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How The Movie Nerve Can Inspire You To Lead A More Exciting Life

Posted on November 5, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

Nerve movie poster
Image via Collider.

Sometimes, you just feel stuck. Whether it’s being stuck in your comfort zone because of elements out of your control or failing to take risks due to practical reasons, it’s a horrible feeling. You don’t want your life to be any less exciting the movie characters’ you’re watching, though you (probably) want slightly less danger.

The fun drama thriller Nerve (2016) dares its characters to take crazy risks you’d probably never do.

A bit on Nerve starring Dave Franco and Emma Roberts

Vee (Emma Roberts) is a high school senior, a talented photographer and unwilling to take risks. She’s delayed telling her mother (Juliette Lewis) she was accepted to CalArt, partly because they’re both still recovering from the death of her older brother.

But when her popular and overtly extroverted best friend Sydney inadvertently embarrasses her to her crush, Vee decides to play Nerve, a popular interactive game where watchers pay to dare players to do all sort of things, from relatively harmless to potentially lethal. Her first dare has her kissing a stranger (Dave Franco) for 5 seconds. That cute stranger, Ian, turns out to be a Nerve player as well, and watchers love them together.

As they start taking challenges together, their attraction grows more intense. But is Ian really a great catch that’s genuinely into Vee, or does he have ulterior motives like Vee’s other best friend Tommy thinks?

Nerve is a fun ride that entertains more than makes you think

Don’t get me wrong. I loved Nerve. And it did make me think. But there is so much compelling social commentary that can be done with a PG-13 rating. And it is okay. If you want to think and get depressed about what people and technology have come to, you can always watch any Black Mirror episode. So far, I’ve watched the first season (the first 3 episodes), and I plan to skip season 2 altogether.

Nerve isn’t a depressing movie. It’s also strangely romantic, and if you take away the right lessons, it will inspire you to have a life that will give you plenty to write about.

Why This Writer Is Feeling Stuck

Now as writers, our lives are rarely devoid of drama. A lot of us are prone to mood swings even if we are not combating a mental condition. The potential economic instability (known as the feast or famine cycle) of freelancing, the hatred of our day job if we are not freelancing, the obligation to multitask and the feeling that we’re not doing enough for our careers, health problems like chronic illnesses, writing disabilities or just annoyingly weak immune systems that give us long-lasting colds every two weeks… How can we not be emotional?

How can we not get frustrated?

We all have obstacles that get in our way, some of them harder than others. And even though we know better, sometimes we say stuff like “I wish something would happen in my life already.”

Like you already haven’t endured disappointment, heartbreak, depression, illnesses, failures, rejections, grief, …. on the negative side.

Or you haven’t already experienced tremendous lust for life, exciting crushes, a thousand travel stories, unique adventures and occurrences on the positive.

Sometimes you just hit a rut. And whatever the reason, the rut feels like it has been there forever when it wasn’t just last week, or month or year.

So you start comparing yourself to the narrators of your favorite personal essays, characters from the movies and novels and TV series and maybe sometimes even your friends.

Let’s face it; you’re not in Amsterdam taking beautiful shot after beautiful shot. You’re struggling to cobble of two words or ideas together. You haven’t sold a piece in what feels like forever whereas your blogger friends seem to be at the height of their productivity and success. Their lives are filled with excitement and surprise and spontaneity.

Yours feels just…the same.

Because you forgot about that two beautiful vacations you took in the summer or the awesome musical you just saw last week. Instead of feeling like you can take over the world, you feel like the world has taken over you.

But then you stumble upon a piece of writing that speaks to you. You watch a film that motivates you. The film was Nerve.

For me, that piece of writing was my friend Olga Mecking’s blog post WHY THE BEST STORIES ARE THE WORST where she reminds us how great characters, characters we want to read about, are always in big trouble. And the great storytellers have compelling real life material they derive from.

Sure, you are looking forward to the new war thriller Allied starring Brad Pitt and Marion Cotillard, but there’s no way in hell you want to be a spy during Word War II. You may want to kiss a hot stranger for five seconds, but you’d never lead him as he sped up to 60 miles an hour on his motorcycle blindfolded.

Then you remember that your friend’s Amsterdam photos are taken on a post-divorce trip. And while you’d want to be aboard, you would not want to be going through a divorce. Or that you’d have never wanted to marry the guy she was with. When they were together, their relationship was the stuff of nightmares. Not dreams. You feel bad for feeling envious of that trip. You apologize silently and wish her the best of luck.

*

Sometimes boring is good. It’s better than catastrophe. It gives you time to collect on what’s happened, and what you want to happen. It teaches you to procrastinate less when you are healthy because you have only so much time when things are going your way.

