UPDATE, 2:10 PM: Conan the Barbarian script doctor Sean Hood has sent along to Deadline the following regarding his piece we told you about last night, focusing on the part that could have been construed as throwing the screenplay’s previous drafters under the bus:
“Actually my words “I made vast improvements on the draft that came before me” weren’t very classy because it does sound like I’m throwing the previous writers under the bus, and I need to publicly apologize to Thomas Dean Donnelly, Joshua Oppenheimer, and Andrew Lobel. All I can say is that I didn’t mean it that way and I should have chosen my words more carefully.
What I meant to say that I was proud of the work I did solving problems that that had emerged in the development process, over many years and dozens of drafts. To suggest that I did better work than the writers before me would be both un-classy and flat out incorrect.
Many people have read Thomas Dean Donnelly and Joshua Oppenheimer’s early drafts of Conan when it showed up on the internet, and a great, great number of them think theirs was the best draft of any, including the shooting script. Andrew Lobel’s draft was filled with great humor, which some critics thought the movie lacked.
I didn’t write this to point fingers. As the last writer on the project, the criticism of the story, dialogue, and characterization should fall primarily on me… not my peers, not producers, not studio executives, not the director.”
PREVIOUS, 11:37 PM TUESDAY: Sean Hood is one of the four credited screenwriters on the remake of Conan The Barbarian released last weekend to dismal grosses. Today he writes on the Internet Q&A site Quora about “What’s it like to have your film flop at the box office? Don’t they know how bad it is before it comes out?”:
When you work “above the line” on a movie (writer, director, actor, producer, etc.) watching it flop at the box office is devastating. I had such an experience during the opening weekend of Conan the Barbarian 3D.
A movie’s opening day is analogous to a political election night. Although I’ve never worked in politics, I remember having similar feelings of disappointment and disillusionment when my candidate lost a presidential bid, so I imagine that working as a speechwriter or a fundraiser for the losing campaign would feel about the same as working on an unsuccessful film.
One joins a movie production, the same way one might join a campaign, years before the actual release/election, and in the beginning one is filled with hope, enthusiasm and belief. I joined the Conan team, having loved the character in comic books and the stories of Robert E. Howard, filled with the same kind of raw energy and drive that one needs in politics.
Any film production, like a long grueling campaign over months and years, is filled with crisis, compromise, exhaustion, conflict, elation, and blind faith that if one just works harder, the results will turn out all right in the end. During that process whatever anger, frustration, or disagreement you have with the candidate/film you keep to yourself. Privately you may oppose various decisions, strategies, or compromises; you may learn things about the candidate that cloud your resolve and shake your confidence, but you soldier on, committed to the end. You rationalize it along the way by imagining that the struggle will be worth it when the candidate wins.
A few months before release, “tracking numbers” play the role in movies that polls play in politics. It’s easy to get caught up in this excitement, like a college volunteer handing out fliers for Howard Dean. (Months before Conan was released many close to the production believed it would open like last year’s The Expendables.) As the release date approaches and the tracking numbers start to fall, you start adjusting expectations, but always with a kind of desperate optimism. “I don’t believe the polls,” say the smiling candidates.
You hope that advertising and word of mouth will improve the numbers, and even as the numbers get tighter and the omens get darker, you keep telling yourself that things will turn around, that your guy will surprise the experts and pollsters. You stay optimistic. You begin selectively ignoring bad news and highlighting the good. You make the best of it. You believe.
In the days before the release, you get all sorts of enthusiastic congratulations from friends and family. Everyone seems to believe it will go well, and everyone has something positive to say, so you allow yourself to get swept up in it.
You tell yourself to just enjoy the process. That whether you succeed or fail, win or lose, it will be fine. You pretend to be Zen. You adopt detachment, and ironic humor, while secretly praying for a miracle.
The Friday night of the release is like the Tuesday night of an election. “Exit polls” are taken of people leaving the theater, and estimated box office numbers start leaking out in the afternoon, like early ballot returns. You are glued to your computer, clicking wildly over websites, chatting nonstop with peers, and calling anyone and everyone to find out what they’ve heard. Have any numbers come back yet? That’s when your stomach starts to drop.
By about 9 PM its clear when your “candidate” has lost by a startlingly wide margin, more than you or even the most pessimistic political observers could have predicted. With a movie its much the same: trade[s] call the weekend winners and losers based on projections. That’s when the reality of the loss sinks in, and you don’t sleep the rest of the night.
