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Usenet Posted 19 years ago
Screenwriting

The European Screenwriters' Manifesto

(when you see a ? mark, it should be a 'quote' mark or an apostrophe.) -) Problems with the ISO code used for the apostrophe mark, I think.

The European Screenwriters Manifesto
One hundred and twenty five writers from all over Europe gathered in Thessaloniki, Greece, on the 21st and 22nd November and committed to campaign for the implementation of a manifesto, which defines the role of the screenwriter in the twenty-first century, agreed at the conclusion of the meeting.
Speaking at the opening Wim Wenders, Chairman of the European Film Academy, said that it was important to finally give screenwriters the acknowledgement they deserve.
The Conference, which took place in Thessaloniki on the 21st and 22nd of November, was attended by one hundred and twenty five writers from twenty two different European countries. Issues related to stories, rights and money.
The conference Chairperson and FSE President, writer Christina Kallas said in her opening speech that: ?It is writers who face the blank sheet and conjure out of nothing the stories that captivate the world. Everything else ? producers, directors and distributors ? come later. The writer is a primary creator of the audiovisual work.?
During the opening session Mogens Rukov the writer of ?Festen? said ?We make the story. We should be proud?.
Among the speakers was David Kipen, Director of Literature at the National Endowment for the Arts in the United States and author of ?The Schreiber Theory?, which asserts that American film history can be better understood by concentrating on writers. He summed up the history of American cinema by saying that the first fifty years belonged to the producers, the second to the directors and the next will be for the writers. ?We are historically at a kind of a crossroads?, he concluded, referring to the conference, ?and this is only the warning shot?.
The European Screenwriters? Manifesto was launched at the recent Berlin International Film Festival with the backing of 21 national writers? guilds, including the Writers? Guild of Great Britain. Collectively this represents approximately 9,000 writers across Europe. The Manifesto is a declaration of beliefs about the role of screenwriters and calls on others to recognise their contribution. The Manifesto is an initiative of the Federation of Screenwriters in Europe (FSE) and to show your support you can sign up on the website www.scenarites.org and also to encourage your friends and colleagues in the industry to do so. It is important that all writers sign the manifesto so we would urge you all to do so immediately.
THE EUROPEAN WRITERS? MANIFESTO
Stories are at the heart of humanity and are the repository of our diverse cultural heritage. They are told, retold and reinterpreted for new times by storytellers. Screenwriters are the storytellers of our time.
European writing talent should be trusted, encouraged and supported. The European film industries need to find ways to attract and keep its screenwriters in the cinema and in their craft.
We assert that:
1. The screenwriter is an author of the film, a primary creator of theaudiovisual work.
2. The indiscriminate use of the possessory credit is unacceptable.
3. The moral rights of the screenwriter, especially the right tomaintain the integrity of a work and to protect it from any distortion or misuse should be inalienable and should be fully honoured in practice.
4. The screenwriter should receive fair payment for every form ofexploitation of his work.
5. As author, the screenwriter should be entitled to an involvement inthe production process as well as in the promotion of the film and to be compensated for such work. As author, he should be named in any publication accordingly, including festival catalogues, TV listing magazines and reviews.
We call on:
6. National governments and funding agencies to support screenwriters byfocusing more energy and resources, whether in form of subsidy, tax breaks or investment schemes, on the development stage of film and television production and by funding writers directly.
7. Scholars and film critics to acknowledge the role of screenwriters,and universities, academies and training programs to educate the next generations in accordance to the collaborative art of the medium and with respect toward the art and craft of screenwriting.
8. Festivals, film museums and other institutions to name thescreenwriters in their programs and plan and screen film tributes to screenwriters just as they do to directors, actors and countries.
9. National and European law should acknowledge that the writer is anauthor of the film.
10. National and European law should ensure that screenwriters canorganize, negotiate and contract collectively, in order to encourage and maintain the distinct cultural identities of each country and to seek means to facilitate the free movement of writers in and between all nations.
We will:
? Distribute this manifesto to industry members and the press in our respective countries.
? Campaign for the implementation of the agenda defined by this manifesto.
? Seek the transition into national and European law of the legal changes demanded by this manifesto.
Chairperson and FSE President, writer Christina Kallas said,
?What we tried to do by naming it the Manifesto is to challenge the international film community and to start a discussion about what has gone wrong and how we could set it right. It is a step in our campaign to give the writer her rightful place, as in the theatre and indeed in any other form of writing.
The Manifesto is also a political document that demands a much more favourable working environment for screenwriters regarding state aid and investment schemes for film funding, the equitable remuneration of screenwriters and political demand to the European Union to acknowledge that the writer is an author of the film. It is therefore extremely important that it should be signed personally by as many screenwriters as possible but also by other colleague writers and filmmakers all over the world.
The manifesto has been widely acclaimed and has been, without any prompting from the FSE, translated into a whole host of languages including Spanish, German, Dutch, Icelandic, Greek, and Norwegian. It has also been favourably received and supported by screenwriters and other filmmakers outside Europe, namely Canada, Argentina, Mexico, Australia and it is now reaching the US.
FSE is asking writers guilds around the world to present and distribute the manifesto to all its members and to use it as a tool to develop and enhance the status of screenwriters.?
  

