[RE][scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.

2009-07-09 Thread Martin Baxter
Who's up for an exhumation and a kangaroo trial?





-[ Received Mail Content ]--

 Subject : [scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.

 Date : Wed, 08 Jul 2009 23:36:52 -

 From : ravenadal ravena...@yahoo.com

 To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com


http://www.slate.com/id/2221392/


The King of All Formulas

The incredible true story of the man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.

By Paul Collins

Posted Monday, July 6, 2009, at 7:02 AM ET

The Proposal is formulaic. The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 is formulaic. Imagine 
That is formulaic. Even Up is … progressively more formulaic.

But who came up with the formula?

If you want the human embodiment of Hollywood predictability, you can't do 
better than Wycliffe A. Hill. A profoundly obscure writer of silent 
five-reelers, Hill is also the unheralded inventor of something more enduring: 
the attempt to engineer movies that will bring the most satisfaction to the 
largest number of people—the mob, in other words.

It was a notion borne of failure. After a hard-knocks apprenticeship in a 
Manhattan literary agency, Hill went to Hollywood in 1915, where his first 
movie pitch was summarily shot down by Cecil B. DeMille. The problem? No plot. 
A dramatic plot, DeMille's brother patiently explained to Hill, is where 
someone wants something, something stands in the way of his getting it, he 
tries to get it and either does or does not.

DeMille's prodding was perfectly timed; Hill wandered into a bookshop and found 
the new translation of French critic Georges Polti's Thirty-Six Dramatic 
Situations. If you've ever endured a teacher bloviating on how there are only 
really X number of plots in literature, blame Polti. A theatre critic, he 
gamely ran with the claim that Italian playwright Carlo Gozzi had once 
succeeded in isolating 36 tragic situations that formed the building blocks 
of drama. (Naturally, Gozzi then lost his list.) Polti had a recent and 
lesser-known work that had not yet been translated, The Art of Inventing 
Characters, which handily presented 36 archetypes. While Polti's books were 
largely descriptive, Hill hit upon a notion: What if they were combined and 
made prescriptive?

What if together they made … a formula?

Hill's Ten Million Photoplay Plots: The Master Key to All Dramatic Plots, a 
byzantine matrix of characters and conflicts designed to create endless plot 
combinations, was so novel when it debuted in 1919 that the slim guide sold for 
an eye-popping $5. Quietly lifting from Polti, Hill created mix-and-match lists 
of characters, settings, and dramatic situations. (An old man wrongfully 
accused of a mine explosion + seeks refuge from a band of outlaws + with a 
woman whose house he enters for a hiding place. + …) It was the perfect 
instrument for the silent movies being churned out on Hollywood lots.






http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds

Re: [RE][scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.

2009-07-09 Thread mcjennings124
That's sick!  When???  :o)

Sent via BlackBerry by ATT

-Original Message-
From: Martin Baxter truthseeker...@lycos.com

Date: Thu, 09 Jul 2009 08:34:10 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [RE][scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.


Who's up for an exhumation and a kangaroo trial?




-[ Received Mail Content ]--
 Subject : [scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.
 Date : Wed, 08 Jul 2009 23:36:52 -
 From : ravenadal ravena...@yahoo.com
 To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com

http://www.slate.com/id/2221392/


The King of All Formulas

The incredible true story of the man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.

By Paul Collins

Posted Monday, July 6, 2009, at 7:02 AM ET

The Proposal is formulaic. The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 is formulaic. Imagine 
That is formulaic. Even Up is … progressively more formulaic.

But who came up with the formula?

If you want the human embodiment of Hollywood predictability, you can't do 
better than Wycliffe A. Hill. A profoundly obscure writer of silent 
five-reelers, Hill is also the unheralded inventor of something more enduring: 
the attempt to engineer movies that will bring the most satisfaction to the 
largest number of people—the mob, in other words.

It was a notion borne of failure. After a hard-knocks apprenticeship in a 
Manhattan literary agency, Hill went to Hollywood in 1915, where his first 
movie pitch was summarily shot down by Cecil B. DeMille. The problem? No plot. 
A dramatic plot, DeMille's brother patiently explained to Hill, is where 
someone wants something, something stands in the way of his getting it, he 
tries to get it and either does or does not.

