Write On: 'Abraham's Boys' Writer/Director Natasha Kermani

Write On: 'Abraham's Boys' Writer/Director Natasha Kermani

"Vampires hold incredible destructive power, and so we're very drawn to them, sort of like moths to a candle, right? I think that's sort of eternal, and that's the reason every culture, pretty much around the globe has some version of the vampire because it represents that very human conflict of what we desire which is so in tune with and aligned to things that can also destroy us. That just feels very honest and eternal, so I don't think [vampires] will ever go away. I think they will be an eternal part of our mythologies," says writer/director Natasha Kermani, about the everlasting appeal of vampires on film.

On today's episode, we chat with Natasha Kermani about her new movie Abraham's Boys that extends the world of Dracula into a psychological family drama with its own chills and thrills. The movie centers on brothers Max (Brady Hepner) and Rudy (Judah Mackey) Van Helsing, who have spent their lives under the strict rule of their father, Abraham Van Helsing (Titus Welliver). Unaware of their father's dark past as a vampire hunter, they struggle to understand his paranoia and increasingly erratic behavior. But when the brothers begin to uncover the violent truths behind Abraham's history with Dracula, their world unravels, forcing them to confront the terrifying family legacy.

Kermani talks about adapting the Joe Hill short story of the same name, shares tips for structuring a short story into a feature film, and ways a writer can bring a classic monster story like Dracula into a modern setting.

"I think it's about examining our world through an eternal lens of these mythologies that don't change. Power dynamics. Authority. Submission. These are eternal. So the question is, if you take that structure, and apply it to our world, how do things fall into place? And when you can start to look at the world around us through that lens, I think you start to get really interesting, truthful stories because you're not trying to come up with a new structure, or a new classic. You are obeying the laws of how our brains work and how our stories work.

"I think it's a question of, 'What are the things that you desire, but also fear? What are you drawn to, like a moth to flame?' For me, with Abraham's Boys, it's that we're so drawn to the idea of someone coming to you and saying, 'I know what the monsters are, I know what the heroes are. Follow me and you'll be safe.' That's very dangerous," says Kermani.

To hear more, listen to the podcast.

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Write On: Showrunner Chris Black on 'Monarch: Legacy of Monsters'

Write On: Showrunner Chris Black on 'Monarch: Legacy of Monsters'

Final Draft's Write On podcast sits down with Showrunner Chris Black to talk about his new show, Monarch: Legacy of Monsters. "For it to be successful as a TV series, it couldn't be a show about monsters. It had to be a show about people who happen to live in a world where monsters are real," Black says when describing what it was like to pitch the show to Apple TV. Monarch: Legacy of Monsters picks up the "monsterverse" story after the battle between Godzilla and the Titans and follows one family's journey to uncover secrets about their history linking them to Monarch. Known for his work on Apple's mind-boggling workplace drama Severance, Black knows what it takes to make a successful TV series. Listen to our podcast to find out more on how to expand a universe, writing for monsters and creating new characters. Monarch: Legacy of Monsters premieres on Apple TV+ on November 17.

20 Marras 202329min

Write On: 'Rustin' Writer Julian Breece

Write On: 'Rustin' Writer Julian Breece

"Be sneaky and read every script that you can get your hands on. If you can work in a studio, read the original draft, read the revisions, see how the script got to the final script. That's what I was doing. I would use the opportunities of working in that system to learn," says screenwriter Julian Breece on Final Draft's Write On Podcast. Julian, along with Dustin Lance Black, wrote Rustin, the new biopic about little-known civil rights activist Bayard Rustin, played exquisitely by actor Colman Domingo. Rustin, alongside Martin Luther King, helped make the 1963 March on Washington a pivotal moment in the Civil Rights Movement, while dealing with racism and homophobia as an out gay Black man in the 1960s. Julian shares his inspiration for writing the film, Bayard Rustin's belief in non-violent civil disobedience and what it was like working with Ava DuVernay on the Netflix series When They See Us. Julian also talks about sneaking his own scripts into the reading pile while he was working at Disney and other risks he took to help jumpstart his career. Take a listen to the podcast to see what you can learn from Justin's journey.

