A Fantastic Fairytale Fad

Fairytales have emerged as the latest movie fad. How long will this last? A lot longer than you think.

The fairytale seems to be all the rage in Hollywood today. Over the past couple of years, we have witnessed fairytales such as Alice in Wonderland and Red Riding Hood reappear into our lives. This year, Snow White made her way to the big screen; but she is slightly feistier than we last remembered. Next year doesn’t seem to be looking any different with “comebacks” from our favorite fairytales both Jack and the Beanstalk and Hansel and Gretel. The fad looks to be far from over. Why the sudden interest in fairytales? Perhaps it has more to do with success.

Movie trends have spanned across various genres and themes over the years. The fairy tale is no exception.  First came American Pie which led to a series of movies centering on teenagers who desperately wanted to explore their sexual fantasies (Eurotrip, Roadtrip). Then came Harry Potter who gave a green light for all the other goblin-filled movies (Percy Jackson, The Golden Compass) to follow pursuit—ultimately paling in comparison. David Heyman, producer of Harry Potter, shares his insight, “We weren’t trying to emulate anything, and we didn’t have too many people in the mix trying to say what it should be. You’ve got Jo Rowling’s voice and the director’s voice. We’re not creating a product; we’re adapting Jo Rowling’s books.” Audiences can’t be fooled for too long. This is ultimately why imitated works usually do not live up to the originals.

Many films with comparable storylines go into production at the same time. Computer animated films have been a huge culprit of this. Have you noticed animated movies come lumped together exploring both the same themes and terrains? Surprise. Animation first explored the harsh realities of those living in the soil (A Bug’s Life, Antz) and then moved to the depths of the sea (Finding Nemo, A Shark’s Tale).  CG even shed light on some mysterious creatures that we didn’t even know existed (Monsters Inc., Shrek). Once computer animation was able to convincingly capture Mother Nature’s wrath, we were flooded with volcanoes (Dante’s Peak, Volcano) and asteroids (Deep Impact, Armageddon) and other natural disaster movies. Now audiences can look forward to being haunted by their favorite childhood stories.

Hollywood isn’t entirely to blame for the new crave. Many moviegoers enjoy rediscovering those sentimental fairytales from their youth. It is a nice escape from their routine lives. Additionally, Fairytales have done extremely well on the big screen in the past several years. After all, can you really blame movie executives for striking the iron while it’s hot? Movie executives are merely attempting to reproduce the success. At least that’s what Hollywood screenwriter and veteran William Goldman maintains. While the overabundance of fairytales may seem like a cheesy fad, it’s been very lucrative. Don’t look for the craze to die down anytime soon.

Serge is the founder of Edictive and is a seasoned production professional as well as a leading technology product specialist in film production management space

Real Car Tunes

Hi everyone! Enjoy this fun guest post. Isn’t it amazing where inspiration can come from?

Cars have become embedded in every facet of our society, maybe even more so then computers. Think about it. There have been TV show’s, movies, books, video games and even music all devoted to cars. In fact some songs about cars are so famous that nearly everyone knows them and they have earned their place in history. Here are just a few of them.

Don McLean’s “American Pie” is hands down one of the most iconic songs in American history. Okay, it may not exactly be about cars, but everyone knows the phrase, “drove my Chevy to the levy but the levy was dry.” The song was originally written in 1971 about the deaths of rock legends Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper. However, McLean later wrote another version to include numerous other living artists. The song was a huge hit and has come to symbolize the good old days of rock ‘n roll, and America. In fact, the song was number one on the Billboard charts for four weeks straight. It also inspired Roberta Flack to compose and record the also famous song, “killing me softly.” Few songs are considered to be as important as American Pie.

Moving a decade forward into the 1980’s will give us another hit about a car. Not only are we moving up in time but also in car quality as “Pink Cadillac” was play on the radio. Okay, you might think this is a tribute to Mary Kay cosmetics but it wasn’t and ironically enough the song wasn’t originally a hit. Bruce Springsteen wrote and released on the B side of “Dancing in the Dark” in 1984.  It received nominal play on rock radio and peaked the Billboards at number 27. It wasn’t until four years later when Natalie Cole covered it that it hit the top ten charts. That being said, in case you wondering, yes, it is a sexual reference as well.