DeMille's prodding was perfectly timed; Hill wandered into a bookshop and found 
the new translation of French critic Georges Polti's Thirty-Six Dramatic 
Situations. If you've ever endured a teacher bloviating on how there are only 
really X number of plots in literature, blame Polti. A theatre critic, he 
gamely ran with the claim that Italian playwright Carlo Gozzi had once 
succeeded in isolating 36 tragic situations that formed the building blocks 
of drama. (Naturally, Gozzi then lost his list.) Polti had a recent and 
lesser-known work that had not yet been translated, The Art of Inventing 
Characters, which handily presented 36 archetypes. While Polti's books were 
largely descriptive, Hill hit upon a notion: What if they were combined and 
made prescriptive?

What if together they made … a formula?

Hill's Ten Million Photoplay Plots: The Master Key to All Dramatic Plots, a 
byzantine matrix of characters and conflicts designed to create endless plot 
combinations, was so novel when it debuted in 1919 that the slim guide sold for 
an eye-popping $5. Quietly lifting from Polti, Hill created mix-and-match lists 
of characters, settings, and dramatic situations. (An old man wrongfully 
accused of a mine explosion + seeks refuge from a band of outlaws + with a 
woman whose house he enters for a hiding place. + …) It was the perfect 
instrument for the silent movies being churned out on Hollywood lots.






http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds


Re: [RE][scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.

2009-07-09 Thread Martin Baxter
As soon as I narrow down the location! ;-D





-[ Received Mail Content ]--

 Subject : Re: [RE][scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock 
machine.

 Date : Thu, 9 Jul 2009 13:08:24 +

 From : mcjennings...@yahoo.com

 To : SciFi2 scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com


That's sick! When??? :o)

Sent via BlackBerry by ATamp;T

-Original Message-
From: Martin Baxter 

Date: Thu, 09 Jul 2009 08:34:10 
To: 
Subject: [RE][scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.


Who's up for an exhumation and a kangaroo trial?




-[ Received Mail Content ]--
 Subject : [scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.
 Date : Wed, 08 Jul 2009 23:36:52 -
 From : ravenadal 
 To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com

http://www.slate.com/id/2221392/


The King of All Formulas

The incredible true story of the man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.

By Paul Collins

Posted Monday, July 6, 2009, at 7:02 AM ET

The Proposal is formulaic. The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 is formulaic. Imagine 
That is formulaic. Even Up is … progressively more formulaic.

But who came up with the formula?

If you want the human embodiment of Hollywood predictability, you can't do 
better than Wycliffe A. Hill. A profoundly obscure writer of silent 
five-reelers, Hill is also the unheralded inventor of something more enduring: 
the attempt to engineer movies that will bring the most satisfaction to the 
largest number of people—the mob, in other words.

It was a notion borne of failure. After a hard-knocks apprenticeship in a 
Manhattan literary agency, Hill went to Hollywood in 1915, where his first 
movie pitch was summarily shot down by Cecil B. DeMille. The problem? No plot. 
A dramatic plot, DeMille's brother patiently explained to Hill, is where 
someone wants something, something stands in the way of his getting it, he 
tries to get it and either does or does not.

DeMille's prodding was perfectly timed; Hill wandered into a bookshop and found 
the new translation of French critic Georges Polti's Thirty-Six Dramatic 
Situations. If you've ever endured a teacher bloviating on how there are only 
really X number of plots in literature, blame Polti. A theatre critic, he 
gamely ran with the claim that Italian playwright Carlo Gozzi had once 
succeeded in isolating 36 tragic situations that formed the building blocks 
of drama. (Naturally, Gozzi then lost his list.) Polti had a recent and 
lesser-known work that had not yet been translated, The Art of Inventing 
Characters, which handily presented 36 archetypes. While Polti's books were 
largely descriptive, Hill hit upon a notion: What if they were combined and 
made prescriptive?

What if together they made … a formula?