13 Marras 202329min

Write On: 'The Holdovers' Writer David Hemingson

Write On: 'The Holdovers' Writer David Hemingson

Director Alexander Payne's new film The Holdovers, is set in the 1970s and tells the story of a grumpy ancient history instructor (Paul Giamatti) at a New England prep school who's forced to remain on campus during the Christmas break to babysit the handful of students with nowhere to go. Eventually, he forms an unlikely bond with one of the students, an oddball troublemaker (Dominic Sessa), and the school's cafeteria lady (Da'Vine Joy Randolph), whose son was recently killed in Vietnam. We speak to screenwriter David Hemingson about getting a very unexpected call from Alexander Payne (which at first he thought was a prank!) asking him to write the screenplay after reading one of his original TV pilots. Hemingson talks about his journey to craft just the right characters for the story, how to make their arcs feel authentic and give them meaningful, emotional lives. "The movie is a love story. I wanted these people to fall in love and do right by each other. Different people, from very different backgrounds with different problems and histories but they find a way, almost impossibly, certainly improbably, to come together over this small period and fall in love with each other and kind of save each other. I want to believe that's possible," says Hemingson. He also talks about bringing his own personal experience to the story even when it's emotionally challenging. "I need to get to the place where I am very heartbroken about what's happening on the page and really feeling it. There's an honesty to it," he says. To go deeper into the screenplay, take a listen to the podcast.

10 Marras 202330min

Write On: 'It's a Wonderful Knife' Writer Michael Kennedy

Write On: 'It's a Wonderful Knife' Writer Michael Kennedy

One year after saving the town of Angel Falls from a psychotic killer on Christmas Eve, Winnie Carruthers (Jane Widdop) can't let the fear and guilt of the event go. Struggling to make sense if her life, she wishes she'd never been born – only to find herself in a nightmare parallel universe. The film is a mash up of the Christmas classic It's a Wonderful Life and Scream. On this episode, I speak to screenwriter/producer Michael Kennedy about using a classic Christmas movie as inspiration for a slasher horror/comedy film. We also talk about the importance of queer representation in the horror genre. "I wanted to give this a cornucopia of vastly different types of representation in the movie, but I also didn't want for that to be what the movie is about. I wanted it to be just matter of fact. For me, if I can make a movie where seven of the characters are gay, then I should do that!" says Kennedy. He went on to say that the quest for queer representation in Hollywood has been slow, but those who want to see it need to speak up. "It is satisfying as a producer to see that a lot of the change and stuff in this industry can happen if you just ask for it. Sometimes, you won't be in the position to be able to do that and I really bided my time with that, so I'm really fortunate. It was great to not only ask for what I wanted but also get it," he says. For a deeper dive into the screenplay, take a listen to the podcast.

8 Marras 202334min

Write On: 'The Morning Show' Showrunner Charlotte Stoudt

Write On: 'The Morning Show' Showrunner Charlotte Stoudt

Season 3 of The Morning Show is now streaming on Apple TV+. With some of the most engaging actors working in television (Jennifer Anniston, Reese Witherspoon, Billy Crudup and Nicole Beharie), showrunner Charlotte Stoudt talks with us about some of the most shocking and groundbreaking scenes that are meant to blow your mind this season. This dramaturge-turned-showrunner, Stoudt's love of working with other writers is palpable. "The delight of sharing a story space with other writers is one of the great joys of this job. I never get tired of sitting across from a writer and having them say, 'What if we did this?' It's like a Christmas present every day," Stoudt says. Stoudt also gives her advice on what to include in a spec script, no matter what kind of writing job you're up for. "The best writing samples give some insight and truth about what it means to be alive. That can take any form – comedy, sci-fi ­– I don't think the genre matters if you're able to put something of your most primal self on the page. There has to be something that's alive inside of you, that hooks you and makes you go, 'Who is this person telling this story?'" To hear more about the challenges and delights of running The Morning Show, take a listen to the podcast.