You also remember that while you might be going through a rut, your life hasn’t been boring. You wish you had less drama. But hey, you already suffered an education system that treated you like a racehorse and made medical mistakes to continue the race.

You suffered, but not without getting some trophies and learning your lessons. You were never going to live by somebody else’s rules again as much as you could possibly help it.

That’s why you are freelancing. Because even when it seems like a rut, things are still more exciting than they could ever be if you held a job that went against your very nature.

Even boring is good, when you get to call most of the shots.

*

Watch Nerve. Read Olga’s post. Dare to do something different. But don’t mistake your temporary rut with other people’s lifelong ones.

Write on! (This post contains an affiliate link.)

 

 

Filed Under: Inspiration and Motivation, Writing Tagged With: dave franco, emma roberts, freelancing, freelancing inspiration, freelancing life, nerve, nerve movie, writing inspiration, writing life

Behind Closed Doors by B A Paris: Book Review for A Gripping Psychological Thriller

Posted on October 17, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

Behind Closed Doors
Image via yahoo.

On the surface, Grace and Jack are the perfect married couple. They adore each other, and they are always together. Jack is an accomplished lawyer who has never lost a case, and Grace is the perfect housekeeper. They are rich, beautiful and in love.

Grace wishes.

In reality, they are always together because Jack doesn’t allow Grace out of his sight. She doesn’t have her own cell phone. She doesn’t have her own e-mail address. She almost has no opportunity to send anyone a message, to tell the truth about Jack. Almost…

Luckily for her, her sister with Down Syndrome is a lot smarter than people give her credit for. And one of the couple’s new friends, Esther, is very skeptical about perfection…

*

Behind Closed Doors is a first person narrative told mostly in present tense. It constantly goes between back and forth between the present and the past (one present chapter followed by a chapter about the recent past), so that we find about what Grace is doing now to survive and escape, and why and *how she got herself in this situation in the first place. (*More on this in a bit, but there will be spoilers.)

Jack might be a smart psychopath with the perfect image, but Grace is resilient, smart and she has one very important thing to lose.

Jack is a formidable villain that is not to be underestimated. But he has gotten cocky with how much he has gotten away with, and Grace is too determined to let him win.

Spouses make the best villains. They have access to everything, and this leads to breath-taking claustrophobia.

Of course, we are on Grace’s side, impatient for her to hopefully give Jack what he deserves. But at the same time, we just don’t want the book to finish.

I finished the book the day I bought it and regretted it immediately. So I’m reading it again. It is that good.

*How Grace Got Here (Spoilers, you might want to skip this bit):

I won’t spoil the ending, but it should be noted that Jack didn’t just overpower and kidnap Grace. He seduced her, used her one big weakness against her and he showed his true colors only after they got married.

Now, I said “how Grace got herself in this mess.” I’m not victim-blaming, but she definitely made things too easy for Jack: She depended on him financially by taking his word. She married him after only three months. She quit her job because he wanted it that way. She had sex with him only once. I can go on, but Grace and Jack’s relationship will also be featured in one or two other posts.

Stay tuned.

**

If you love your thrillers, and don’t mind the spouse being the evil villain, Behind Closed Doors is your book. You can follow author B A Paris on Twitter here.

*

Do you like thrillers? Check out my review for The Girl on The Train.

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: b a paris, behind closed doors, behind closed doors book review, review for behind closed doors

Do You Need to Buy Another Writing Resource? The Impulsive Information Product Shopper’s Checklist

Posted on September 26, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

Shop Shop Till You Drop. Or you know, run out of money.
Shop Shop Till You Drop. Or you know, run out of money.

Hi, I’m Pinar, and I’m a shopaholic. (Yes, I love and adore the book series (aff.link) by Sophie Kinsella up until there is a baby involved.)

I love shopping so much that I once lost 16 pounds in one summer with shopping (and walking during that shopping) as my only fitness activity.

OK, it is not THAT bad. I can exercise control, and the only debt I go to is during writing contest submission time with one credit card that has a ridiculously low limit. So, not a lot.

But I do love shopping. Clothes, accessories, shoes, make-up, stationery, books, e-books, e-courses…. Ah, yes. Information products.

At this point, I have bought stuff about writing more times than Donald Trump has insulted Hillary Clinton. Or glam metal bands have destroyed the Ozone layer with hair products. Yes, that much.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not an impulsive buyer when it comes to information products on writing. I check out the creator, the content, reviews, and compare with my needs and weaknesses. Then I look at the price and my budget. And then, if it looks like I do in fact need this product, I add it to my shopping cart.