For the next couple of days, you walk in a daze, and your friends and family offer kind words, but mostly avoid the subject. Since you had planned (ardently believed, despite it all) that success would propel you to new appointments and opportunities, you find yourself at a loss about what to do next. It can all seem very grim.
You make light of it, of course. You joke and shrug. But the blow to your ego and reputation can’t be brushed off. Reviewers, even when they were positive, mocked Conan The Barbarian for its lack of story, lack of characterization, and lack of wit. This doesn’t speak well of the screenwriting – and any filmmaker who tells you s/he “doesn’t read reviews” just doesn’t want to admit how much they sting.
Unfortunately, the work I do as a script doctor is hard to defend if the movie flops. I know that those who have read my Conan shooting script agree that much of the work I did on story and character never made it to screen. I myself know that given the difficulties of rewriting a script in the middle of production, I made vast improvements on the draft that came before me. But its still much like doing great work on a losing campaign. All anyone in the general public knows, all anyone in the industry remembers, is the flop. A loss is a loss.
But one thought this morning has lightened my mood:
My father is a retired trumpet player. I remember, when I was a boy, watching him spend months preparing for an audition with a famous philharmonic. Trumpet positions in major orchestras only become available once every few years. Hundreds of world class players will fly in to try out for these positions from all over the world. I remember my dad coming home from this competition, one that he desperately wanted to win, one that he desperately needed to win because work was so hard to come by. Out of hundreds of candidates and days of auditions and callbacks, my father came in… second.
It was devastating for him. He looked completely numb. To come that close and lose tore out his heart. But the next morning, at 6:00 AM, the same way he had done every morning since the age of 12, he did his mouthpiece drills. He did his warm ups. He practiced his usual routines, the same ones he tells his students they need to play every single day. He didn’t take the morning off. He just went on. He was and is a trumpet player and that’s what trumpet players do, come success or failure.
Less than a year later, he went on to win a position with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, where he played for three decades. Good thing he kept practicing.
So with my father’s example in mind, here I sit, coffee cup steaming in its mug and dog asleep at my feet, starting my work for the day, revising yet another script, working out yet another pitch, thinking of the future (the next project, the next election) because I’m a screenwriter, and that’s just what screenwriters do.
In the words of Ed Wood, “My next one will be BETTER!”
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.







Classy words. I actually quite enjoyed Conan and I’m sure there others who did.
Thank you for the positive words..
Saying that Conan was anything but the hot stinking turd that it was, is idiotic. However, I applaud this writer for telling it like it is. This blog that he wrote is TEN THOUSAND TIMES more interesting than Conan (the movie). It took balls to write this blog and take the blame (most of it) for a flop. This guy has guts.
@Pat Bateman
Your opinon and it is not shared by a large number by the response I have noticed. Seen the movie twice and may go again this weekend.
Well, it’s shared by most of the American and Canadian public since the domestic gross is so bad.
They have a word for people like you in society, that would see a movie like THIS ONE three times…Sadist. Either that, or you’re using it as a replacement for your Ambien addiction. Either way, no healthy, normal, functioning human would sit through more than the first five minutes of this film. Unless you’re under the age of 6. And we all know that kids will sit through anything!
Okay, you hated it. WE GET IT.
I think the word you’re looking for is “masochist,” not “sadist.” Unless you’re saying they saw the flick 3x to inflate its numbers and try to get sequels – which would be sadomasochism at its best.
I only saw it once, and that’s enough. I’ll never get those 2 hours back.
The real reason Conan and the other big pics flopped is that the audience is no longer tolerating big cheesy films. Don’t blame the writers, blame the accountants who keep trying to franchise crap to moviegoers who are craving smart original fare.
People hated latest Transformer and Pirates sequels, but they were already invested in those franchises.
That doesn’t translate into people embracing films they know suck in advance; nobody wants to spread the bonhomie to Green Lantern and Conan. People are paying to see quality films (The Help, Midnight in Paris) and they aren’t investing in crapola anymore.
The movie audience doesn’t want 80′s remakes, tired plots like Change Up nor badly made comic fare like Conan and Green Lantern. But they do want fresh ideas like Inception, quality films like The Help and smartly crafted actioneers like Thor.
Hey Sean-
what are your other produced credits as either the sole writer or as script Dr.?
is there one that you are really happy about?
where the outcome was primarily achieved because of your work.
any availability to read your CONAN shooting script online?
You gotta be kidding me!
