it took me a long time to recover from the insensitive way I was treated and the handling of the script I loved and worked so hard on. I know it’s difficult but keep your head up and don’t lower your standards. Keep pouring your heart into your work. Don’t let them break you. As Larry Gelbart once told me about being a writer in this difficult business “You may have to rent yourself out now and then…but never sell out.” I’ve struggled, I’ve been screwed over…but there have been some nice highs as well.
-just another writer
hang in there,
Thanks for the encouragement. I know I’m not alone. During the strike I met countless writers with similar stories to ours.
Nikki nailed this article and it resonated with me. However, the problem is bigger than Alex Young and Fox. Seriously, the parties who did this to me are considered “great people” in the industry. None of them have ever been able to look me in the eyes when we’ve crossed paths by accident or in meetings since this. They knew how personal the story I wrote was.
And for the posters below talking about Porsche’s in the garage, try Nissan’s. After the lawyer takes his 5%, your manager 10%, your agent 10% and the tax man gets his cut, I make slightly more than I did at a corporate job with benefits. I’m not an A list writer yet. I could hardly afford Vietnam.
That said, I know I’m lucky and fortunate to have cracked through the wall and I still have to earn my dues and stay on top of my game, but it still doesn’t make swallowing a big ‘ole glass of crap taste any better at the end of the day.
The only thing that “closer” did for my script, was close the book on it. I recently asked how much it would cost to buy it back from the studio and I don’t have enough Porsche’s in my garage yet to even dream of doing that.
Nikki should contact you man and write a story about you (maybe with the names of the people and the studio) It was really an interesting reading. All the best.
The same thing happened to me. Twice now.
I just go away and enjoy great vacations until my sphincter closes up and heals then dive back in again.
I have sold nine projects to the studios and never seen a film made.
God I love/hate this city.
you’re complaining about getting paid for your scripts and taking great vacations? Sounds like some champagne problems my friend. You think the studio execs get to take vacations?
All due respect, a studio doesn’t owe it to you to make your movie. It’s not their privilege to finance your film. If you want to see your passion projects get made, stop selling them to conglomerates (duh). Raise the financing yourself. Or better yet, become a studio exec! Revolutionize the system. Let’s see how you do it.
raise the financing yourself… hilarious! that might have been possible a few years back, but it’s almost like winning the lottery these days. even a-list talent is having trouble doing that.
your post is so absolutely right-on.
This isn’t a Fox problem. In fact, it’s not really, actually, a “problem”. This is 100% business as usual, as demonstrated at every studio (and smaller production company) in town.
There are only about 10-12 writers in town who actually get “respect”, and the rest of us are often just props & playthings for agents, managers, producers and execs to shuffle around and manipulate.
Writers are always the last ones to find out anything. Which is so sad, and so bizarre, when you consider that we’re the ones actually generating the ideas, the concepts, and the “product”.
If they say “we love your voice for this project”… it really means “we’d love for you to work on this project for zero money for several weeks or months and generate hundreds of pages of outlines, treatments, beat-sheets, and then when we’ve completely sucked the life out of you, we’ll completely forget about you, move on, and/or let the project die.”
Maybe TV really is the way to go…. sigh.
There is no such thing as “a writer friendly studio.”
You’ve confused apples with oranges.
Movies have been described as a schizophrenic marriage between art and commerce but if this is so, during coitus, commerce is definitely on top. If D-execs sent you notes for a re-write, in all likelihood a first re-write was in your contract. They’d already paid you for it so why not let you run with it and see what came in. The direction they’d been told it had to go for a greenlight was different but your revised draft would still have value.
If it was a luv-fest, that’s because there was nothing in it for them in turning it into a hate-fest (and you can attract more bees with honey than you can with vinegar). They didn’t necessarily lie to you, and their notes weren’t necessarily false. William Goldman explained their problem (also yours) decades ago in “Adventures in the Screen Trade”: nobody knows anything. Because nobody knows anything, they didn’t know how your revisions might turn out and how it (any of it) might play out with the people whom THEY report to. They act as intermediaries between you and The Principals, whom you will probably never meet. The Studio System itself is designed to insulate them from you. The loftier the job-title (“Executive Vice President of World Wide Production”, etc), the less actual power resides in that office.
Your draft might be called a “screenplay” but it’s actually a design for entertainment; a concept draft/treatment of a story idea and nothing more. Anton Chekhov’s “Cherry Orchard” it’s not. Nobody is going to run down to the local library and check it out for pleasure reading. And it’s work-for-hire. It might not have started out that way but it became that when you signed that contract, accepted money for it and performed that first re-write following submitted notes. From that point on you were like one of a dozen painters working on the Sistine Chapel helping Perugino, Botticelli, and Michaelangelo fix Julius II’s vision. Whether (and how much of) your initial concept makes it to that ceiling fresco (silver screen; straight-to-video DVD) is a function of studio politics, whim, and mere chance; the purest of pure chaos because, in the final analysis, Mr. Goldman was right: nobody knows.