And I find myself checking out products quite often.

Because every time I hit a difficult period, whether I get a few rejections in a row, get writer’s block or hit another frequent roadblock, I love to refresh my knowledge and see what other successful writers have put out there.

But you have to be careful, especially if you are at a stage in your career where you already know a lot, and your main problem isn’t not knowing, but not implementing. Or hitting some career milestone block.

The truth is, sometimes you don’t need to buy anything new, but a visit to your good old library will do.

So to buy or not to buy?

Relax. Some information products are really up-to-date, refreshing and more ass-kicking, and worth every penny. So let’s do a little checklist before we open up our wallets and purses:

  • Is the information new, correct and applicable?
  • Do you get free updates?
  • Does it come in different packages, taking different levels of needs in consideration?
  • Are there payment plans available?
  • Is it in a format you know you will take advantage of?
  • Can you afford it?
  • *How soon can you reap the investment?

*It’s not just about testimonials. You can actually check out referrer’s body of work, website, products, etc. and see for yourself how much they have accomplished, or if you have liked what you have accomplished. Obviously, not everything can or should be attributed to one resource, but you’ll at least have an idea.

  • Is it evergreen? Will the information likely hold up a couple of months from now? And will you always have access to it and its updates?
  • Is the writer/creator open to questions and communication?

You don’t have to say yes to all of these, but if you can’t say yes to more than five, take a breath. Leave that wallet alone. Open the search function of your computer and delve into your library. Make a note of the sources you purchased before, and take a look at their content. See what you are missing. Then walk around and look at your physical library.

Still don’t see what you need? Go through your bookmarks a bit.

You might find this time-consuming, but it is actually one of my favorite methods to come up with new ideas for articles. You also need to organize your files, books and bookmarks anyway, so there’s that advantage.

See? You’ve come up with ideas, done some organizing and have made an informed decision on whether to spend your hard-earned money.

I will try to review each book individually when I get the time, but until then:

My Latest Purchases:

The Essential Guide to Freelance Writing (How To Write, Work and Thrive On Your Own Terms) by Zachary Petit


I was in a shopping mood, browsing through Amazon. I was drawn in by the title and who the author was, but it was the humor of the first couple of pages that drew me in.

In the first chapter, he wrote he “was perplexed by freelancing.” “I had stringers writing for me when I was a weekly newspaper editor, but they were working for beans, and they’d been writing for the paper longer than I’d been there…. I accepted their magical presence but never took the time to find out how they got there.”

I was hooked. The honesty, flow, humor and the fact that he mentioned acid reflux (I have a stomach condition that few people understand so…) I realized this was my kind of writer. Sure, a lot more well-known and successful (he had edited for Writer’s Digest, for crying out loud!) than me, but someone whose style didn’t seem far from my own.

Oh, and the “your own terms” also attracted me. What can I say? I’m a sucker for doing things my way.

I was like “I want to find more about this guy’s journey!”

It has a great deal more about interviews, finding celebrities, pitching, and yes, I learned a lot. Even after six years of freelancing. I wish I had the book in the beginning. So it is one of my go-to books now. We are happy together.

You can buy The Essential Guide to Freelance Writing Freelance Writing (How To Write, Work and Thrive On Your Own Terms) on Amazon. (affiliate link.)

Gina Horkey’s 30 Days or Less to Freelance Writing Success Course

30dol

Because Gina is kind of a big deal in the freelance writing/blogging world. I had heard a lot about her and read some of her guest posts. So I checked out her blog and loved that as well.

After loving all of her content, I wanted to check her writing course as well. Now, you might ask, why the hell are you still checking out writing courses after six years?

Okay for one, you always need to stay up-to-date, and you need to keep adding new skills. Also, I’m not a full-time freelancer, as I’ll go into more detail in my review of the course. (I also write screenplays and actually try to sell them, so that also takes a lot of time. And money.)

Now, don’t be fooled that the picture says “newbie freelancers.” If you are a newbie freelancer, you might indeed have to take the time to take the actions course suggests. But when you are established or semi-established, you can jumpstart your pitching process and writing in record time, while still learning new stuff and adding to the old.

I have the growth package, which has a couple of additional bonuses than the starter package, and it lacks the pitch review and a month of coaching from Gina, that the rockstar package has.

I wanted to learn from her because her writing and personality are lovely, and she is a financial success. An active, private and supportive FB group sounded awesome. (I’m very active on the FB group, both with my own questions and comments trying to help out fellow writers in any way I can.)

I’ll go over the details in my review, but if you want to check this course out, go ahead. You won’t regret it if you pay attention and do the work. Yes, it is a proud affiliate link.

