Alliance Family Health Center





Craig Cambria

Craig Cambria
Atlanta, GA


Contact Craig Cambria


Craig Cambria

5th Place for Feature Screenplay

"Night of Reflections"

Interview:

Although trained in science and medicine (B.S. mathematics, M.S. physics, M.D.), I’ve always longed to resume my youthful interest in writing and film.  It took me a while, but I’ve now carved out enough time to pursue a screenwriting career.

Is “Night of Reflections” your first script? If not, what else have you completed?

I’ve written 8 screenplays - 3 of the early ones didn’t pan out and 3 more were pretty good (placed in contests and/or had agents repping), but became obsolete by current events or other films that were too similar.  The remaining 2 scripts are my most recent and are the two that made it into your finals, “Night of Reflections”  and “Canaries.”

Why did you write “Night of Reflections?” 

I work in the field of mental health.  I wanted to bring an obsessively controlling protagonist (a character flaw which I have to some extent) together with a severely and maliciously ill antagonist to get him to examine his own personality disorder.

How long did it take you to write it? 

Kind of hard to say since I’ve done a few rewrites after leaving it alone for months at a time to concentrate on other stuff, working on it part-time during other periods.  I’d guess about 200- 300 hours over a year and a half. I.e. if I’d worked on it continuously in 40-50 hour weeks it would have taken a month or two.

Describe your process; do you have a set routine, method for writing?

I use file cards (primitive storyboarding) to sequence all the major scenes from beginning to end before writing.  Then I write the first 10-15 pages, rewrite them a couple times, then on to the next 10-15 pages, etc.

What inspires you to write? 

Initially ideas, eventually deadlines.

Apart from writing, what else are you passionate about? 

Doing my job professionally and keeping my family healthy and safe.  (Yeah, I wish I could say windsurfing and skydiving, but I’m a pretty buttoned-down guy.)

What influenced you to enter the Movie Script Contest? 

Its emphasis on industry exposure over monetary awards, and the promise of feedback of high quality.

Do you feel that screenwriting contests are worthwhile for writers and why?

Yes, because it’s tough to break in with just a script and a smile.  A credit helps open doors.

Who is your favorite screenwriter or writer and why? 

Joel Coen.  Economical, clever, funny.

Any advice or tips you’d like to pass on to other writers? 

My big breakthrough came when I realized that I must have others read and criticize my work before sending it out, usually several times for several rewrites.  That giddy feeling you get when you finally type “FADE OUT” on an early draft is so intoxicating that you want to share the script with the world immediately.  Well, share it with trusted writer/industry friends or coverage services first and remember that “writing is rewriting.”

What’s next for you? 

I’ve got the sequels to my Sci-Fi thriller, Canaries, rattling around in my head along with a drama/thriller about money and family akin to “A Simple Plan.”  I’m still deciding which to tackle first.


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