Thursday, April 26, 2007

My Fantastic Four script

This is a script I wrote of the Fantastic Four based on just the
trailer before the movie came out in the Summer of 2005. Just my way of
practicing writing in general, specifically screen writing.

"Fantastic Four"
 
Screenplay by
 
Folarin Osibodu
 
 
(Four astronauts become superheroes after being
contaminated
while in
outer space -- Dr. Reed Richard gets elastic limbs,
Ben Grimm turns to rock,
Sue Storm becomes invisible and Johnny Storm becomes
the Human Torch)
 
A beautiful and well designed, little
futuristic space craft fly’s past the
camera
in space. The 5 astronauts have been
sent to do some repairs in a space station.
 
They get to the beautifully designed station.
Everyone gets in. It lowers them like
the whole room is an elevator while the
underneath opens like a material sheath.
 
Suddenly disaster happens. One of the
astronauts is working on a radiation
device on the outside. A wrong switch
is pushed which triggers a huge cloud
of cosmic storm. 
 
JOHNNY STORM
Ben, get out of there!
 
BEN GRIMM
What?
 
JOHNNY STORM
I said get out there. There’s a problem, the radiation tank is leaking.
I think it’s about to explode. Get out of there now!
 
BEN GRIMM
Oh my God!
 
JOHNNY STORM
He’s not gonna make it!
 
Ben jumps out towards the main deck, floating in space with his space suit
still connected to the oxygen tank in that zone. It is too late. Everyone is
wiped with the radiation in the cosmic storm.
 
The radiation effects are like the effects from Final Fantasy when a person’s
soul is being taken away from him/her. Except in this case, it looks like a
huge flame sweeping through each of the astronauts taking out their
“bio-physical soul”. 
 
Everyone blacks out. They all pass out on the floor. After about 5 minutes,
they wake up, feeling ok and then since the device is now destroyed, they
head back to earth. 
 
Headquarters demands that they take a physical at NASA Care (the hospital).  


 
BEN DISCOVERS
 
That night, while Ben Grimm sleeps, he is wrinkling on his bed. His face
begins to hurt badly. His legs and arms hurt like crazy! It feels like
muscle pull multiplied by 100. Very quickly, his whole body hurts too.
Then his body begins to turn to rock, one big square of block after another.
After a few blocks form all this while screaming, he wakes up. The camera is his POV. 
 
He breaths a heavy sigh of relief and decides to go and get a drink.
He feels quite fatter than before. 
 
Ben Grimm
(Feeling very heavy) Men, Sue was right. I really should lose some of this weight.
 
He opens a door and his shadow is cast on the wall as “The Thing”.
The camera only shows his shadow.
 
Because Ben was the only one that was directly hit by the cosmic storm,
his change into an orange-colored rocky exterior is irreversible.
 
 
(Write scene for when Johnny Storm 1st discovered his power)


 
DINER SCENE WITH SUE STORM AND DR. REED RICHARD
SUE STORM
Look at me.
 
DR. REED RICHARD
I can’t.
 
Reed really can not see her even though she is sitting directly opposite him.
 
SUE STORM

What? What do you mean?
 
DR. REED RICHARD
Where are your hands?
 
Sue accidentally knocks over a bottle on the table. This makes Dr. Reed “stretch”
out his hand to catch it before it hits the ground.
 
 
 


 
HOSPITAL SCENE WITH JOHNNY STORM
 
JOHNNY STORM
Hi, I’m here to see the doctor, I have a high fever.
 
RECEPTIONIST
The doctor will be right with you. You can wait in that room right there.
 
JOHNNY STORM
Thank you.
 
A beautiful middle aged female doctor walks in.
Camera classically focuses on her feet while she enters the room. In slow motion,
moving up her legs until it gets to her face. Camera then cuts in to Johnny
ogling at her.
 
DOCTOR
I assume you are Johnny storm?
 
JOHNNY STORM
You assume correctly doctor.
 
DOCTOR
Okay, let’s see what the problem is Johnny. I’m just going to find out your
temperature.
 
JOHNNY STORM
You can find out anything you want from my body doctor.
 