That this guy cannot write is obvious from his pathetic post. To continue his analogy, America gets the politicians it deserves – and the films that should never have even made it to the screen. He’s lucky he got paid for that shit pile – and good luck getting work again.
So, a guy comes clean about his failure, totally owns it, and hopes to do better, and you trash him for it.
You’re kind of a dick. No, wait.. I was wrong- you’re a fully realized dick.
Comes clean? He said he made vast improvements to the script…after basically apologizing for the exact same statement. So he threw them under the bus,pulled them out and then threw them under a different bus! Lol. Oh, and calling someone names really validated your opinion. Classy!
@WOW!!
I can’t seem to understand why the Deadline comments sections has a reputation around town for being full of nasty, bitter losers when I read a comment as thoughtful, well-reasoned and astute as yours.
I’d say “good luck getting work again” to you as well, but you technically have to get work in the first place to get it “again.”
PS – His blog post is pretty great. Honest, intelligent, and pretty full of information about the reality of professional screenwriting. So it’s kinda stupid of you to call it “pathetic.”
Actually my words “I made vast improvements on the draft that came before me” weren’t very classy because it does sound like I’m throwing the previous writers under the bus, and I need to publicly apologize to Thomas Dean Donnelly, Joshua Oppenheimer, and Andrew Lobel. All I can say is that I didn’t mean it that way and I should have chosen my words more carefully.
What I meant to say that I was proud of the work I did solving problems that that had emerged in the development process, over many years and dozens of drafts. To suggest that I did better work than the writers before me would be both un-classy and flat out incorrect.
Many people have read Thomas Dean Donnelly and Joshua Oppenheimer’s early drafts of Conan when it showed up on the internet, and a great, great number of them think theirs was the best draft of any, including the shooting script. Andrew Lobel’s draft was filled with great humor, which some critics thought the movie lacked.
I didn’t write this to point fingers. As the last writer on the project, the criticism of the story, dialogue, and characterization should fall primarily on me… not my peers, not producers, not studio executives, not the director.
Sean,
Don’t apologize. We can assume it’s your opinion that you actually do feel you made improvements on the material. It’s subjective and we all know that. Your promise to do better is very humbling and refreshing. But I’d like to know know exactly how you plan on doing this? Ha! Seriously, onward and upward and let the haters hate away.
Sean,
You have won a new fan. Thanks for the honesty and willingness to share with people who you owe no explanation.
I knww nothing about this movie apart from seeing and appreciated the previous effort. No net, no advice, no emails, no pre release hype. I did see a trailer somewhere on the net, for a taste; deciding to go.
I took my teenage daughter and promised her mindless violence, something that we both enjoy, like a sorbet in this case prior to being confused by ‘CowboyAlien’.
We enjoyed Conan, had a great time. There were some funny lines, great action, perhaps some CGI was ‘off kilter’ prespective wise, no matter wasn’t the purpose. We were thrilled, laughed, and agreed walking out, better than we thought it would be.
Said that, because there wasn’t much in the way of mega marketing, huge displays, posters, big names, premier; nothing like that, almost released with as little fanfare as possible, some studio apologising for being forced to release a exec friendless movie.
A bastard child….
Who wrote what, when, was not a consideration, let alone the actors and Directors who can make up for a certain lack of on the page didactic.
This guy the writer, the others are so pressured with the surreal turn of the coin, literally; a small stumble by others can cause years of block and self doubt.
Easy to say difficult to achieve, forggedaboudit! N-E-X-T and move along, nothing to see here.
If you walk through life with your head looking behind you at those mistakes, you’ll bump into something.
It’s over move on and don’t lose you mojo over other’s bile.
Grab the gold babe!
This was GENIUS!!! It inspired me!
Which part was genius. When he threw previous writers under the bus or when he talked about how self-deluded he was into thinking he actually wrote something of quality here?
Ha.
No kidding.
It reminds me of a player coming into the locker-room and blaming his teammates for the loss.
Word of advice to Sean Hood and any others like him — SHUT UP AND TAKE IT LIKE A MAN
He didn’t blame anybody. Read it again.
@Jack,
Yeah, take it like A REAL MAN! A real man who posts anonymous comments on a film website! YEAH!
Tell me, do you have to work at being a d##k, or does it simply come naturally to you?
btw, my comment was not directed at the screenwriter, but one of his asinine bloggo-troll critics
When a movie does well the director and actors get all the credit – when it flops, hey that’s the only time you ever hear about the screenwriter.
