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CineStory Foundation Feature Retreat and Fellowship

Cinestory Feature

Contact

Los Angeles, CA 90066

Web:
http://cinestory.org
Email:
info@cinestory.org

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Professionalism: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.3/5.0)
Feedback: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.5/5.0)
Signficance: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.5/5.0)
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Objective

CineStory is a national non-profit dedicated to nurturing emerging screenwriters through mentorship programs. Winners of our competition have gone on to pen films such as IRON MAN, CAKE, THE CHILDREN OF MEN, BALLAST, KING OF CALIFORNIA and 11:14.

One of the main goals of the CineStory Feature Retreat is to select up-and-coming screenwriters for our four-day intensive program held in the Fall.

THE CINESTORY FEATURE RETREAT

CineStory's Retreat is dedicated to the advancement of great new voices in screenwriting. Retreat attendees are chosen from the top writers of our annual competition, the CineStory Screenwriting Awards. For four days, writers enjoy direct access to working Hollywood professionals.

Past retreat mentors include: Mark Fergus & Hawk Ostby (IRON MAN, CHILDREN OF MEN), writer/director Joe Forte (FIREWALL, OUT), producer Nana Greenwald (SEVEN), producer Michelle Sy (FINDING NEVERLAND), producer and former head of Jodie's Foster prod co MEG LEFAUVE (THE DANGEROUS LIVES OF ALTAR BOYS), writer Philip Eisner (EVENT HORIZON, MUTANT CHRONICLES) and writer/director Keith Gordon (DEXTER, WAKING THE DEAD). Show More

Deadline/Entry Fees

Deadline Date
Days till:
Entry Fee
Early February 19, 2024 $50
Regular March 24, 2024 $69
Late April 21, 2024 $81
Extended May 19, 2024
26
$88

Notification: Quarterfinalists – late June; Semifinalists/Invitees – Late July; Finalists – Mid August; Fellow – Early September.

Rules

Please visit http://www.cinestory.org/rules-and-guidelines/ for all rules and guidelines.

Awards

GRAND PRIZE: THE CINESTORY FELLOWSHIP
Valued at over $17,000 this prize includes a $10,000 cash award, free meals, board and tuition at the exclusive CineStory Writers Retreat as well as a 12-month mentorship program with two Hollywood professionals hand picked for the winner. The CineStory Fellowship gives writers direct access to Hollywood professionals and has a long track record of success. Prior fellows have optioned material, gained representation and secured writing assignments with the guidance of their mentors. Also included: one-year Script Pipeline Writers Database membership; three-year subscription to Creative Screenwriting; iScript screenplay audio recording; and one-year Scripped PRO subscription.

SECOND PLACE:
Over $1500 in cash and prizes, including $1000 cash.

THIRD PLACE:
Over $1000 in cash and prizes, including $500 cash.

FINALISTS RECEIVE:
Discount on Retreat tuition.

ALL SEMIFINALISTS RECEIVE:
An invitation to the exclusive CineStory Retreat including: Three 90-minute one-on-one sessions with working Hollywood agents, managers, producers, development executives and other pros to discuss the writer's work and career strategy Open access to 15+ hours of small group sessions covering a wide rage of creative and business topics Free film screenings and other events.

Cinestory Feature

Contact

Los Angeles, CA 90066

Web:
http://cinestory.org
Email:
info@cinestory.org

Report Card

Overall: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.6/5.0)
Professionalism: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.3/5.0)
Feedback: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.5/5.0)
Signficance: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.5/5.0)
Report Cards: 31    
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CineStory Foundation Feature Retreat and Fellowship

Contact

Los Angeles, CA 90066

Web:
http://cinestory.org
Email:
info@cinestory.org

Report Card

Overall: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.6/5.0)
Professionalism: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.3/5.0)
Feedback: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.5/5.0)
Signficance: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.5/5.0)
Report Cards: 31    
Have you entered?
Submit a Report card

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Contest News

Academy Award Nominee Mark Fergus Touts Upcoming CineStory Screenwriting Awards

by Maureen Fox

Mark Fergus grew up wanting to be Steven Spielberg.

As a teenager in New York City in the '70s, he saw Close Encounters and was awestruck. He couldn't believe making movies was really a job. But that's what he wanted to do - make movies. And Spielberg made him believe he could.