 
DOCTOR
(Smiles sarcastically)
 
She pulls out a thermometer.
 
DOCTOR
Say ahh.
 
JOHNNY STORM
Ahh
 
She puts it in his mouth while she checks the computer screen for his temperature.
The reading scrolls up to 209oF.
 
DOCTOR
Oh, you’re hot!
 
JOHNNY STORM
Why thank you! So are you.

130 years of Movies in America: The Impact

This is a paper I wrote for an American History class while in college:



130 years of Movies in America:
The Impact
0754
HIST 2020
March 18, 2006


Movies have always played a very important role in our lives since its development in the 1880s. I call it development because somebody did not invent a movie or a ‘movie machine’ in just one day; movie making has been an ongoing research field which began in the 17th century. Since this paper will be written within the timeline between 1877 and the present, I will begin there.
Movie History
In 1877, the Praxinoscope was invented by French inventor Emile Reynaud. The praxinoscope was a projector-like device with a mirrored drum that created the illusion of movement with picture strips1. This was the first movie machine that could project a series of images onto a screen. In 1879, Thomas Edison made the first exhibition of his efficient incandescent light bulb in public which was later used for film projectors2. In 1882, Parisian innovator and physiologist Etienne-Julus Marey was studying, experimenting and recording animals in motion with the aid of photography3. She constructed a photographic gun, also known as a camera that could take 12 photographs/frames per second4. This method was called chronophotography. She also claimed to be the inventor of cinema.
In 1894, Thomas Edison introduced the public to the first practical motion picture camera and the kinetoscope. The Kinetoscope was a device that gave the illusion of movement by moving an endless loop of film continuously over a light source with a rapid shutter5. A researcher at the Edison laboratories called William Kennedy Laurie Dickson invented the modern movie projector.
Cinema is born
In the late 1800’s and the early 1900s, Thomas Edison’s company was one of the major pioneering movie production companies on the East Coast of the United States. He simply called the company the Edison Company.
Edison Company: Edison began producing films for the kinetoscope in 18916.
American Mutoscope Company: was founded in 1895 in New York by Edison’s researcher William K. L. Dickson, Herman Caster, Harry Marvin & Elias Koopman7.
In 1902, filmmaker Georges Melies, who was a former magician introduced innovative visual effects in what can be called the first real science fiction (Sci-Fi) film called, “Le Voyage Dans La Lune” 8.
A famous shot from Le Voyage dans la Lune (A Trip to the Moon)
A movie that made a very huge milestone in early film making history was, “The Great Train Robbery.” It was the first true western film made in 1903. This movie was photographed/ shot and directed by Edison’s leading director, Edwin S. Porter. “The Great Train Robbery” utilized many innovative techniques such as parallel editing, double exposure, composite editing, camera movement and on location shooting9. It was just twelve minutes long but was one of the longest movies ever made up to that time. In the last shot of the movie, a gun was fired in the direction of the camera. This style of ‘shooting’ created a profound effect on the audience because it gave an illusion that they were actually about to be shot dead. Economically, “The Great Train Robbery” established the notion that film and movies could actually be a commercially viable medium.
This leads me to the various parts of peoples lives that movies has been an impact in. The categories are: Social/ Entertainment, Economics and Politics.
Entertainment
In the 1900s movies became a popular attraction in several arcades, wax museums, music halls, traveling fairs, and vaudeville houses.
Nickelodeons
In the early 1900s, people no longer saw motion pictures as just great innovative experiments. People became fond of movies and demanded more of it. They needed and wanted to be entertained by these movies. Various lecture halls and storefronts were then converted into the first real movie theaters called Nickelodeons. The name was derived from the fact that the admission charge was a nickel (five cents). The first nickelodeon in Pittsburgh, PA in June 1905 opened showing “The Great Train Robbery”. Teenagers and young adults went with their dates to the movies. This quickly became an avenue for dating and another medium of expressing romance. Before long, more romantic movies (also known as chick flicks) were made. The demand for more films greatly increased the number of films made. This brought profit to the movie producers.
Economics