Beautifully stated, and absolutely true. I’m always amazed that writers would pursue this industry with such a fundamental misunderstanding of their job. You need to pour your emotion into it while keeping yourself emotionally detached. If you don’t, your soul unfortunately will bleed sooner or later.
Too bad there is no Plan B…
Nikki- Why are you constantly picking on Alex Young? He is a talented and well-liked executive, despite all the vitriol that you spew.
Clearly Nikki along with a lot of others don’t care a bit for Alex.
I used to be an assistant at the studio and I can tell you that there are a quite a few assistants and jr. execs reading this article right now with huge grins on their faces shouting “TOLDJ”
Welcome back Nikki!
what absolute crap, Nikki. Shame on you. You should do your research before tearing people down just because you have some agenda (or have been fed an agenda by a disgruntled writer). I’ve written a few scripts for Alex and he stood by me for every draft and put in the hard work every time. Check around with other writers. It is a small community and some of the best writers around swear by this guy and have worked with him multiple times. He was the one guy fighting to get the ateam made and he did it. from the reviews i read it’s a lot of fun. I used to think you were a reporter, Nikki, but this is just a hatchet job.
Alex – stop writing these fake messages here saying you’re a nice guy. We know you’re an anti-human creature who delights in lying and cruelty. So why deny it? You’re a shit. Enjoy yourself! But don’t try to pass yourself off as some “nice guy” with a fake message like this one! We got your number. Some day, someone’s going to get your ass in a sling (hope you marry again to another actress, who’ll rip you apart in your next divorce).
Alex, use your real name when you post things here.
typical story reflecting a bias for writer’s rooted in ignorance. AY’s personality aside, one wouldn’t need so many attempts at a successful draft, or a successful direction, if any one of those writers–who were all paid for their time– had written something that got people excited. the desire for re-direction and continued work only comes in the absence of execution. the credits reflect what got made (and who created the franchise, i.e, Cannell–no involvement in this chapter necessary), that’s why the other writer’s names aren’t credited– they were just paid, for not getting it right. the revelation in this story is not an executive who didn’t get it right, it is how many “writers” failed (an all too often reality).
On behalf of writers everywhere, go fuck yourself.
Unfortunately the truth stings sometimes.
There are hacks at every level of this business. This exec could be an idiot, but to me he’s part and parcel with the whole town. I don’t respect writers just because they write, I respect great writing. I think there are great executives striving to develop so-so scripts into good or even great films. Despite calls for the contrary, this really isn’t an auteur business. It’s collaborative. I want to direct and write, and I know every day I’ll have to make a lot of different kinds of people happy to make my movies. Nobody should be surprised when they’re shuffled around a project called “The A-Team”. On behalf of Movie Fans everywhere, get back to work on a real masterpiece. You can always say no or you can accept your paycheck writing assignment and accept nobody’s going to line up at the cinema to see your unique, artistic approach to a revived schlock 80′s TV action franchise.
I see…this must be why so many “finished” studio films are so terrific, and filled with brilliant writing. Because the executives have finally found the writer to make it work. HA HA HA HA HA. Most of the comic book crap coming out today feels like it was written by a machine set to repeat, repeat, repeat.
It’s interesting that the two love notes for this guy were posted one minute apart…..
Agree 100%. Writers are so essential to the process and deserve respect for their talent and hard work- but they’re not perfect and even the best writers can’t get it right every time. Alex was doing his job. Executives don’t hire additional writers to be dicks- it’s their job to see if something’s working, and if it’s not, fix it- usually in a hurry to meet production demands. It’s called show Business after all, and at the end of the day he’s the one who is held accountable for the movie, not the writers. As much as we’d all like to live in a world where artists had all the time and money they wanted to craft the perfect event movie (seriously- I’d like to live in that world!), that’s just not realistic or fair.
I’m not the biggest Alex fan but this article is mean and vicious and simply unnecessary. Did Alex stand you up for a date Nikki?
“but they’re not perfect and even the best writers can’t get it right every time”
Well in the studio exec’s judgment anyway. Hollywood is too risk-averse and left-brain for its executives to have good judgment in these matters. Most of the time the script would have been much better if some imperfections had been allowed for the sake of keeping a more interesting, unique, personal voice. Hammering the script with so many different writers in the effort to make it “perfect” or “right” totally kills it. Crushes the life out of it.
I’ve worked on many projects with many different executives, and of all the terrible motherfuckers I’ve had the horrible displeasure of sitting in a room with, Alex Young was the terriblest motherfuckingest of them all.
I can’t believe he’s still in this town, free, and not gimped up in some even-angrier-than-me screenwriter’s basement.
(Put my name to it? Sure, sure…because what I REALLY want to do is jeopardize my career just to sling mud at a prick like Young.)
nikki – were you that pissed that Mike Fleming was completely taking over your site that you had to go after someone maliciously just to prove your bona fides? Hiring multiple writers is new to Hollywood? nikki, back when you were in your 20′s they used to have these buildings at every studio where entire staffs of writers worked on the best movies of all time. They were called the Writers Buildings. Sometimes it takes a few tries to get it right.