Hill's Ten Million Photoplay Plots: The Master Key to All Dramatic Plots, a 
byzantine matrix of characters and conflicts designed to create endless plot 
combinations, was so novel when it debuted in 1919 that the slim guide sold for 
an eye-popping $5. Quietly lifting from Polti, Hill created mix-and-match lists 
of characters, settings, and dramatic situations. (An old man wrongfully 
accused of a mine explosion + seeks refuge from a band of outlaws + with a 
woman whose house he enters for a hiding place. + …) It was the perfect 
instrument for the silent movies being churned out on Hollywood lots.






http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds

RE: [RE][scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine.

2009-07-09 Thread Reece Jennings
droolgrr..LOL!!!

  _  

From: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com [mailto:scifino...@yahoogroups.com] On
Behalf Of Martin Baxter
Sent: Thursday, July 09, 2009 3:35 PM
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [RE][scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock
machine.






As soon as I narrow down the location! ;-D







-[ Received Mail Content ]--
Subject : Re: [RE][scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock
machine.
Date : Thu, 9 Jul 2009 13:08:24 +
From : mcjennings...@yahoo.com
To : SciFi2 scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com

That's sick! When??? :o) 

Sent via BlackBerry by ATT 

-Original Message- 
From: Martin Baxter 

Date: Thu, 09 Jul 2009 08:34:10 
To: 
Subject: [RE][scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock
machine. 


Who's up for an exhumation and a kangaroo trial? 




-[ Received Mail Content ]-- 
Subject : [scifinoir2] The man who invented the Hollywood schlock machine. 
Date : Wed, 08 Jul 2009 23:36:52 - 
From : ravenadal 
To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 

http://www.slate.com/id/2221392/ 


The King of All Formulas 

The incredible true story of the man who invented the Hollywood schlock
machine. 

By Paul Collins 

Posted Monday, July 6, 2009, at 7:02 AM ET 

The Proposal is formulaic. The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 is formulaic. Imagine
That is formulaic. Even Up is … progressively more formulaic. 

But who came up with the formula? 

If you want the human embodiment of Hollywood predictability, you can't do
better than Wycliffe A. Hill. A profoundly obscure writer of silent
five-reelers, Hill is also the unheralded inventor of something more
enduring: the attempt to engineer movies that will bring the most
satisfaction to the largest number of people—the mob, in other words. 

It was a notion borne of failure. After a hard-knocks apprenticeship in a
Manhattan literary agency, Hill went to Hollywood in 1915, where his first
movie pitch was summarily shot down by Cecil B. DeMille. The problem? No
plot. A dramatic plot, DeMille's brother patiently explained to Hill, is
where someone wants something, something stands in the way of his getting
it, he tries to get it and either does or does not. 

DeMille's prodding was perfectly timed; Hill wandered into a bookshop and
found the new translation of French critic Georges Polti's Thirty-Six
Dramatic Situations. If you've ever endured a teacher bloviating on how
there are only really X number of plots in literature, blame Polti. A
theatre critic, he gamely ran with the claim that Italian playwright Carlo
Gozzi had once succeeded in isolating 36 tragic situations that formed the
building blocks of drama. (Naturally, Gozzi then lost his list.) Polti had a
recent and lesser-known work that had not yet been translated, The Art of
Inventing Characters, which handily presented 36 archetypes. While Polti's
books were largely descriptive, Hill hit upon a notion: What if they were
combined and made prescriptive? 

What if together they made … a formula? 

Hill's Ten Million Photoplay Plots: The Master Key to All Dramatic Plots, a
byzantine matrix of characters and conflicts designed to create endless plot
combinations, was so novel when it debuted in 1919 that the slim guide sold
for an eye-popping $5. Quietly lifting from Polti, Hill created
mix-and-match lists of characters, settings, and dramatic situations. (An
old man wrongfully accused of a mine explosion + seeks refuge from a band of
outlaws + with a woman whose house he enters for a hiding place. + …) It was
the perfect instrument for the silent movies being churned out on Hollywood
lots. 






http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds 





http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds