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Rock, Paper, Peace
PART 1: DEVELOPING A CONCEPT
Updated Oct. 12, 2003

Monday, 9 a.m. Nearly 70 students of IFB #1 convene for the first time in Zable Hall to address the vital first step of making a movie, development. Our goal: Produce a quality short film that will satisfy a specific objective, and that we can shoot entirely on the AIU campus. Producer Stan Foster assigns the students the role of co-producer, with the aim of the session being to recognize what assets are available to the production, identify our limitations and determine how best to exploit them to our benefit. The biggest challenge? Coming up with a meaningful story that can be written and polished in three days, then shot in two days beginning on Friday.

Director Michael Steven Gregory (MSG) leads the group in a brain-storming session that results in the broad story beats that screenwriter Anna Gilson will receive at 3 p.m. Her assignment is to write a first draft of the screenplay, based on the beats, and turn it around by no later than 1 p.m. Tuesday for breakdown and review. The working title is Rock, Paper, Peace. Rewrites are slated for Wednesday and Thursday.

CRAFTING THE SCRIPT

At noon on Tuesday, the first draft of the script is turned in and the response is overwhelmingly positive. With the writer having hit the mark dead-on so fast, the production is a full day ahead of schedule. Any rewrites will be dictated by cast availability, locations, and scheduling necessity as we move into the pre-production phase.

Beyond minor tweaks and compressing the opening sequence, one change quickly factors into the script resulting from the discovery of a subterranian tunnel on campus. Too cool and visual not to use, one of the scenes is immediately relocated to take advantage of it.

Moving into pre-production, casting and an ellusive location will result in a rewrite that never even reached the page, yet served to elevate the material still another notch.

<< B A C K    II    N E X T >>

[ PRODUCTION PHOTOS ]..

 
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<< B A C K    II    N E X T >>
MSG and Stan Foster MSG and nearly 70 "co-producers" work out the story beats for the movie that will become ROCK, PAPER, PEACE.

read First Draft
Read the First Draft
<< HERE

Read the Final Draft
HERE >>

read Final Draft

First Draft of the script arrives. Sound Recordist George Marshall digs it . . . George and Tom diggin' the script . . . as does our Director of Photography (DP) Tom Jewett.

Tom sees the light and gets an idea – the first to be incorporated into the script rewrite. Tom gets an idea

[L to R]
Ross Kallen,
Stan Foster, and Hope R. Goodwin.
Ross Kallen Stan and Hope
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Max getting a lesson from George.
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A student gets a lesson from George.
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Tom & MSG on the roof, where the first setup of the "money shot" will be. Tom gets an idea
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Final Draft
American Academy of Arts
Alliant International University

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