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The Rewrite starring Hugh Grant and Marisa Tomei: Why It’s A Must-Watch Movie For Writers

Posted on December 20, 2017 Written by Pinar Tarhan

*This post contains affiliate links.

Marc Lawrence’s The Rewrite (2014) is absolutely delightful. Of course, your chances of enjoying it are higher if you like Hugh Grant and/or Marisa Tomei, romantic comedies that aren’t like every other romantic comedy and movies about writers. Not to mention, the cast includes J.K. Simmons and Allison Janney. J.K. Simmons’ loving but tough/sentimental (you need to see it) character provides a hilarious contrast to his Oscar-winning, ruthless role in Whiplash.

I’m a fan of the genre, director/writer (Mark Lawrence) and the cast. And as a screenwriter (aspiring, but still), I do have a weakness for movies featuring screenwriters and their world.

Isn’t it also great the 50-something protagonist is only 4 years older than the love interest?

So why do I recommend the movie to (screen)writers in particular? Let’s start with the plot:

The Rewrite Plot Summary

Oscar-winning screenwriter Keith Michaels (Hugh Grant) is far from his glory days. He hasn’t been able to sell something in ages and is forced to take a screenwriting teaching gig in a cloudy, small town to pay the bills.

Moreover, he seems totally wrong for the job: He doesn’t believe great writing can be taught, starts a relationship with a young student (not Marisa Tomei) before his first day and pisses off the head of the ethics committee Mary Weldon (Allison Janney). Not to mention, he doesn’t even read the scripts of the students.

But thanks to the threats of Weldon and help of his new-comer student Holly (Marisa Tomei), Keith starts teaching and turns out to be pretty good.

You can guess that his involvement with the younger student will cause trouble, and he will fall in love with Tomei’s character.

But it’s the fun and honest journey of a desperate, formerly successful screenwriter getting his groove back, helping out a talented student and getting to love again that intrigues us.

The dialogue is truly funny. One of my favorite lines:

Dr. Lerner (J.K.Simmons): I have a wife and four daughters. I have no opinion.

Why Writers Need to See The Rewrite

– It sums up feast-famine, glory-failure, and acceptance-rejection cycles pretty well.
– It shows that we won’t have a gorgeous house by the pool with movie deals at all stages of our career, and why it is okay.
– It shows that helping other writers is not just good karma, but it will inspire and motivate us.
– It shows that not all good jobs look alike.
– And last but not least, despite our tendency to shut down and be on our own, we need our kind of people to make all those cycles, and life in general be more bearable.

*
I honestly don’t care if you like Hugh Grant or not. If you are a writer, and especially a screenwriter, you should give this movie a shot.

Have fun, and don’t forget to comment to talk about your favorite movies with writer characters.

 

Filed Under: Career Management for Writers, Fictional Writers: Writer Characters in Movies, TV Series and Books, Inspiration and Motivation Tagged With: Allison janney, comedy, drama, hugh grant, jk simmons, marc lawrence, Marisa tomei, movies about writers, movies with writer characters, romance, screenwriting, the rewrite, the rewrite hugh grant movie

What Readers Can Do To Get Better Content

Posted on December 2, 2017 Written by Pinar Tarhan

John F. Kennedy famously said, “ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” So in this post, I’m going to get you to ask what you can do for your favorite bloggers and writers.

Does it sound weird? Counter-intuitive?

Just hear me out for a second.

How many of you open the newsletters you subscribe to?

How many of you unsubscribe when several issues in a row haven’t engaged you?

How many of you answer the questions on surveys that your favorite bloggers and writers send your way?

How many of you reply when those bloggers ask you a specific question?

Many of those surveys come with a potential or actual prize. But it doesn’t really matter if you are offered one. It doesn’t matter if you win something – the actual rewards will come after you answer the questions.

The survey is intended to benefit the blogger for sure: If the blogger provides what you want, they get more shares, clicks, and reads. They sell more products. They gain more followers and fans. But you are not really reading the blog for that blogger’s sake, are you?

You’re reading it because you enjoy it. You learn from it. You study it. So the more the blogger meets your needs, the better it is for you.

So if you are wondering what bloggers can do for you, don’t neglect to reply their questions. It’s for your benefit.

Until next time, happy writing!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Blogging Tagged With: blogging, reading

Best Courses for Freelance Writers: Earn More Writing by Holly Johnson

Posted on November 23, 2017 Written by Pinar Tarhan

I’m a big fan of investing in yourself when it comes to your writing career, so whenever a course filled with valuable information and advice that I don’t see often, coming from successful writers who have succeeded brilliantly in a relatively short amount of time, I jump at it.

Partly, it is for me. I love learning new tips and remembering great evergreen advice I know but lack in practice.

Partly, it is for you. I love sharing awesome resources with you.

Now, this post will include affiliate links. It means if you purchase the courses through my links, it won’t cost you extra, but I’ll earn a little something. If you don’t buy, you will still have learned about an amazing blogger who shares awesome free content on her website.

And yes, I own and completed this course. I keep going back to it for reference on a regular basis, even though I’ve been doing this for a while. Sometimes, you need the extra inspiration and motivation.