A movie is a collaboration and he sure as hell isn’t solely responsible for the finished product. Who knows what was added, taken out, changed during production and post? I think he was brave to tell it like it is.
Truly an excellent metaphor with the candidate comparison and my sympathies go out to you, fair screenwriter, and clearly an intelligent man: You served honorably. Studio boobs and some hack acting and directing were as much to blame as then moving forward before “solving” the screenplay issues…
You will do better next time at bat… and better than that one on the one after that…
From One To Another
good onya buddy! film is such a collaborative, combative, political, ego-driven process I’m sometimes surprised films get made at all, let alone good ones. Conan is such a hard character to do faithfully and to create a world as rich as Hyboria takes major moolah and exactly the right mix of talent and vision. Alas, it was not to be this time.
That which does not kill you makes you stronger, eh?
Next time, by Crom!
Sean: you are a man of humility and integrity. I know your work, and I know the circumstances of this production. You should walk with your head held high. Better things are coming, and whoever reads your comments above will appreciate your grace under fire. Wishing you well, friend.
It took a lot of guts and humility to write that piece. One of the best things ever written on this blog. Knock em dead and best wishes on your next project.
Yes, it did!
Seems like he needed to say it too, as difficult as it was. Bet he feels a load lifted.
What Carl said.
It wasn’t written on this blog. It was reprinted from Quora.
Guts and humility? To continue with the authors clunky metaphor – this is the equivalent of a politician getting caught in a sex scandal. In order to save face and milk some sympathy the offender comes forward with a statement, declaring their remorse for said actions. Meanwhile, the only thing they truly regret is getting caught. I do agree with his closing sentiments – get up, dust yourself off, and keep working, and next time, don’t back a candidate who is running on a recycled message. Find a candidate who is brave enough to say something unique and genuine.
janky, you’re metaphor is actually the one that’s way off here, and if you really worked in the business, you’d know damn well that writers have no control these days over whether or not they get to write “something unique and genuine.” Unless you’re someone like Nolan, you write where the opportunities are or you don’t work.
What an awesome piece. Says a lot about the business as well as the crazy, frustrating and occassionally wonderful life we all live when we sign up for the entertainment business. Bravo
Great post. Only negative was bashing the previous draft. I’m sure that writer tried his best and was equally upset over the outcome.
I was onboard until…
“I know that those who have read my Conan shooting script agree that much of the work I did on story and character never made it to screen. I myself know that given the difficulties of rewriting a script in the middle of production, I made vast improvements on the draft that came before me. But its still much like doing great work on a losing campaign. All anyone in the general public knows, all anyone in the industry remembers, is the flop. A loss is a loss.”
Way to throw your fellow writers under the bus.
I agree.
This was a great piece and could have been a perfectly classy “sometimes these things just happen and I tried my best” defense without becoming a flagrant “it’s not my fault, it was theirs!” defense.
It still took quite a bit of courage to write this, but with this paragraph in there, there’s a bit of whiny undertone to it that the piece didn’t need and takes away from the bigger impact it could have had.
Same here. This guy is simply trying to shift the blame for the failure. The message is: If only HIS version of the script had made it to the big screen, the movie wouldn’t have been a failure. The whole post is too long, anyway. Looks like he needed lots of pretty words to hide his responsibility in the flop.
Agreed. Was really into the piece until that moment. It was like he couldn’t help but shift blame and/or that was the entire reason behind writing an otherwise great piece.
Totally agree. If he wants to be successful he needs to own the failure totally in his mind. As long as it’s always “someone else’s fault” then it will never work out for him.
Maybe his version WAS better? Has anyone considered that perhaps the other writers should have been thrown under the bus?
That’s exactly where I stopped ready.
“Inspiring” would’ve been my one word comment IF the section you quoted had been edited out.
Completely took me out when he played the “blame game” in an effort to provide excuses for future polishes.
Bummer.
Please stop with the all bus throwing, blame game stuff. It’s silly.
As I said below, anyone with any understanding of the process, knows that these scripts go through interminable tinkering so that the work of previous writers is barely recognizable by the time it gets to the final writer. And then when the film is actually shot/edited, it can yet again become something totally different.
I would imagine EVERY writer feels he’s made vast improvements on what’s handed to him or he shouldn’t be writing.
Hood’s post still rocks – with honesty and insight.
Some writers’ work is only worth being run over by a bus. Not all writers are “victims” of “the system” or “the suits.” There is plenty of bad writing being done by WGA members, and Mr. Hood is entitled to his opinion, as we all are. If the other writers on Conan feel slighted by this article, let them write their own.
