The Black List | |
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Created | 2004; 15 years ago |
Location | blcklst.com/lists/ |
Author(s) | Franklin Leonard |
Purpose | Ranking of top unproduced screenplays |
The Black List 2011: Screenplay Roster. It is, at best, a “most liked” list. 133 THE IMITATION GAME by Graham Moore The story of British WWII cryptographer Alan Turing, who cracked the German Enigma code and later poisoned himself after being criminally pros¬ecuted for being a homosexual.
The Black List is an annual survey of the 'most liked' motion picture screenplays not yet produced. It has been published every year since 2005 on the second Friday of December by Franklin Leonard, a development executive who subsequently worked at Universal Pictures[1] and Will Smith's Overbrook Entertainment.[2][3][4] The website states that these are not necessarily 'the best' screenplays, but rather 'the most liked', since it is based on a survey of studio and production company executives.[5]
Of the approximately 1000 screenplays The Black List has included since 2005, nearly a third have been later produced as theatrical films, including successful and award-winning examples such as Argo,[6]American Hustle, Juno,[7]The King's Speech, Slumdog Millionaire,[8]Spotlight, The Revenant, The Descendants, and Hell or High Water. The produced films have all together grossed well over $25.54 billion, and have been nominated for 241 Academy Awards and 205 Golden Globe Awards, winning 48 and 40, respectively.[9] As of the 88th Academy Awards, four of the last eight best picture Oscars went to scripts featured on a previous Black List, as well as ten of the last 20 screenwriting Oscars (Original and Adapted Screenplays). In addition, writers whose scripts are listed often find that they are more readily hired for other jobs, even if their listed screenplays still have not been produced, such as Jim Rash and Nat Faxon, two of the writers of the Oscar-winning screenplay of The Descendants, who had an earlier screenplay make the list.[3]Slate columnist David Haglund has written that the list's reputation as a champion for 'beloved but challenging' works has been overstated, since 'these are screenplays that are already making the Hollywood rounds. And while, as a rule, they have not yet been produced, many of them are already in production.'[10]
On January 27, 2019, it was announced at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival in Park City that the LGBTQ media advocacy group GLAAD has partnered with The Black List to create The GLAAD List, a new curated list of the most promising unmade LGBTQ-inclusive scripts in Hollywood. [11]
The first Black List was compiled in 2005 by Franklin Leonard, at the time working as a development executive for Leonardo DiCaprio's production company, Appian Way Productions. He emailed about 75 fellow development executives and asked them to name the 10 best unproduced screenplays they read that year.[12] To thank them for participating, he compiled the list and sent it to the respondents. The name The Black List was a nod to his heritage as an African American man, and also as a subtle reference to the writers who were barred during the McCarthy era as part of the Hollywood blacklist.[13]
The screenplays to top The Black List, from 2005 to 2018 respectively, are: Things We Lost in the Fire; The Brigands of Rattleborge; Recount; The Beaver; The Muppet Man; College Republicans; The Imitation Game; Draft Day; Holland, Michigan; Catherine the Great; Bubbles; Blond Ambition; Ruin; and Frat Boy Genius.
The Black List tallies the number of 'likes' various screenplays have been given by development executives. Screenplays are ranked based on how many likes each of them get. The most likes received by a single screenplay is The Imitation Game, with 133 upon topping the 2011 list; it went on to win the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.
More than 300 screenplays have been put into production after appearing on The Black List. These include:[14][15]
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