Top answer

Interesting manifesto. Thanks for posting it. My comments on it.

  • Interesting manifesto.
  • Thanks for posting it.
  • My comments on it.
  • [nq:1]We assert that: 1.
  • " Sometimes, it's the director.
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11 Answers
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Interesting manifesto. Thanks for posting it. My comments on it.
[nq:1]We assert that: 1. The screenwriter is an author of the film, a primary creator of the audiovisual work.[/nq]
I don't think there's any single job on a film where you can consistently fill in the blank in this sentence with any accuracy:

"The is the author of the film."
Sometimes, it's the director. Someti
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[nq:1](when you see a ? mark, it should be a 'quote' mark or an apostrophe.) :-) Problems with the ... manifesto to all its members and to use it as a tool to develop and enhance the status of screenwriters.?[/nq]
How precisely can any manifesto enhance the status of screenwriters? The overwhelming majority of moviegoers don't even know that screenwriters even exist. Most of them are barely ev
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[nq:1]How precisely can any manifesto enhance the status of screenwriters? The overwhelming majority of moviegoers don't even know that screenwriters ... it's got to be this writer for our project. No one else will do? I'm not holding my breath. NMS[/nq]
Yet there have been some screenwriters who were "brands." Joe Eszterhas had it for a while, then blew it. Paddy Chayefski had it, even though
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[nq:1]Yet there have been some screenwriters who were "brands." Joe Eszterhas had it for a while, then blew it. Paddy ... any of their names at the moment. Women! Anyway, there are a few screenwriters who rise to the public's consciousness.[/nq]
I think you're being way optimistic.
Do you think 1% of the non-Hollywood population could tell you who Paddy Chayefski is? Same with Dalton Trumb
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[nq:1]How precisely can any manifesto enhance the status of screenwriters? The overwhelming majority of moviegoers don't even know that screenwriters ... like Steven Spielberg or George Lucas or Spike Lee. For most people, it's about the stars and about the movie.[/nq]
Well, yes and no... Since my last post, I've watched the evening news to see if any tornadoes are expected as part of tonight'
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[nq:1]There are people like Coppola and Lucas who think of themselves as writers. Though he is a television writer, Gene Rodenberry still draws audiences by his name alone. Rod Serling falls in the same category. So maybe television *is* the friendlier medium for writers.[/nq]
Does Gene Rodenberry draw an audience ... or does the brand "Star Trek?"

Similarly with Lucas and "Star Wars.
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[nq:1]How precisely can any manifesto enhance the status of screenwriters? The overwhelming majority of moviegoers don't even know that screenwriters ... like Steven Spielberg or George Lucas or Spike Lee. For most people, it's about the stars and about the movie.[/nq]
Well, yes and no... Since my last post, I've watched the evening news to see if any tornadoes are expected as part of tonight'
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[nq:1]And therein lies the answer to the screenwriter's dilemma. If you are a screenwriter and you want to be a brand name, you must become a hyphenate. It's the only way to steer your own ship.[/nq]
Can I become a screenwriter-pirate? I love the puffy shirts.
jaybee
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[nq:1]Seems like a lot of people have heard of Charlie Kaufman. Maybe some people would go if the film was ... John Malkavich and the The Eternal Sunshine...' I feel like I've heard that in a trailer, but could be wrong.[/nq]
I think you're right, actually ... I think he might be a brand name right now.
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[nq:1]Yet there have been some screenwriters who were "brands." Joe Eszterhas had it for a while, then blew it. Paddy Chayefski had it,[/nq]
To that list you should add Charlie Kaufman. I am much more likely to go out of my way to see "Synecdoche, New York" when it comes out because it's a Charlie Kaufman written film, than because Michelle Williams, Samantha Morton or Philip Seymour Hoffman a

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