Couldn’t agree more, Flemming Fan. Let’s have more journalism and less tabloid stories. Put Flemming in charge of all the REAL stories and let Nikki continue her BS with the US Weekly version. That way we know we, who actually work in the business and don’t look at it through the store window, can skip all of Nikki’s articles…
Flemming writes the kind of non-news that you can read in the trades. This kind of article is what made DHD worth reading in the first place. Get your other writers to up their game, Nikki, because this was like a breath of fresh air.
second that. this is exactly the kind of insider, position taking story that makes DHD ‘must read’ in hollywood. not the variety style announcements, etc.
The WGA needs to investigate this.
For several years I have been told by different writers that Alex Young rewrites their screenplays without the writers knowledge prior to handing them into Tom Rothman. This is in direct violation of the Writers Guild agreement and is a serious offense. If the accusations are true FOX will have legal exposure as Young was an employee for many years and not a work-for-hire producer.
Tomorrow I will be sending a letter to the President of the Writers Guild and to the General Counsel of the Writers Guild asking them to begin an investigation of Alex Young and all of the films that he has supervised during his employment at Twentieth Century Fox.
I have heard these accusations from various writers and the Deadline article verifies what I have been told.
If you are a WGA writer who believes Alex Young has rewritten one of your screenplays please notify the General Counsel of the Writers Guild or the WGA Credits Department.
What is young Hollywood going to do when they run out of toys and old TV shows to remake?
How about creating something original?
The answer to “How about creating something original?” will be found inside: “Entertainment Industry Economics — A Guide For Financial Analysis” Fifth Edition. Harold L. Vogel.
http://www.amazon.com/Entertainment-Industry-Economics-Financial-Analysis/dp/0521792649
A thumbnail sketch: “things original” are created all the time. Their problem then becomes how to promote and distribute them effectively; most aren’t.
Something that creates a sensation does break through (seemingly from nowhere) from time-to-time. But for that to happen, it must first rise above the din — the background noise. Very few releases can, or do.
The business problem media distributors confront is how to attract a mass (paying) audience before their corporate burn rate consumes them whole (what befell Yari Film Group Releasing; Pinnacle Entertainment; Chrystal Films; Fusion III Films; International Movie Group; Artisan Entertainment … ) especially now, given audience fragmentation and the fact that mass audiences lack cultural sophistication (a Lerner & Lowe or Comden & Green musical would be DOA today). The mining of absurd comic books and video games for plot and characters, the recycling of decades-old television shows, and a growing reliance on serialization (sequels, prequels) by the majors just hints at their underlying desperation.
Dude…Hollywood has asked Hasbro and other big toy companies to CREATE toys with marketing/movie/franchise potential. They are not going to writers for new ideas…they are going to toy companies. Hollywood has jumped the shark!
Absolutely. It’s called “convergence”, discussed at great length in:
“Entertainment Industry Economics — A Guide For Financial Analysis” Fifth Edition. Harold L. Vogel.
Advertising/promotional tie-ins of all sorts have bedrocked production-funding since squadrons of Model-T’s roared through the virtually empty streets of Compton, Burbank, and Culver City in Mack Sennett’s manic chase scenes. And it wouldn’t surprise me a bit if Hasbro, McDonalds, Burger King, Altria, GM (etc, etc) invested in projects that featured their products through LLCs, partnerships, or corporate intermediaries (such as Allen & Co.) joining NATO exhibitors, hedge funds, and princes from Qatar and Dubai for whom $100,000,000 is mere pocket change.
god i love this town. we have hedda-hopper-nikki and her anonymous sources (and all you posters) trying to tear down one of the good guys. Can you say agenda? somehow the guy works his ass off and gets movies made and all we can do is throw stones from the cheap seats. Strike that – i hate this town.
Didn’t you guys watch THE PLAYER before you came to Hollywood? jeez… you act all indignant that this is going on when it’s been de rigeur for 85 years. I mean, when you sign up to rewrite the A-team you know when you’re in for.
I’m as far removed from Hollywood goings-on as possible, but after reading this, I must say — what the deuce is going on in this town? A clustercuss of this magnitude over a TV show adaptation? What, is all the money going to buy ice cream? It’s bad enough when I sit through seasons upon seasons of films that stink, only to read about power-tripping yahoos that can’t just freaking make something. How’s about you get your act together, and *then* commit the resources at your disposal to making a movie (I’d pray for at least a good one, but the gods of cinema have yet to heed me lately).
They say you can tell a lot by the company you keep. Alex Young is best buddies with Damon Lindelof, one of the nastiest egomaniacal jerks in town. I believe everything about this story.
Agreed. Damon Lindelof is a nasty egomaniacal freak best avoided. I can’t believe he’s stayed in partnership with JJ for so long. Every conversation I ever had with Damon would lead to a hushed but bitter gripefest about how JJ was screwing him over on LOST– how JJ is the worst kind of credit hound & glory whore, etc.
Thank god LOST is over now so Damon can STFU and hang out with Alex Young.