*

What resources on writing have you bought recently?

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Career Management for Writers, Inspiration and Motivation, Recommended Resources, Writing Tagged With: best freelance writing resources, freelance writing, freelance writing success, gina horkey, how to become a successful freelance writer, how to make money freelance writing, zachary petit

(Re-)Watched, Published, Read: Sleeping with Other People, Ex Machina and More

Posted on September 8, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

rsz_img_20160819_065243
This writer on vacation

I spent two weeks (one in July and one in August) away from work as I made the most of the sea, sand and beach. Then last week, I went on a self-made writing retreat as I stayed with my grandmother where I pretty much just worked and caught up with my grandma. Oh, and I watched movies.

So without further ado, this is some of what I did post-vacation and during/post retreat. (Please note that this post contains affiliate links.)

Published:

Interests, Education, Location & More: How to Catch Those First Clients with What You Already Have on Be a Freelance Writer.

The One I Love Movie Review: Mixing Sci-fi with Drama and Romance for Writers on this blog.

Dear Women (and Men) Who Don’t Want to Have Kids: You’re Not Alone on my dating blog.

Re-Watched

Mustafa Hakkinda Hersey starring Fikret Kuskan and Nejat Isler

Mustafa Hakkinda Hersey
Image via beyazperde.com.

I’m not the biggest fan of Turkish cinema as many films tend to try the same old plots over and over again, but All About Mustafa is a breath of fresh air. While it might not be the most original story out there, the plot elements, pacing, music and acting take it up to another level.

Starring two of my favorite actors Fikret Kuskan (Mustafa) and Nejat Isler, Mustafa Hakkinda Hersey is a dark drama thriller worth watching:

Mustafa supposedly has the perfect life as a successful businessman, and a great father/ husband. He loves his gorgeous wife and is expectedly devastated when he loses her in a fatal car crash, where she was with a cab driver named Fikret (Nejat Isler).

Deadly curious to find out answers, Mustafa kidnaps Fikret a short time after he is released from the hospital, and the torture begins. As Mustafa shows us he is more than a privileged city boy, we get to know more about his upbringing – which might tell us why he doesn’t exactly seem so mentally stable right now.

And while we might feel sympathy for Mustafa’s pain and get pissed off some of the nonchalance coming from Fikret, it’s easy to change sides as we see more of Mustafa’s dark side. After all, there is a big chance whatever Fikret was doing with his wife, she was a willing participant…

So who the hell is Mustafa, anyway?

Thoughts on Mustafa Hakkinda Hersey:

Strongly recommended. Written and directed by the famous Turkish director Cagan Irmak.

Bicaksirti (Roughly translated: Back of the Blade)

Bicaksirti, b?çaks?rt?
Characters from left to right: Ali (driver/real father/love interest), Nisan (supposed mother, wife, love interest), Orhan (supposed father, husband, villain/antagonist), Murat (son, cause of everyone’s happiness and problems.) I love this picture because it puts all the main conflicts in one photo.

Rewatched, because it is one of my favorite Turkish series, and if we ignore the sometimes overdone music, one of my favorite series of all time.

Again starring Nejat Isler and Fikret Kuskan, alongside Melisa Sozen (Winter Sleep), Mehmet Gunsur (Hamam) and Vildan Atasever, is a solid drama with strong thriller and romance elements that deserves its own post in my Great Story Conflicts series.

I’ll try to summarize the main plot as well as I can:

Nisan (Melisa Sozen) and Orhan (Kuskan) are an unhappily married couple living in a mansion with their young son Murat, Orhan’s father, Orhan’s younger brother (Mehmet played by Mehmet Gunsur) and the family’s loyal helper of 25 years.

Nisan and Orhan have a secret that they keep from everyone: Murat is not their biological son. When they found out Nisan was sterile, Orhan paid money to a doctor so that they can pass a newborn baby as their own son. Since the mother died during birth and the father was sentenced to life in prison for her murder, it was a life-saving deal for all.

Except the biological father Ali (Isler) is not guilty, and after 10 years, his lawyer/younger sister Gunes (Atasever) finally manages to prove his innocence and get him released. And when he finds out his baby is actually alive and calling two strangers parents, he decides to take him back. But instead of shocking the kid with the news, he confronts Orhan and gets hired as their driver so he can be close.

And if you think things will get complicated because Orhan’s wife Nisan and Ali will soon fall for each other, and Orhan will stop at nothing to protect his secret and fatherhood, you are right. Oh, and Ali’s sister will of course fall for Orhan’s brother because their lives were so simple…

Yeah, I know, I should have drawn a diagram.