The course also comes with its own Facebook group. I can say that the members of the group are lovely, helpful and inspiring.

Now that we got that out of the way, the review:

Earn More Writing

Earn More Writing was created by Holly Johnson, a six-figure writer specializing in personal finance and travel. She co-runs the blog Club Thrifty with her husband, where they give smart, fun and applicable advice on living better for less.

I own the standard package that comes with 8 modules and a bonus section.

The modules are video courses with a written summary, and they each have a worksheet you can print out to study and record your progress.

The modules include:

  • How to Establish Your Blog and Brand
  • How to Build Your Portfolio and Pitch Clients
  • Defending Your Work Day
  • How to Transition from Broke to Rich Writing
  • Finding and Keeping Your Dream Clients
  • Actually Getting Paid
  • Get More Work by Making Editors Happy
  • Taking Your Income into the Stratosphere

The bonus section includes several guides and a bonus video on ghostwriting for CEOs. The guides include an actual successful pitch letter Holly sent herself, essential resources for freelancers, what editors really want, anatomy of a perfect blog post – and my personal favorite: list of businesses with blogs.

*

The course, while fun, is a lot of work. However, despite however long you have been doing this, I recommend not skipping even a second of the videos. You can always improve on your brand as a writer.

This course is for all writers of non-fiction who want to make more money and build or maintain a writing career on their own trips. That’s why the course includes modules on branding, time management and relationships with your editors.

About Holly Johnson

You can learn more about Holly through the blog ClubThrifty. Her bylines include The Simple Dollar, Forbes and CNN.

If you have any questions about the course, hit me up in the comments. If I can’t answer it, I’ll ask Holly and get back to you.

You can buy the course here.

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Blogging, Career Management for Writers, Recommended Resources, Writing Tagged With: career management for writers, earn more writing, earn more writing course review, holly johnson, making money as a writer

Interview with Author Carmen Radtke on Her Novel “The Case of the Missing Bride”

Posted on November 16, 2017 Written by Pinar Tarhan

 The Case of the Missing Bride
My copy of The Case of the Missing Bride.

October went in a bit of a blur. I took a translation project that I grossly underestimated in terms of both time and money, which in turn “reactivated” the nerve entrapment in my wrists.

But worry not, I’m back, and I’ve interviewed a great writer for my return post, Carmen Radtke. My good friend Radtke’s page-turning and addictive mystery The Case of the Missing Bride was released on September 5, 2017, and has been giving readers a new favorite author ever since.

So without further ado, here’s Carmen with my most pressing questions. Enjoy!

Carmen Radtke.

 

How and when did you start writing?

I’ve always written, since I discovered that I could use a pen and paper to make up poems (when you’re seven, any rhyme will do) and stories (the hamster and the stolen diamonds could’ve become a classic had I but known about the concept of a second draft).

Is it any wonder I became a newspaper journalist, sticking to facts and deadlines so tight I rarely got to explore the concept of a second draft?

Most reporters want to write a novel one day, lavishing time on crafting one immaculate sentence after another. Me too. Which is why, with impeccable timing, my first novel was partly written under my desk, while I typed away like a woman obsessed between earthquakes in Christchurch, New Zealand. 

Can you tell us a bit about your book?

The Case of the Missing Bride is set in 1862 and tells the story of a group of young, impoverished Australian women, travelling half-way across the world, to marry prosperous Canadian miners. When one of the brides is missing after a stormy night, it’s thought of as an accident, but one girl knows better and embarks on a secret mission to find a killer.

These women really existed – I found a short paragraph online, during an idle research into “imported brides.” They set out in high hopes from Melbourne, but when they reached San Francisco for a stopover, they vanished without a trace. I can’t imagine a world where this would have ended well for them. Maybe that is why I couldn’t let it go. In my novel, at least I can save most of them, and give them some of the happiness the real life did not hold in store for them.

What genres do you prefer to read and write? Who are some of your favorite authors?

As a reader, I’m polygamous, voracious and insatiable. I love historical fiction, mysteries, grittier crime, comedy, thriller, some fantasy and science-fiction … After moving half-way around the world twice, I still have the complete works of Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, Rex Stout, Ngaio Marsh, plus Janet Evanovich, Dick Francis, Terry Pratchett, Tony Hillerman, Elizabeth Peters … On second thought, in about two-thirds of the books on my shelves, there usually is a crime of some kind involved.

Strangely enough, my next novel also features crime of some kind. A Matter of Love and Death (Bombshell Books) will be released on 29 November, under the pen-name Caron Albright. It’s historical again, set in Australia in 1931, during the Great Depression and comes complete with a plucky heroine, a dashing nightclub-owner, artists and crooks.

What are you working on now?

I’m currently working on a screenplay – a contemporary Romantic Comedy makes a change from the crimes of the past and the heartbreak of current events. If I get stuck or bored, I – like most writers – have a file, loosely labelled ideas.

Where can we follow and read you online?

You can follow me on Twitter: @carmenradtke1, connect on Facebook (Carmen Radtke) or visit my website https://scribbler25.wixsite.com/mysite.

 

 

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Writing Tagged With: author interview, carmen radtke, fiction, mystery, the case of the missing bride, writing

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