Keeping with the 1980’s theme finds us with yet another hit song also about a Chevy with Prince’s “Little Red Corvette.” Debuting in 1983 on Prince’s album 1999, it was his first album to hit the top ten on the Billboards’ Hot 100 list finishing at number 6. Surprisingly, it was also his first song to do better on the pop charts then the R&B charts, thanks largely in part to the poppy chorus. Once again this song is also a sexual euphemism but like Pink Cadillac, most people don’t realize this. Chevy could hardly ask for a better promotional song.

Of course there are many other famous songs about cars, many continuing the sexual theme such as Wilson Pickett’s “Mustang Sally” and “Drive My Car” by the Beatles. Of course don’t forget any number of country songs about used cars trucks. Who knew that cars could provide such creative inspiration?

Rusty Jefferson like in the golden state of California. He writes about pop culture, music and life. Enterprise Car Sales is one example of where to find your own car to inspire your music.

The Negatives of Writing for a Living and How to Get Through Them

Enjoy this guest blog by Chris Hoole!

You may have dreamed of being paid to write, but the reality might not live up to your expectations. Yes writing is a wonderful career to choose and it has many benefits such as being able to work from home, having the chance to write about things you love and being paid for being creative but there are down sides too and knowing how to work through these negatives can help to ensure you create great content even if your heart isn’t in it.

More Facts than Fiction

Writing for a living doesn’t necessarily mean you are able to write stories all day. In truth most writers working from home find they are constantly writing for companies who are looking to market their business online or through printed materials. If you write for a company who specialising in products you love this can be great fun, but many business out there will be marketing services and some of these can be completely out of your comfort zone, which can make writing turn from a pleasure into a chore.

Set Your Writing Free

If you have been educated in creative writing you can help to remain fresh and in love with your job by using some of the common exercises that help creative juices flow.  Free writing is a great exercise that can help you come up with ideas for topics you are uncomfortable with. Write down anything you want about the topic, you could end up with questions that inspire your next posts and then it is down to you to find out the answers and write the piece aimed at people like you who know little about the subject. Offering advice and answering questions is a great way of building a valuable blog or viable article that can really help optimise websites.

Watching people is also beneficial to writers and something that can constantly prove to be useful. Although it is rude to eavesdrop if you are in a café or waiting for a bus listen to the conversations around you. Learn what makes people tick, listen out for opinions and study the body language of those around you. While this may not help directly with your tedious writing task you can find it is useful to put yourself in the mind of the audience you are writing for.

Research and Read

If you have a regular client who wants unique content on a topic you don’t feel passionate about it is a good idea to spend time researching. By reading great blog posts, news articles and visiting similar websites you can quickly educate yourself on the basics, and from their your knowledge will be given a chance to grow. Sign up to newsletters, take advantage of free eBooks and use your time to learn something new. You may discover you do have an interest for the subject after all. This is one area that really helps me to stay in love with writing, I constantly learn new things and I enjoy finding a passion for something I felt nothing for previously.

Get Away from it All

Some days the brain will simply refuse to play ball, and on those days it is better to leave the page empty and get out of the house. Going for a walk or browsing in shops can help to reenergise your brain, plus you never know when inspirations will strike. When you go out always take a pen and paper, iPad or phone that allows you to add notes. That way if an idea does come into your mind, and it probably will, you have the ability to write it down and use it later.

These methods are used by many copywriters who remain passionate about each job they are working on. Find the passion in your writing to produce your best work.

Benefits of Print on Demand

If you have yet to hear about print on demand, you are missing out on a great feature. Print on demand is a relatively new printing technology. Instead of printing a large quantity of books, pamphlets, brochures, etc. all at once and risking having a ton of inventory left over, print on demand only prints those items needed during the time of the order.

For example, let’s say that you’re a new author who just wrote a book. Rather than pay to have millions of copies of your book printed, you can use print on demand. If you are using a website to promote your book, you simply set up the ordering process with the printer. Once an order comes through, your book will be printed and sent to the customer. This allows printing to be done one at a time instead of in bulk.

So what are the benefits of this technology versus older technologies?

1. It’s cheaper.

Having a million copies of one item printed would cost a fortune. And if you weren’t able to sell all of the copies you printed, you would be stuck paying for them out of your own pocket. With print on demand, you are only paying to print the items you need based on orders. For example, if you had an order of 10 books, only 10 books would be printed, saving you a fortune, and allowing your profits to pay for the printing of the book.

2. It allows authors to become published.

There are many aspiring writers out there with great stories to tell, but unfortunately they don’t have the resources to pay for the publishing and printing fees. With print on demand, independent authors can now become published authors through the use of print on demand. This technology does not require any financial risk, so if the author’s book is unsuccessful, they won’t end up losing all of their savings.

3. No more dealing with an agent.

By using print on demand, you can opt to print the book yourself, which means that you will not have to hire an agent to push your book out to multiple publishing companies. This will save a great deal of money, and it will also ensure that your book is published more quickly than it would be using a traditional agent.

4. Creative Control

When you have an agent, you are forced into making their changes in order to have the book published. With print on demand, you have total control over what is said in your book, how the cover looks, how many pages there are and the names of each character, amongst other things.

If print on demand sounds like something that interests you, be sure to do your research and find a company that you like. Each printing company may do things a bit differently than others, and it’s a great idea to be partnered with a company you enjoy working with.

George Simmons lives in Miami.  He likes to write in his spare time and has recently been telling others about the best Florida printing companies.

The Scariest Hotels From Movie History

Enjoy this fun post! I grew up on the movie Psycho and totally agree that there’s a creepy element about hotels that movie-makers have exploited (much to everyone’s delight!).

What is it about a remote hotel setting that compounds the terror in a horror movie? Could it be those corridors, the length of 20 football fields that are seemingly the only avenue of escape from unspeakable horror, but always have a really unpleasant surprise lurking at each end? Is it those closed doors that lead off of a dimly lit hotel corridor behind which anything may be lurking? Fear of the unknown is part of the human condition and having movie characters battle monsters in unfamiliar surroundings adds disorientation to terror. These are not exclusively budget hotels as one might think: Horror haunts the most hallowed of halls.

The 1960’s film, Psycho is a horror classic and has all the elements that make terror so tantalisingly terrible. A young woman on the run after stealing $40,000 chooses to hide out at the isolated Bates Motel that sits vulture-like atop a craggy hill similar in setting to Dracula’s castle, and seeming to rely entirely on a sinister looking moon for lighting. To have someone else go where no sensible coward has gone before and then have our cowardice justified when they are horribly mutilated, somehow reaffirms our self-esteem. This lady gets exactly what this thoroughly creepy motel suggested she would.

The number 13 features in two of the scariest movie hotels and one would think that this alone would give reason enough for pause. The Dolphin Hotel, and in particular room 1408 (adds up to 13 as if Stephen King didn’t know and maliciously assign anyway), is the scene of unrestricted evil gone berserk. Again, a supposedly intelligent individual who is the author of 3 successful non-fiction works based on the paranormal, checks into this notoriously haunted room simply because he has a sudden attack of conscience: He doesn’t actually believe that the paranormal exists and therefore feels like a fraud. The terror of this hotel is that life goes on as normal in the rest of the establishment, while demonic chaos very loudly reigns in that room only. A similar scenario erupts at the Wessex Hotel in the movie, Nightmare on the 13th floor. Guests mysteriously disappear and a reporter who is writing a review takes it upon herself to investigate. The discovery of an unmarked 13th floor immediately kills any intelligence she possesses and she sallies forth unhindered by common sense or travel companions. Some Gothic decorative touches really should have given her some indication of the satanic cult that resides on this floor.

Isolation from the comfort of a crowd also turns The Overlook Hotel in the 1980 film, The Shining, into nightmare accommodation. Long, deserted and eerily quiet corridors will soon explode with the sound of doors being hacked down as a previously sane father attempts to decimate his family with an axe while demonic forces seen only by his young son, write strange messages in blood on the walls. Lonely halls in a murky establishment that is thankfully about to close make The Yankee Pedlar hotel from the movie, The Innkeepers a place to be avoided. Evil manifests here as sound as two employees at the establishment attempt to record the ghosts who have supposedly taken up residence.

The Pinewood Motel from the movie, Vacancy continues the classic horror pattern. A car breaks down and a couple are forced to book into a room that has hidden cameras galore and knife wielding psychopaths watching. Isolation is complete as no cell-phone towers exist. Horror Hotel features a young student doing research into witchcraft with similar results to Psycho. In all cases separation from the comfort of company is what makes these hotels the terrifying residences that they are.

Amy writes about movies and works for Deal Zippy – the hotel deals website.