2011 Black List Scripts Pdf
The Top Unproduced Screenplays of the year has been released. The best unproduced screenplays from The Black List 2011 is compiled by votes from over 300 “execs, agency guys, and high-level assistants.
Dec 5, 2017 - BIOGRAPHY Imran's first screenplay JURASSIC PARK was included on the 2011 Black List and is NOT about dinosaurs being brought back to life. Since then, he has honed his craft by writing numerous scripts that raise no trademark infringement issues whatsoever, including work for Paramount Pictures. Jan 19, 2018 - Shutterstock and released this year's, a ranking of the best-loved unproduced movies culled from over 500 of film executives' favorite screenplays of the year. Crack Extendsim 8. Since 2005, over 275 Black List scripts have been made into movies grossing over $24 billion and earning 196 Oscar nominations and 37 wins.
Titled The Black List, the compendium highlights both established screenwriters and up-and-comers, and has served as a launching pad in the past for projects like Juno, Lars and the Real Girl, and (500) Days of Summer. Last year’s list included, Crazy, Stupid, Love,, and.” Regarding the validity of The Black List, things to keep in mind: some of these screenplays have already been acquired and are already in development, thoughnone will have entered principal photography by December 31, 2011. Also worth pointing out is that, as in previous years, there have been rumors that some of the participants have been accused of using the Black List to promote their own clients or friends. Finally,“The Black List is not a ‘best of’ list.
It is, at best, a ‘most liked’ list. This year, scripts had to receive at least six mentions to be included on the The Black List. The full 2011 Black List of unproduced screenplays is below. 133 votes: “The Imitation Game” by Graham Moore The story of British World War II cryptographer Alan Turing, who broke several German codes but in later life was prosecuted for being homosexual, which led to his suicide. Agent: Creative Artists Agency — J.P. Evans, Jacqueline Sacerio Manager:The Safran Co.
— Tom Drumm Producers: Ido Ostrowsky, Nora Grossman producing for Warner Bros. 84 votes: “When the Street Lights Go” by Chris Hutton, Eddie O’Keefe In the early 1980s, a town suffers through the aftermath of the murder of a high school girl and a teacher. Agency: WME — Simon Faber, Sarah Self Manager: Tariq Merhab Management — Tariq Merhab Producers: Imagine Entertainment 59 votes: “Chewie” by Evan Susser, Van Robichaux A satirical, behind-the-scenes look at the making of “Stars Wars” through the eyes of Peter Mayhew, who played Chewbacca. Agency: WME — Mike Esola Manager: Industry Entertainment — Jess Rosenthal 53 votes: “The Outsider” by Andrew Baldwin In post-World War II Japan, an American former prisoner of war rises in the yakuza. Agency: Creative Artists Agency — Jay Baker, John Garvey Manager: Anonymous Content — Bard Dorros, David Kanter Producers: Linson Entertainment for Warner Bros. 43 votes: “Father Daughter Time: A Tale of Armed Robbery and Eskimo Kisses” by Matthew Aldrich A man goes on a three-state crime spree with an accomplice, his 11-year old daughter.
Agency: Creative Artists Agency: John Garvey, Stuart Manashil Manager: Silent R Management: Jewerl Ross Producers: Pearl Street Productions production for Warner Bros. 33 votes: “In the Event of a Moon Disaster” by Mike Jones An alternate telling of the historic Apollo 11 mission to the moon that examines what might have happened if the astronauts had crash-landed there. Agency: Creative Artists Agency: David Kopple, JP Evans Manager: The Gotham Group: Lindsay Williams Producer: FilmNation 30 votes: “Maggie” by John Scott 3 As a “walking dead” virus spreads across the country, a farm family helps their eldest daughter come to terms with her infection as she slowly becomes a flesh-eating zombie. Agency: Creative Artists Agency: Billy Hawkins, Dan Rabinow Manager: Trevor Kaufman Producer: Pierre-Ange Le Pogam 30 votes: “The Current War” by Michael Mitnick Based on the true story of the race between Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse to develop a practical system of electricity and sell their respective inventions to the country and the world. Agency: William Morris Endeavor — Simon Faber Manager: Fourth Floor Productions — Jeff Silver 28 votes: “The End” by Aron Eli Coleite Four people — a veteran broadcaster in London, a 16-year-old girl and her boyfriend in Ann Arbor, Mich., and a devoted family man in Shanghai — each try to make peace with their lives before an interstellar event ends the world in six hours. Agency: Creative Artists Agency — Matt Rosen Producer: Warner Bros.
27 votes: “Beyond the Pale” by Chad Feehan Based on William Gay’s novel “Twilight,” teenage siblings suspect they’ve been ripped off by the town undertaker, but what they discover is much more sinister. Agency: Creative Artists Agency — Matt Rosen, Jacqueline Sacerio Manager: Management 360 — Guymon Casady, Mary Lee Producers: Feehan’s The Fort producing for Vendome Pictures 27 votes: “Ezekiel Moss” by Keith Bunin A mysterious stranger who possibly has the power to channel the souls of the dead changes the lives of everyone in a small Nebraska town, especially a young widow and her 11-year-old son. Agency: Creative Artists Agency — Rowena Arguelles Manager: Kaplan/Perrone — Alex Lerner, Sean Perrone Producers: A Likely Story and Mandalay Pictures 24 votes: “Grace of Monaco” by Arash Amel Grace Kelly, age 33, has given up her acting career to focus on being a full-time princess. She uses her political maneuvering behind the scenes to save Monaco while French leader Charles De Gaulle and Monaco’s Prince Rainer III are at odds over Monaco’s standing as a tax haven.