Very awesome and happy for you and your wife.
man there was so much stuff that I wanted to tell you that day and pics to send but we were under very strict orders to keep everything under wraps until they had a distributor. It was killing me because out of all my friends I knew you were the one person who would instantly appreciate what I was experiencing.Junkhead said:
I knew OP before he was famous.
And I was a little jealous when he got to meet Dolly Parton and Linda Perry but I am just now finding out about Jennifer Aniston and I'm PISSED. But seriously, congrats to you and the wife.
your wife's book doesnt sound like smutnai06 said:Also as a benefit, people have accused me of being a KeithDB sock and I feel like this makes it pretty clear I am notSarduakar said:
Congrats, KeithDB is fuming
Its really stressful. Most authors don't have any say in the film at all. When you sell the rights, thats pretty much it. They can give you a few assurances, but there typically isn't any guarantee that they stay true to the story.TexjbA&M said:
How stressful was the process of giving up control of the novel? I would imagine for your wife as the author that would be incredibly nerve-racking. I'm sure as with all novel to the screen adaptations, things had to be changed. What was that like for her?
We have lots of friends that write romance and I'll read them from time to time just because their my friends and I want to support them. One of my friends wrote the book im currently readingThe Debt said:your wife's book doesnt sound like smutnai06 said:Also as a benefit, people have accused me of being a KeithDB sock and I feel like this makes it pretty clear I am notSarduakar said:
Congrats, KeithDB is fuming
Having Dove Cameron is huge especially given her popularity with a younger demographic. The main character Willowdean, is played by Danielle Macdonald who starred in Patti Cake$MookieBlaylock said:
Dove Cameron is a big get too i guess she is playing the main charqcter
Congrats
I'm curious about this process. How does this work?Quote:
Soon after we got a call that Disney wanted to buy the film rights which they ended up doing. That was a bit of wild experience just seeing all the things that Disney does. Around this time, Disney began ramping up production on it's live action remakes. About a year later they decided to let the rights expire and not to make the film. It was a pretty big gut punch but there was a silver lining.
Flashdiaz said:oh so now you refer to her as Jenn now... you so hollywood!nai06 said:Jenn is such a genuinely nice person. On the last day of filming even though she had already wrapped, she arranged for a special food truck to be on set for the overnight shoot for the cast and crew. It served coffee, milk, and cookies all night and she picked up the tabPresley OBannons Sword said:GoAgs92 said:
Congrats, that is super cool!
Just keep your wife away from Ben Affleck...ha.
Or Jennifer Aniston, apparently.
but really, cool story. Have your wife write a sequel where Jenn takes her top off and does jumping jacks.
This explains the Ian-ifer references I saw in the Enquirer.Flashdiaz said:oh so now you refer to her as Jenn now... you so hollywood!nai06 said:Jenn is such a genuinely nice person. On the last day of filming even though she had already wrapped, she arranged for a special food truck to be on set for the overnight shoot for the cast and crew. It served coffee, milk, and cookies all night and she picked up the tabPresley OBannons Sword said:GoAgs92 said:
Congrats, that is super cool!
Just keep your wife away from Ben Affleck...ha.
Or Jennifer Aniston, apparently.
huba huba......nai06 said:
TL;DR
My wife wrote a book which was made into a movie starring Jennifer Aniston, Dolly Parton and Linda Perry did the soundtrack, Dolly wrote some original songs for the film, it comes out in a month, and I don't know what real life is anymore.
LINKS:
IMDB page for cast
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4878482/fullcredits
https://www.countryliving.com/life/entertainment/a24403853/dumplin-movie-netflix/
Dolly Parton has two songs out from the soundtrack. Here I am (a rerecording featuring Sia) and her newest original song Girl in the Movies (she has already been promoting it for an oscar nom)
https://dollyparton.com/featured/here-i-am-first-single-from-dumplin/15492
You can find both songs anywhere you buy or stream music.
And here is the track listing
Odds of him lurking in this thread?Sarduakar said:
Congrats, KeithDB is fuming
What's the backstory on this?Sarduakar said:
Congrats, KeithDB is fuming
Alright this is kinda longAgGrad99 said:
Last week I listened to an interview with Dolly Parton, and she was talking about Dumplin and making new music for it. Had no idea the connection. Very very cool. She sounded genuinely thrilled to be making the music, and that she was interwoven into the story.
She seems like the type of person you could talk to for hours, and feel like you haven't' even scratched the surface.I'm curious about this process. How does this work?Quote:
Soon after we got a call that Disney wanted to buy the film rights which they ended up doing. That was a bit of wild experience just seeing all the things that Disney does. Around this time, Disney began ramping up production on it's live action remakes. About a year later they decided to let the rights expire and not to make the film. It was a pretty big gut punch but there was a silver lining.
I'm guessing the money they paid for the rights, you get to keep?...but additional money would have come from a percentage of the movie's revenue, had they made it?
But once it expired, did you sell the rights again? Just take a percentage? How does all that work?
KeithDBs wife is also an author. he also has a reputation on the political board.MSFC Aggie said:What's the backstory on this?Sarduakar said:
Congrats, KeithDB is fuming
Unfortunately that is a very common story. People get the rights and just change the entire thing. What's even worse is when they hold rights on purpose. I've known of a few people who sold rights only to later find out the studio had a similar movie already in the works. They simply bought the rights with the purpose of holding them in order to reduce competition and keep the movie from being made until theirs came out. I get that its a business decision but thats absolutely devastating for the author. Throughout this whole process we have basically assumed it would never happen so as not to get our hopes up.CanyonAg77 said:
Congrats to you and your wife. Getting a book made into a movie is about as likely as winning the lottery. Getting a movie made about your book that closely follows the plot is as likely as getting hit by lightning while holding the winning lottery ticket.
I have an in-law that wrote a script about growing up Catholic in a family of five boys. It was picked up for a movie. But they wanted to make it one boy one girl. And about a single-parent family. And not Catholic. Etc. etc. etc.