Author Learning Center
Site
Search
Register and Subscribe
Sign In
Site
Search
Sign In
Marketing
Marketing
Book to Screen
Companies
From Page to Screen: Taking Your Story to Hollywood - podcast
More
Cancel
by Pen Densham
Other Media Types
Article
Video
Related Content
From Page to Screen: Taking Your Story to Hollywood - podcast
Hollywood producers often look to literature for their next big movie. The trick is getting their attention. Pen Densham, Hollywood producer, writer, and director, talks about how to sell your book to Hollywood and the right way to initiate contact with people in the movie industry. He says that how you approach producers and directors is key in selling your book-to-movie idea. If you want people to pay attention, you need to approach them personally and figure out how to translate your project into something that excites them. Find a director you like and whose projects are in the style of your book, and then write them a letter to pitch your book. If you have someone willing to look at your book, you need to manage their perceptions of it, because it’s all about perception. You need to sum up your story in a catchy and appealing way so that the buyer sees it as a financial opportunity. If you can make your project seem like the logical next step in their personal journeys, they’ll definitely take a look at it.
Click here to play this audio clip
fiction
Nonfiction
podcast
Share
More
Cancel
Share this story
Offline
Amanda Evans
Thank you Mr. Densham, Thank you for your comment on humans talking to other humans. I feel I have been blessed by a voice. You said that if you want someone to look at your materials, you need to show them you care. I really do care. I would really love a professional, or someone who knows what they are talking about, like yourself, to guide me along. Having a voice isn't enough, you have to have some extra help. Thank you agian!
Cancel
Up
0
Down
Reply
More
Cancel
Offline
Charlotte Cunningham
Thank you Mr Densham for this good presentation. I published my first memoir called Why? through Xlibris last year. I'm now working on my second book called The long forty years. My hope is that these books will help people that have been abused. I think your presentation has a lot of good information.
Cancel
Up
0
Down
Reply
More
Cancel
Offline
Carlotta Shinn-Russell
Mr. Densham: Your presentation was very informative and insightful for me. My book is very special. I enjoy writing and connecting with people through words. Thank you for explaining and making the process and a more simplified way of getting your book or materials noticed by a producer. We Smoked Our Sisters is written about the South in the 1960's. It is delightfully entertaining and wonderfully intriguing.
Cancel
Up
0
Down
Reply
More
Cancel
Offline
Lori Anzini
Thank you for your insight. Being new in this realm, I'm underwhelmed by the source of information for first time writers. I guess I would say I'm a late bloomer and just striving to get a story out of persistence for a modern day widow. Suggesting on sending to a director of work I like. It might be the direction and advice I need. It's baby steps for me, so I appreciate the information that you have placed here. Thank you.
Cancel
Up
0
Down
Reply
More
Cancel
Offline
jack hattem
Very helpful, but how does one find the addresses one needs? As a former U.S.C. professor, how would I even reach you? I wrote a book about Marilyn Monroes murder, called Marilyn Monroe, Murder By Consent, because I was directly involved in 1962. A novel I just wrote will be out in 2 weeks, called " The Girl Who Couldn't Say No." This is an erotic mystery thriller, written in scenes, as if a movie. Jack V. Hattem, Ph.D
Cancel
Up
0
Down
Reply
More
Cancel
<
>