Screenplay Oscar Hopefuls

lady-in-the-vanBelow are most of the screenplays I found that are vying for an Oscar nomination. Take a quick read, as I don’t know when the links will be pulled.

99 Homes
Story by Ramin Bahrani, Bahareh Azimi
Screenplay by Ramin Bahrani, Amir Naderi

Beasts of No Nation
By Cary Joji Fukunaga
Based on the novel by Uzodinma Iweala

The Big Short
Adaptation by Adam McKay, rewriting Charles Randolph
Based on The Big Short by Michael Lewis

Bridge of Spies
By Matt Charman and Ethan Coen & Joel Coen

Brooklyn
By Nick Hornby
Adapted from the novel by Colm Toibin

Carol
By Phyllis Nagy
Based on the novel The Price of Salt by Patricia Highsmith

Concussion
By Peter Landesman

The Danish Girl
Screenplay by Lucinda Coxon
Based on the novel by David Ebershoff

Danny Collins
By Dan Fogelman

The Diary of a Teenage Girl
Written by Marielle Heller
Based on the graphic novel by Phoebe Gloeckner

The End of the Tour
Screenplay by Donald Margulies
Based on “Although Of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself: A Road Trip with David Foster Wallace” by David Lipsky

Ex Machina
By Alex Garland

Far from the Madding Crowd
By David Nicholls
Based on the novel by Thomas Hardy

Grandma
Written by Paul Weitz

The Hateful Eight
By Quentin Tarantino

I Smile Back
Written by Paige Dylan and Amy Koppelman
Based on the novel I Smile Back by Amy Koppelman

I’ll See You in My Dreams
Written by Brett Haley & Marc Basch

Infinitely Polar Bear
By Maya Forbes

Inside Out
Original story by Pete Docter, Ronnie Del Carmen
Screenplay by Pete Docter, Meg LeFauve, Josh Cooley

The Lady in the Van
Written by Alan Bennett
Based on his memoir

Learning to Drive
By Sarah Kernochan

Legend
Written by Brian Helgeland

Macbeth
Adapted by Jacob Koskoff & Todd Louiso and Michael Lesslie
Based on the play Macbeth by William Shakespeare

The Martian
Written by Drew Goddard
Based on the novel by Andy Weir

Me & Earl & the Dying Girl
Written by Jesse Andrews
Based on the book Me and Earl and the DYing Girl (Harry Abrams, 2012)

Minions
By Brian Lynch

Mississippi Grind
By Anna Boden & Ryan Fleck

Mistress America
Written by Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig

Pawn Sacrifice
Screenplay by Steven Knight
Story by Stephen J Rivele & Christopher Wilkinson and Steven Knight

Remember
By Benjamin A. August

Room
Written by Emma Donoghue
Based on the novel by Emma Donoghue

Slow West
By John Maclean

The Son of Saul
A screenplay by Laszlo Nemes, Clara Royer

Steve Jobs
Screenplay by Aaron Sorkin
Based on the book by Walter Isaacson

Straight Outta Compton
Screenplay by Jonathan Herman and Andrea Berloff
Story by S. Leigh Savidge & Alan Wenkus and Andrea Berloff

Suffragette
Written by Abi Morgan

Testament of Youth
By Juliette Towhidi
Based on the autobiography of Vera Brittain

Trainwreck
By Amy Schumer

Trumbo
Written by John McNamara
Based on the biography by Bruce Cook

Truth
By James Vanderbilt
Based on the Book Truth and Duty by Mary Mapes

While We’re Young
By Noah Baumbach

Woman in Gold
Written by Alexi Kaye Campbell

Youth
Written by Paolo Sorrentino

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

2016At the beginning of every year I like to set a direction for the New Year. My first step in the process is reviewing the previous year. So let’s get started.

Reflecting back on 2015, my 7th year of blogging, I found that the most read posts were not from the current year, but the year I wrote my book – Notes from the Napkin: A Director’s Cut on Filmmaking. That’s not to say my current writings didn’t get a lot of readership, it did. But, the top five most read posts were all written two years ago.

According to the analytics I received, this is the third year in a row that my writing had “staying power.” In other words, what I write would do well in a book that can stand the test of time to some extent. The information or stories are not timely flashes of ideas, but shared thoughts that endure.

There are about 31,000 of you, my dear readers, from 142 countries. You enjoyed all the categories of posts I wrote, but the top two categories were posts on filmmaking and my life experiences. You also passed my posts on to an additional 472,000 unique readers through social media, ezines and republished articles.

