Would anyone like to read my Project Greenlight screenplay? It was passed on by the four fellow contestants who reviewed it, and you can see the assessment I have posted of their reviews at various places below. None of the reviews helped. Some dwelled on an aspect of the script I was perfectly well aware of (and was completely self-conscious of--as one scene should have made clear, though to these readers it didn't), but mostly they were just as I described below--lots of complaining, little help. They basically attacked my vision rather than advised how I could realize it more clearly. If anyone would like to read it, please e-mail me privately, as I would hope to be able to make the film (and others) some other way. Interestingly enough, I tried to make the mother, who was essentially based on my own mother, as sympathetic as possible, despite what she does, and all the reviewers considered her severely insane. Obviously, the readers I had were the same type of people I watched Malcolm Lee's _The Best Man_, who considered the Taye Diggs character to be a villain, or the people I've talked to who considered Cpl. Upham in _Saving Private Ryan_ a villain. Scott The reviews came in today and I am quite outraged. Two were completely inept and had misspellings in every single sentence, misspelled character names, etc. One thought the narrator was a teenager even though the script specifically states he is in his twenties and a college graduate, and most found the dialogue unrealisitc and the character unbelievable and inconsistent. This convinced me that too many people are spoonfed conventional Hollywood comedy and melodrama, because 90% of the dialogue was identical to dialogue I heard spoken in real life, and the script is autobiographical, with only one scene made up. Most hated the unhappy ending, even though I gave it a subtitle with the word "tragedy" in it so the readers would at least be prepared and could decline if they didn't want to read it. All four passed. All complained of too many stage directions. Several complained of the scene where chairs on the stage would become real-life cars in realistic settings. In short, it was reviewed by Philistines, and these Philistines determined its fate. Only one could compare it to any films that weren't mainstream Hollywood coming of age films, to which my script bears almost no resemblance whatsoever. Many listed characters with brief conversations as "undeveloped supporting characters" while leaving some of the major supporting characters off the list. One thought that all the music references were to works by Bartok, even though Michael Nyman, Oingo Boingo, The Who, and Pink Floyd are all invoked. I deserved better reviewers. ---- Online resources for film/TV studies may be found at ScreenSite http://www.tcf.ua.edu/ScreenSite