Saturday, August 4, 2012

Martin Eden Film Coming Soon!



Well as of this writing, this headline isn’t quite yet true—it’s more of a self-fulfilling prophecy.  It is true that there is an excellent screenplay adaptation of Jack London’s 1909 novel slowly getting some positive attention in Hollywood and New York.  Martin Eden is a great story that mirrors much of London’s own life and times as an uneducated sailor, turned famous writer.  For many years I thought that somebody should’ve made this great novel into a film.  Now that somebody has finally written a very good…No, great screenplay exactly 100 years since the novel was published, I think the time is ripe to bring this story to life on the big screen. How do I know the screenplay is great?  Well, speaking objectively, this script has placed in 4 major screenwriting competitions.  Martin Eden took 2nd place in the Inkwell Opportunity 2009 screenwriting competition, as well as being judged a finalist in Scriptapalooza, Fresh Voices and Sundance Film Festival’s top 100 in the Table Read My Screenplay competition.

The story is about love, obsession, ambition, social issues, self-improvement, sacrifice, success, charity, disillusionment and deep depression.  This story interweaves all of the elements that touch every human soul in one way or another. The story of Martin Eden is set in San Francisco in the early 1900’s.  This was a time when class distinction was most prevalent in American society—the bourgeois wealthy, whom chased to great extent, the Victorian affectations, and the oppressed working class, where the sparks of rebellion were quickly being fanned-to-flame. Eden is a young uneducated and impoverished sailor from the latter class, who gets a taste of the seemingly better life of the wealthy. It all begins when he falls hopelessly in love with Ruth Morse, a young socialite who embodies everything the wealthy upper class can afford.  Eden makes his decision to abandon the life of the sea, educate himself, learn proper etiquette, dress the part of a man of distinction and become a published writer.   

Eden’s relentless pursuit of this goal for the attention, and hopefully the eventual hand of Ruth in marriage becomes his only obsession.  Ruth helps Martin pursue his dream, at the great disapproval of her controlling mother.  All through his improvement training, Martin takes up writing day and night, and very much like his creator, London himself, after years of literary rejection, finally gets some recognition.  Eventually he loses the girl; rather she loses faith in him. Eden later has works published, becomes famous, takes up with socialists and anarchists, gets fame, is disillusioned by the life of the wealthy, gives his money away to his less privileged friends and family and… well, I don’t want to give it all away.  I will tell you that this does not end on a good note though…

But I urge you to read the book…or wait for the film. Once this great screenplay is purchased and produced by some brilliant visionary it will be a certain hit, not only here in the U.S. but this is a sure bet for international attention as London’s book is even today very popular throughout Europe and other parts of the world.  And why am I so hopeful and confident about this script?  Because I, Jim Farina, am the proud author.

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