"Going to CineStory was a real way of assessing where you were at," Fergus said. "It's not threatening or scary; it's a challenge. You work with people who really know the business."


"Steven Spielberg's story was pretty mythologized back then about the way he busted in, just kind of waltzing in and deciding he was going to be a filmmaker," Fergus said. "Who knows how much of it was true, but it made you think, here's this kid who just wanted to do it, and start to feel like it was possible."

The writing came later, when Fergus realized he needed to learn to tell a story first. "If you didn't know how to write, you really didn't know how to make a film," Fergus said. "It just kind of came out of necessity."

But there weren't a lot of opportunities to learn how to write scripts. Fergus attended Boston University, which had a film program, but he had trouble getting into the classes. Film courses were reserved for film students, and as a business major, Fergus was shut out from most classes.

So he taught himself. His philosophy was trial and error. His film school was watching films and reading scripts. His education came from writing constantly, as he tried to become a better writer with every project and competition. From high school through college, he learned by doing.

"I wrote some pretty bad scripts, and I wrote some slightly better ones," Fergus said. "I just kept going from there, learning how to write and learning how to not write, how to make your mistakes and learn from them." Fergus did learn. Today, he is an Academy Award nominated screenwriter, as well as a successful director. Fergus and his writing partner Hawk Ostby wrote the scripts for Consequence (2003), First Snow (2006) and Iron Man (2008), and they were nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay for Children of Men (2006). Fergus and Ostby also won the CineStory Screenwriting Award in 1999. Fergus's journey has been a challenging one, but he owes his success to his self-taught education and to his experiences at CineStory.



After graduating from college, Fergus returned to New York and did everything he could to learn more about the film business. He worked for the Fox-Film Company in accounting for several years, and he continued to write scripts. But the best education he received came from reading scripts for HBO.

As a freelancer, Fergus learned how to do coverage and read hundreds of scripts that were being considered by HBO. There were very few good ones, but Fergus got to see firsthand what a story needed to be great. "You learned what made them work, what made them fail, how they went off the rails," Fergus said.

Fergus was soon able to bring what he learned to a writing partnership. Fergus met Ostby through a mutual friend, and the two began working together right away. They have remained partners and close friends ever since and built their reputations together. Fergus believes their partnership is a happy accident and credits Ostby with helping him get through the difficult parts of the writing process. "It's a really cool thing to be able to have someone who is an expert at what you don't want to deal with" Fergus said.

Their first collaboration was on one of Ostby's projects. Fergus read the script and was immediately impressed. Together, they finished the piece, and Fergus took it to HBO, hoping it might be considered.

His supervisor bought it that same week, and the result was Consequence, which premiered on HBO in 2003. Fergus was not happy with how the film ultimately turned out (stories can change a great deal through the filmmaking process), but it was his and Ostby's first credit and first paycheck. Maybe they weren't crazy after all.

But Fergus and Ostby still had a lot to learn. After the success of Consequence, the two tried to write blockbuster films to plow their way into the business, but they weren't getting anywhere. The problem was that they were trying to write movies they thought would make big money, not stories they were passionate about. It must have showed, because film companies weren't buying.
So Fergus and Ostby submitted their script for First Snow to CineStory. They won. And their experience at CineStory became one of the greatest learning opportunities in their career.


Frustrated, Fergus and Ostby decided to take a step back, reexamine their screenwriting approach, and write something they really cared about. Inspired by the low-budget thriller In the Company of Men, the two wrote First Snow. It was their final effort to jumpstart their careers. If it didn't work out, they would go and get real jobs and leave screenwriting behind.

Fortunately, it worked. First Snow was a success, and it helped Fergus and Ostby win an agent and some small screenwriting competitions. It started their careers, just like that.

"We could not figure out how to get started, and it turned out that really the simple solution was to write from your heart, to write from your own voice," Fergus said. "That literally made one hundred percent of the difference."

It was then that Fergus and Ostby found out about CineStory.

CineStory is a nonprofit association dedicated to helping new screenwriters improve their writing skills. Based in Idyllwild, California, CineStory consists of film industry professionals who consult with screenwriters through mentorship programs, workshops, classes and retreats. CineStory strives to help screenwriters create the best writing possible by fostering their unique voice and by instructing them in the essentials of cinematic storytelling.

