Project Greenlight is a contest and documentary series focusing on amateur filmmaking. Founded by Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, and Chris Moore through their production company LivePlanet, along with Miramax, Project Greenlight first aired on HBO for two seasons before moving to Bravo for season three. Project Greenlight Australia started receiving contestants in the beginning of 2005, with entries closing on February 14 of that year.
For an explanation of the title, see Greenlight.
Season One
The script contest ran from September
2000 to March
2001. Over 7,000 screenplays were submitted, and
Pete Jones was selected as the winner for
Stolen Summer, which he then filmed on location in his hometown of
Chicago during the summer of 2001. The first season of
Project Greenlight, chronicling the selection of Jones's script and the filming of the movie, aired on
HBO from late 2001 through early
2002.
Stolen Summer premiered at the
Sundance Film Festival in January of 2002, then went on to a limited theatrical release which brought in just under $120,000.
Season Two
For its second run, the contest was split into two categories: writing and directing. The winners were chosen on
January 18,
2003.
Erica Beeney won the writing contest for her script
The Battle of Shaker Heights, and
Kyle Rankin and
Efram Potelle won the directing contest. The series aired in the summer of 2003, detailing the production of the film in
Los Angeles.
The Battle of Shaker Heights opened in limited theatrical release on
August 24,
2003, earning just under $280,000 during its box office run.
Season Three
Script submission began and ended during February 2004. After two seasons on
HBO, the series moved to
Bravo and season three began airing on March 15, 2005.
The selected screenplay was a horror script entitled Feast written by Marcus Dunstan and Patrick Melton. The director was John Gulager. The film stars Krista Allen and Eric Dane and was produced by Dimension Films and Neo Art & Logic.
Australia
According to the
Weekend Australian*, Affleck and Damon have "always talked about exporting the concept" of Greenlight to other countries, with
England,
India and
Australia lined up as possible destinations. The foreseen requirements being a "thriving film business and lots of computers". In
2005 Project Greenlight Australia was launched with
Pay-TV Movie Network in partnership with
Screentime producing the show and offering the
AUD $1,000,000 financing to the winning film. The entries were received online with last entries being accepted by 5pm on
February 14.
The screenplay selected from the 1200 submissions was "Solo" by Morgan O'Neill. It is described on the PGLA website as "a dark journey into the heart of the Australian underworld."
External links
2000s TV shows in the United States | HBO network shows | Reality television series | Bravo television series