The music, and sometimes the not-so-interesting sub-sub-plots might be its flaws, but it is still a great show with constantly stellar acting, especially from the leading characters.

Watched:

Sleeping with Other People starring Alison Brie and Jason Suedekis

Sleeping with Other people movie poster
Sleeping with Other People. Image via cineforest.com.

Starring Alison Brie (Community) and Jason Suedekis (SNL, Hall Pass, Horrible Bosses), Sleeping with Other People is a fun, sex-focused romantic comedy where most of the raunchiness comes from the language.

Lainey (Alison Brie) and Jake (Jason Suedekis) lose their virginity to each other and never see each other again until a sex addicts’ meeting many years later:

Lainey is obsessed with the now married old flame Matthew (Adam Scott), and Jake would rather screw his relationship up by sleeping with other people instead of having a honest break-up speech.

After the meeting, they meet up and decide to be friends. They keep on dating people and having sex, but not with each other. They become best friends and build the kind of true intimacy most couples lack. But how long can this arrangement last when it is obvious they are in love with each other?

Co-starring Marc Blucas and Amanda Peet. Featuring Adam Brody.

Thoughts on Sleeping with Other People:

In addition to featuring two actors I don’t see enough of (Blucas, Peet), Suedekis and Lainey make a lovely couple. Sure, you probably wouldn’t want to date either of them as their issues are well…deal-breakers for most people, they are honest, funny and just damaged enough to make wonderful characters.

Please focus on the genre romcom when you are predicting your ending.

Written and directed by Leslye Headland. Give it a try, just not with anyone conservative or overly sensitive around.

Read:

Dead in Venice (spec screenplay, written by my friend Fiona Leitch)

Logline: A successful crime novelist travels to Venice to cure her writers’ block, and finds herself embroiled in a murderous plot involving carnival masks, ghost stories and an Interpol agent with a passion for cheese and a tragic past.

Thoughts on Dead in Venice

Dead in Venice is a page-turning drama, crime, thriller with really funny aspects and some (un)expected darker turns. I had a blast reading it, though I did not predict just how tragic the past of the agent will be. It will be rated R in its current version especially for its crime scenes, which is appropriate for the genre. Oh, and it is romantic too.

Priceless (spec screenplay, written by my friend Fiona Leitch)

Logline: A hopelessly romantic security guard and a downtrodden cleaner steal the world’s most famous painting, but when they realise that a life of crime is not for them and they must return it, Fate seems to have other ideas.

Thoughts on Priceless

Priceless is lovely crime, comedy and romance that combines art theft, soccer fandom and love. It also has a heart when it comes to looking at the life of its protagonists, and it is definitely lighter than Dead in Venice if we are comparing. I strongly recommend both scripts, though Priceless is the obvious choice when you want something less dark.

Riding Aristottle (spec script written by US screenwriter Jon Meyers)

Logline: In 1908, a month prior to her performance review, the country’s first female dean struggles with a private club invitation, while keeping an extra-marital flirtation under wraps from everyone at the university – – especially the jealous Vice Provost.

Thoughts on Riding Aristotle

Riding Aristotle is a dark comedy set in 1908 offering plenty of surprises. It’s a refreshing story,especially with what the private club entails, and a nice blend of what 1908 was, and what the author recreated it to be.

Riding Aristotle offers plenty of external and internal conflicts and obstacles, an ensemble of highly interesting and mostly modern characters (with the exception of the antagonist of course).

Read: Screenplay of the movie Ex Machina, written and directed by Alex Garland

Talented hacker Caleb (Domhall Gleeson) is chosen to spend a week at his genius/billoinare boss Nathan’s (Oscar Isaac) house for a mysterious project. The project/mission turns out that Nathan wants Caleb to “test” the AI he has created named Ava (Alicia Vikander): Can Ava pass for a human despite Caleb knowing she is AI?

As Ava proves more intelligent and seemingly emotional than Caleb has predicted, he starts falling for her. But can she really feel, or is she just good at manipulation? And whatever happens to her if she fails the test?

Thoughts on Ex Machina:

Ex Machina is a well-crafted, original and intrguing script (as well as a worth-seeing movie.) Even though I was hoping for another ending from the moment Caleb checks whether or not …… (blank, because I want to avoid spoilers), I mostly liked the movie.

*

So this is it from me for now. What have you read, watched and published? Let me know in the comments. It’s okay if you have rewatched, reread and republished! : )

 

 

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Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: alex garland, alison brie, bicaksirti, ex machina, ex machina screenplay, fikret kuskan, jason suedekis, Leslye Headland, melisa dozen, mustafa hakkinda hersey, nejat isler, sleeping with other people, sleeping with other people movie

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