Businessmen soon became very interested in the burgeoning movie industry. Some of them were investors, exhibitors and distributors in these new nickelodeons. A few of them were:
  • Adolph Zuler
  • Marcus Loew
  • William Fox (20th Century Fox)
  • Louis B. Mayer (Metro Goldwyn Mayer)
  • Sam Goldwyn (Metro Goldwyn Mayer)
  • The Warner brothers (Warner Brothers/ WB) 10
These businessmen realized that in order to generate more profit, they had to expand the demographics that movies targeted – the middle-class, women and children were now additional targets.
In the 20th century, many filmmakers, both directors and producers had become very wealthy, some even billionaires. Wealthy filmmakers/producers include George Lucas, Steven Spielberg and Jerry Bruckheimer.
George Lucas who is very well known for creating (writing and directing) the Star Wars movies is also known for pioneering the ever expanding field of visual and computer generated effects in movies. With his company called ILM (Industrial Light & Magic), he became very wealthy very quickly. George Lucas at 61 is worth $3.5 billion11.
Steven Spielberg, who is a close friend of Lucas’, has made a large number of movies spanning many genres. He is a visionary when it comes to story telling from any perspective. Steven Spielberg who just released War of the Worlds (sci-fi) and Munich (political thriller), owned a company called DreamWorks SKG. It was recently acquired by Paramount in February 200611. Steven Spielberg who is 59 is worth $2.8 billion dollars12.
The last filmmaker/ producer that I will mention is Jerry Bruckheimer. He has been involved with so many blockbuster hits such as Beverly Hills Cop, Armageddon and Pearl Harbor. He is also involved with producing the hit T.V. show CBS drama CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. All movies, musicals and T.V. shows that he has been involved with have grossed $11 billion to date13.
Hollywood
Filmmakers were lured by the incentives from the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce joined with plenty of sunshine (natural lighting reduced the cost of indoor artificial lighting.) Hollywood became a major movie production area. It was set in Los Angeles, California. The Hollywood sign originally read “Hollywoodland” in the 1920s but it was changed to “Hollywood” in 194914. The sign is located near the top of Mount Lee15.
Politics
In 1912, 15 film companies were in full operation in Hollywood. Large scale studios and production companies were now the norm16. Because of this, nickelodeons were being put out of business and were being replaced by bigger theaters.
In 1913, an anti-trust suit, initiated by William Fox was heard by the U.S. government. The law suit was filed on behalf of the independent film companies such as Universal, Paramount and Fox against the Motion Picture Patents Company. In 1915, the MPPC was declared an illegal monopoly. Damages of over $20 million was ordered and was to be paid by the trust17. In 1918, the MPCC was dissolved18.
In the 21st century, movies became a medium of voicing out political related events such as terrorism. The popular director Michael Moore made documentaries such as Bowling for Columbine (2002) and Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004). Bowling for Columbine presented America’s love for firearms and the pathology of violence in the U.S. Statistics show that the United States has the highest gun-murder rate in the world19.
Fahrenheit 9/11 was an expose that reflected on the events that transpired in America since the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The movie focused on the personal relationship of George W. Bush and the family of infamous terrorist Osama bin Laden. It also touched on the role that oil must have played in the attacks on U.S. soil20.
Conclusion
Movies have always fascinated the general audience all around the world. People want to be entertained, they want to laugh, cry, and feel even closer to those they love. “The movies” is a means of escape for people from their normal and sometimes rigorous lifestyle. Movies have been a mode of expression of filmmakers to tell their stories or the stories of others that have been shut out from mainstream media. We have seen ground breaking visual effects that have left audiences in awe like Pearl Harbor; we have seen movies that caught the attention of so many critics and practically the whole world like The Passion of the Christ. What next will the movies leave us to think about? What new technology will film making develop? Remember movies have only been around for about 130 years…what next?
Bibliography
Dirks, Tim. “Film History by Decade: 100 years of movies,” Film Site, 1996 (19 March 2006)
“Film,” Wikipedia, (19 March 2006).
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California,” Wikipedia, (19 March 2006).
The Great Train Robbery (1903 film),” Wikipedia, (19 March 2006).