6 Marras 202335min

Write On: 'Nyad' Writer Julia Cox

Write On: 'Nyad' Writer Julia Cox

The new film Nyad tells the true story of athlete Diana Nyad (Annette Benning) who, at the age of 60 and with the help of her best friend and coach Bonnie (Jody Foster), commits to achieving her life-long dream: a 110-mile open ocean swim from Cuba to Florida. We talk to screenwriter Julia Cox about what it was like getting to know the real Diana Nyad, structuring the screenplay to create a satisfying sports movie and creating one of the most daunting physical antagonists on the page: the ocean. "I did think of the ocean as the mother of all antagonists and I tried to structure the screenplay so it didn't feel too episodic, really focusing on a different obstacle with each attempt [to swim from Cuba to Florida]. In real life, there are sometimes two or three reasons why something happens or doesn't happen, but in a screenplay, you have the impulse to distill it down and confront each obstacle with enough attention to make that feel tense and satisfying when she overcomes it," Cox says. Cox also discusses how this story didn't fit into typical sports movie tropes. "It's an unconventional sports movie in that she doesn't have an opponent. We get a whiff of other people attempting to do the same thing and that creates some tension, but for the most part this is about one woman in the sea, supported by her team but competing against herself. So along with the ocean, her obstacle was often her own body and her own mind and when all these things were aligned, when she made peace about continuing to try, when the elements were working for her, that's when she was able to make it." For a deeper dive into the screenplay, take a listen to the podcast.

6 Marras 202341min

Write On: 'Anatomy of a Fall' Writer/Director Justine Triet

Write On: 'Anatomy of a Fall' Writer/Director Justine Triet

"Starting to write a project like this, we always begin with a set of very strong personal desires," says Anatomy of a Fall writer/director Justine Triet, adding, "I'm quite reticent of scripts that are too clever or that clearly have the intension of disseminating things where information or the person disseminating information has the upper hand over my ability to navigate the narrative." The new film Anatomy of a Fall won the Palme d'Or at the recent Cannes Film Festival and could be called Anatomy of a Marriage – at least one that ends in a mysterious tragedy. Set in a remote village in the French Alps – perhaps reminiscent of the hotel in The Shining, frustrated writer Samuel (Samuel Theis), is found dead in the snow beneath his family's chalet and his wife Sandra (Sandra Hüller), becomes the number one suspect in his suspicious death. In this shocking family drama that moves into a chaotic courtroom, the verdict comes down to the couple's 11-year-old blind son's gut-wrenching testimony. Directed by Justine Triet from a script written by Triet and her own life-partner Arthur Harari, Triet talks about writing the film from an emotional place and not relying on structure or over-used devices like flashbacks to create a deeper sense of mystery. This film is the best lesson on how to tell a character-driven murder mystery – while keeping the audience guessing – I've seen in a long time! Listen to the podcast to go deeper into how Triet crafted the story.

2 Marras 202319min

Write On: 'Suitable Flesh' Writer Dennis Paoli

Write On: 'Suitable Flesh' Writer Dennis Paoli

"I'm not happy with a script unless I can look through it and find at least five or six pages where there's no dialogue – where the story tells itself through imagery," says horror screenwriter Dennis Paoli. Feeling strongly that the screenwriter's job is to help the director see their vision for the scenes and characters, he says that instead of writing shot-by-shot, he writes, "Visual by visual. I try to give the important visuals that are inherent in that scene that help tell the story." Famous for writing the cult-classic body-horror film Re-Animator from 1985, Paoli has a new film called Suitable Flesh starring Heather Graham and Barbara Crampton just in time for Halloween. In Final Draft's Write On podcast we talk about the importance of a screenwriter embracing visual storytelling on the page and discuss the challenges of reinterpreting H.P. Lovecraft's story The Thing on the Doorstep to create two bewitching female leads. Listen to the podcast to hear more about Paoli's long working partnership with the late Stuart Gordon (director of Re-Animator), making the "Miskatonic-verse" feel fresh and modern, and planting Easter eggs in the new movie.

27 Loka 202337min