The gall with this guy… I happened to have read the first draft that was leaked and it was 10 times better than what I saw on screen. Since he was the guy writing during production blaming the original writers makes absolutely zero sense. His version is what ended up being shot.
I don’t recall reading any whoa-is-me open letters to the industry for the previous turds he worked on that under performed.
What a little baby. If this guy was the Captain of a sinking ship, he’d be stepping over women and children to be first on the lifeboat.
Great way to ingratiate yourself within the film community. Douche.
Do you mean “woe is me”, by any chance?
Who’s the baby?
You seem to whining on behalf of the previous writers. If you had any understanding of the process, you’d know that these scripts go through interminable tinkering so that the work of previous writers is barely recognizable by the time it gets to the final writer. And then when the film is actually shot/edited, it can yet again become something totally different.
I would imagine EVERY writer feels he’s made vast improvements on what’s handed to him or he shouldn’t be writing.
Unfortunately, a lot of very angry and ill-informed people in this comment section.
I am a teacher. There are other teachers on my hallway that teach the same subject. I’ll tell you every time that I do a better job teaching the material than the other guy. Am I correct? I have no idea, but you won’t catch me admitting it if I am not.
I must disagree with a few of you. He didn’t throw anybody under the bus here. He was honest. If the first draft was satisfactory then he would not have been hired to “doctor” it. That is a fact.
Disagree. As a writer, you HAVE to believe your contributions matter, and best the work that came previously – otherwise, where’s your talent? And the sentence “I know that those who have read my Conan shooting script agree that much of the work I did on story and character never made it to screen” is presumably a FACT… and, if so, then he has every right to complain that his work hasn’t been duly handled. It’s a shame Hollywood writers get blamed for the script when half the time, their scripts are butchered or only half-shot.
Jesus people – give this guy a break.
Why in devil are we talking about the writers in the first place? This all ultimately falls to the producers and the director. If he’s a young director that can be pushed around – it’s all on the producer. If he’s a seasoned director that will mostly get his way, well some of the responsibility shifts.
I work this job every day – I’ve been through dev over and again. The writer’s don’t have ultimate say in jack squat!
I’m sure he did massively improve the earlier draft – I’ve read it, it needed work. But it probably needed work partially because the producers wouldn’t listen to the previous guys. And some of this cat’s fine work didn’t end up in the film. Surprise – Surprise.
Some producers know story. They have a good ear. They listen to the talent. Some don’t do or have any of the above.
There’s blame to go all around, but to blame the writers is like blaming the plumber for an ugly building. I’m sorry – that’s the way it is.
Sometimes a writer has to know when to pass – this might have been a good one to let go on down the road, but times is tough and we take what we can get.
Ultimately it was some producer’s responsibility to know this script wasn’t ready. (or to have left it alone when it was) But again, times are tough and if you get a chance to shoot you shoot.
The idea that story isn’t important needs to be stricken from every feeble little brain in Hollywood. Anyone who says it isn’t should be promptly deported to Kansas. There are exceptions, but the very best brands are no replacement for good story – and good story will draw viewers even without big branding.
Learn the lesson folks – screw making “slinky the movie” Make great story – and never blame the writers. They have no control. I’ll be damned if I can remember the last time someone hefted the writers onto their shoulders that last time something was a great success – but they should be.
As for Sean – I say, “class act.” I’m sure he wishes a crystal ball and his bank account would have allowed him to pass on this project. And good luck to all the players on this. May you live to fight another day.
And for the record – I didn’t hate the film. It just didn’t get there. Happens every weekend.
Experience is what we get when we don’t get what we want.
peace – out
Thank you for the inspiration. Your fathers story is quite interesting, inspirational and moving…a story to inspire others.
This was an awesome and honest evaluation. I personally appreciated reading it.
Trek on good sir, we (in my household) have not yet seen Conan yet, my partner however does want to see it on the strength of the trailers alone. This won’t define your career if it’s not a ‘great’ cinematic experience, anyone who devotes so much time and money to make a movie will occasionally make an error or two, it’s the learning from these errors that keeps what we do as writers or actors or any kind of creative career fresh, because we’ll never make these errors again, and grow because of them. When all is said and done, my Mrs still wants to see the film, so that has to count for something.
Wow, way to absolutely pulverize that poor fucking metaphor. No wonder the movie sucked.
Exactly.
Major doucher in DC or Hollywood.
