He started the process of making Apocalypse Now, and I was started on writing the screenplay with Carroll Ballard for The Black Stallion. The idea was that we were going to make this film, I was going to edit it, and it was going to combine the first two books of The Black Stallion series which involved the shipwreck and then an adventure somewhere in North Africa with Arab horses. We struggled with this story for about six months trying to fuse these two things together and keep it at a manageable length. We just... we did not succeed at that, and we brought on Gill Dennis, who was a mutual friend, to give us a new way. And so the three of us started working, and Gill made the suggestion, 'Just tell the first book, keep it simple, and then if you want... if the film is a success and you want to shoot another one in North Africa, then you have this other book.' And we were in such a state that we thought okay, we'll do it.
Carroll was nervous about it because he loved aspects of the North African scene. And in The Black Stallion, once the shipwreck is over, it really becomes a story of a boy in a suburban environment with a horse. That's eventually how the film was finished and made. But there was a certain amount of tension in that process, and Carroll put a great deal of attention, which really paid off, on the whole story of the shipwreck and the boy marooned on the island with the horse. So my... all of my activity in the year 1975 was based on writing a screenplay, I wasn't doing any film editing, mixing or anything. I was sitting and writing different versions of this script.