CineStory is especially known for their annual screenwriting awards, in which the grand prize is a CineStory Fellowship valued at over $14k. As part of the fellowship, the winner receives a cash award, a one-year mentorship program with two industry professionals and an invitation to attend the CineStory Retreat for free.

Fergus liked that CineStory was focused on making screenwriters better writers rather than on empty promises of instant Hollywood success like other contests. "Everything about CineStory is about the writing and the work," Fergus said. "It just sounded like the right type of approach."

So Fergus and Ostby submitted their script for First Snow to CineStory. They won. And their experience at CineStory became one of the greatest learning opportunities in their career.
Fergus is grateful for CineStory's influence, and he is still involved with the organization today. Like many other CineStory mentors, he attends retreats and serves as both a contest judge and board member.


Fergus was especially impressed with the help he received during CineStory's retreat. Each retreat attendee has at least three one-and-a-half hour meetings with working industry professionals to go over his or her work and to receive feedback. "Going to CineStory was a real way of assessing where you were at," Fergus said. "It's not threatening or scary; it's a challenge. You work with people who really know the business."

CineStory taught Fergus and Ostby to take their script apart and discover what their story was really about. "Screenwriting is all about getting stuck. When you get stuck, and you don't know what to do next, you need to know what the core, the heart of your story is" Fergus said. CineStory showed them how to find that heart.

CineStory also taught the two writers how to find their own voices and put them into their work. "People respond to real passion and truth, and when your voice is on the page they can tell," Fergus said. CineStory pushed Fergus and Ostby in the right direction and helped them feel more confident in their writing. "It was one of those great timing things in life where the teacher that you need appears right when you need them," Fergus said.

After their fellowship with CineStory ended, Fergus and Ostby continued to build their screenwriting careers. They received their Academy Award nomination for Children of Men, and Fergus directed First Snow in 2007. Fergus and Ostby also wrote the wildly successful Iron Man, starring Robert Downey Jr., in 2008.

Fergus is grateful for CineStory's influence, and he is still involved with the organization today. Like many other CineStory mentors, he attends retreats and serves as both a contest judge and board member. "Everybody does it surely for the passion of trying to put back some of the energy that they got out of it for other writers," Fergus said. "It has a really great spirit like that."

Fergus and Ostby are also continuing to add credits to their resumes. The two are currently adapting James Patterson's book Maximum Ride for the screen, and their next film, Cowboys & Aliens, starring Daniel Craig, will be released in 2011. Fergus and Ostby are also hoping several other projects they have worked on will get made into films. "You write each one as if it's going to be the next great movie, and just try to believe that there's always a movie at the end of it," Fergus said.

"I keep waiting for the day when it's all so easy all of a sudden" Fergus said laughing. It never comes. But Fergus loves what he does, and he continues to learn and compete to stay sharp as a writer. You do what you can to stay in the game.

And Fergus has always learned by doing. He may have started out wanting to be Steven Spielberg, but he learned that he really needed to be himself. He found success by sticking to his own personal voice and vision.

Fergus hopes other writers will be able to learn from his career.

"Trust your own experiences and be as original as possible," Fergus said. "No one else has your voice. The more you can tap into that, the more it's going to shine on the page. And that's what they're looking for."

2011 CineStory Deadline: December 31, 2010



About the author: Maureen Fox received Bachelor of Arts degrees in English and communications-journalism from California State University, Fullerton (CSUF) in spring 2010 and is currently a graduate student in English at CSUF. Along with her academic work, Maureen writes as a freelancer for various organizations and maintains her own travel blog, www.openroadtraveler.blogspot.com, which provides travel advice to young adults. You can reach Maureen at mfox@csu.fullerton.edu.

Updated: 12/12/2010

CineStory Foundation Feature Retreat and Fellowship

Contact

Los Angeles, CA 90066

Web:
http://cinestory.org
Email:
info@cinestory.org

Report Card

Overall: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.6/5.0)
Professionalism: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.3/5.0)
Feedback: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.5/5.0)
Signficance: 4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars4.5 stars (4.5/5.0)
Report Cards: 31    
Have you entered?
Submit a Report card

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Categories

Submit Report Card

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