That’s great but as of now I cannot remember the last time a great movie had a major release in theaters, much less a number of great movies. Remakes, super heroes, 3D gimmickry; nothing that is original has captured Hollywood or America’s imagination recently, unless it was on HBO.
Ironically, CONAN was a remake, superhero, and 3D gimmick all rolled into one!
Yes… Ironically… lol.
Actually, a great movie just had a major release – Rise of the Planet of the Apes. The word of mouth on that flick has been excellent. I really enjoyed it.
really inspiring words! Thanks a lot for that. Really made my morning!
btw: your father really is right. Sooner or later hard work does pay off. At least that’s what I experienced. I was looking for a new job in Entertainment Marketing but there was absolutely nothing to get. No job offerings at all ’cause in my country this is a very tiny market. So I started working at some other place – after all you gotta pay your rent. Two weeks later I got a call from one of the top companies in the country offering me the job I always dreamt of.
as someone who works in a creative field, this was quite inspiring, as often ‘you’re only as good as you’re last…’ whatever can seem to hang over your head. really enjoyed reading about his correlation to his father’s job, and how even a trumpet player knows that there are other chances, next times. something that can often be forgotten when an idea/concept gets axed/killed.
I’ll take your word for it that your draft was better than the versions before yours. But maybe it was actually worse.
Wow, Bill, that comment makes the old Hollywood joke that ends in “But first, I have to piss in it” seem startlingly accurate.
Great piece on the pitfalls and priorities of professional artistry. As said by another commenter, writing that just days after a far less than anticipated opening weekend is gutsy, and also quite admirable in comparison to what others in the same straits might say. I hope that all who’ve read and commented also check out the film.
Sean, you’ve written a piece of shit. Accept it and don’t give us excuses.
Brilliantly put.
It also reminds me of one studio exec from years ago who used to say, “Always hire a director after a flop. They will work that much harder to make sure the next one is not”.
Well, that explains how Marcus Nispel remains employed.
Having worked in the movie business myself for over 20 years, as a unit publicist on a number of movies ranging from excellent to godawful, I still vividly remember something the production designer told me on my first movie: “Nobody ever deliberately sets out to make a bad movie”. Often I worked on films whose scripts were quite good. But studio interference resulted in myriads of rewrites during the filming (on pages every color of the rainbow, and often written by someone else than the original script-writer), and the final cut that was released to theaters was a disaster more often than not. I applaud Sean Hood for his courage and integrity in writing the most informative and honest description of the perils of movie-making I have ever read. Since his article on “Conan” is so eloquently written, and the fact that he was only one of the four credited writers (God only knows how many other uncredited scribes toiled on this misbegotten enterprise), it is readily apparent that he is the last person to shoulder the blame for the movie’s disappointing boxoffice returns. Thank you, Mr. Hood, for your unbiased report, and for your reluctance to resort to name-calling or naming names. You are a true gentleman, and I look forward to all of your future projects, whose success you so richly deserve.
How about just saying, ‘You know what? I got this wrong. We all tried hard to make this movie work, but it didn’t and life rolls on…’
To harp on about the trials and tribulations and then, whilst casually dusting your shoulders flip
‘I know that those who have read my Conan shooting script agree that much of the work I did on story and character never made it to screen. I myself know that given the difficulties of rewriting a script in the middle of production, I made vast improvements on the draft that came before me’
is not a particularly class act.
If it runs in the family, I wonder what his dad would have done to other members of the brass section had they hit a bum note?
I applaud this. The produced efforts of any writer is incredibly hard to knock, especially when you’ve done it yourself.
As someone who has written things that I thought would have propelled me to much greater heights… and they didn’t…
Thanks.
It’s nice to read this.
Great piece! Loved it!
As well as being something I was genuinely interested in knowing, it was written with class and honesty. Speaks volume for the writer.
On a side note: Conan previews in my part of the world tonight, and I can’t wait to see it.
>>I’ll take your word for it that your draft was better than the versions before yours. But maybe it was actually worse.
No. Sean’s draft was better. Speaking as a Conan and Robert E. Howard fan, IMHO Sean Hood was in the position of trying to make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear. But he’s too polite to say so.
“I know that those who have read my Conan shooting script agree that much of the work I did on story and character never made it to screen. I myself know that given the difficulties of rewriting a script in the middle of production, I made vast improvements on the draft that came before me.”
Nooooo, he pretty much “said so”!
Good article, but the buck-passing did him no favors.
Actually he did say so.