These numbers would be hard to grasp if it wasn’t for the encouraging emails I’ve received from so many of you. The personal contact makes all the difference and helps me know who I’m writing to.

Now for 2016…

I’ll take a week or so to figure out what I’ll be writing about this year, but I think it’ll be something I can roll into a book – Just like I did two years ago. And, since the majority of my readers prefer a topic on filmmaking, I’m sure it will have something to do with experiential hands on steps in making a film.

If you have any thoughts on what you’d like me to write about, please make a comment below.

Have a great 2016!

Politically Correct Words Alter Friendships

© apops - Fotolia.comCommunication is critically important in our lives. Every year men attempt to control this powerful tool in order to persuade others to their perspective. For decades journalists told both sides of a story to stop any one person from gaining control over the masses. But with the new millennium came a barrage of politically correct (PC) rules in the name of what is “right” that was accepted blindly by the country.

Freedom of speech, the kind that existed when I was a kid, no longer exists.

If you make a statement today that contrasts the current PC culture, you are bound to receive a barrage of comments “punishing” you for stating something outside of what is “right.” You no longer can voice an opinion that isn’t in agreement with those who are currently in power.

This is most unfortunate, since those who saw life differently than those who were in power birthed our country’s liberation. The cool trends in media also came from those who saw life from a different perspective. In fact, someone who disagreed with our status quo introduced all of our country’s great accomplishments over the past millennium.

This new PC language has since infiltrated our friendships. For decades, a friend was someone you opened your heart to without the fear of rejection. They knew your deepest and darkest secrets, but cast no judgment. You were accepted for who you were and the positive elements of your life were celebrated.

In his book, Consolations: The Solace, Nourishment and Underlying Meaning of Everyday Words, David Whyte explains friendships in this way, “In the course of the years a close friendship will always reveal the shadow in the other as much as ourselves, to remain friends we must know the other and their difficulties and even their sins and encourage the best in them, not through critique but through addressing the better part of them, the leading creative edge of their incarnation, thus subtly discouraging what makes them smaller, less generous, less of themselves.”

The Bible is another resource that recommends the sharing of heartfelt words over PC language. The author suggests that close friends confess their sins to one another and encourage the withholding of judgment since we have all fallen short. Even more verses are aimed at lifting up our friend’s best attributes for God’s glory.

When I was a young teen, my dad loved to promote the best in us kids. He saw my charismatic stage presence and ability to perform illusions as a skill worthy of promoting. During our massive three week driving vacation, to see everything west of the Mississippi, my dad had us visit old friends who had moved away. Every visit was around a great meal, where dad nonchalantly introduced my skills of illusion for the purpose of entertaining his friends.

During that trip I made saltshakers stand on edge, bread rolls float in the air, wedding rings disappear and reappear, and spoons magically bend without anyone touching it. The entertainment value was high for all and I had a lot of fun. Not once did dad point out my faults or shortcomings.

We had a lot of fun during the days when my family was far from being politically correct. I remember a camping trip when we hit a skunk with the car. We had just comeback from a laundry mat with clean clothes in the trunk. Sharing our misery and the skunk’s scent seemed like a fun and humorous idea, so we drove around all of our friend’s campers before retiring for the night. We woke up the next morning and found a sign posted above our camper that read: “Stinky Hollow.”

Our friends and family were always able to laugh off our failures and promote our best attributes before the days of PC language. Today, few friends and family members are willing to risk comments or activities that might be perceived as politically incorrect, creating an atmosphere of hesitation, less sharing, and little revealing of who we really are.

Facebook tends to encourage the same shallowness. Rarely will someone present anything negative about themselves for fear that their next employer might read about it and decide not to hire them. And the positive posts are so pristine that no one can really live on the pedestals of half-truths that they seem to balance on.

Our freedom to speak our mind and reveal our true self was greatly altered by the introduction of PC language. Few people have the guts to buck the system in order to maintain their own personal freedom, especially once its no longer vogue to believe things that are not accepted by those in power.

These choices force us into thinly veiled friendships that are temporary and judgmental. We couch our words instead of boldly stating what we really believe. And, our careful words blind others from seeing our soul, our true self. The real person that we are is sidelined. People only see a manipulated PC projected version of us.

It’s no wonder that there is a growing desire deep inside each of us that longs to be known. We desire to be accepted in spite of our shortcomings. We want to be loved for who we really are, not who we appear to be on the surface. We are significant, but can only shine in a friendship when we let go of what those in power think is “right” and we live based on who we are and what we know is right.

Let’s be real friends.

Copyright © 2015 by CJ Powers