How To Begin Writing A Screenplay
How To Begin Writing A Screenplay
Something to write on
Something to write with
me, it's not as easy as it looks. Even if you think you know it in
your head write it down. This will get your brain thinking in
terms of story and that's exactly what you want. Once you have
finished writing the synopses for that film click on the films
title and a synopsis for the film will appear. Your synopsis will
never match word for word but hopefully you've captured the
basic story.
Stand By Me
The Shawshank Redemption
True Lies
EXERCISE TWO
Now that you know what a short synopsis is, it's time to
write your own. On a new sheet of paper write a short synopsis
for the screenplay you are planning on writing. It should only
be a few sentences long. Once you've written down the story
you would like to tell, take that piece of paper and hide it. Don't
look at it for one or two weeks. Then read it again and see if
it's the same story you want to tell. Writing a screenplay takes
months if not years and if you're already bored with your story
after one week, then it's not the story you should consider
writing. If the idea still strikes you as exciting then you now
have your story for your screenplay.
Spend at least two weeks on this assignment then check back
to see what we'll be working on next.
CONCEPT
Conjure up an exceptional concept, premise, or theme for your
movie considering: autobiography/biography, big vs. small,
chick flicks, imagination, impact on writer, metaphor,
originality, and universality.
concept
AUTOBIOGRAPHY/BIOGRAPHY
Stories best suited for cinema have strong dramatic structure.
Such stories are often difficult to pull out of biographies as
these tend to be chronologically linear and difficult to
encapsulate in a launch-story-climax design. Strong cinematic
life stories do indeed tell such a story, carefully extracted by a
skillful writer, but the challenge might best be saved for later
scripts. Where no cinematic story can be extracted from a life
or true story--e.g., a romance, another relationship, a challenge
or series of similar challenges--generating a theme might serve
lack of perspective
CHICK FLICKS
Any mother will tell you that her daughter will go see "boy
films" but her son will not go to see "girl films", so she ends up
taking them both to see "boy films" or loses half of her
audience. The same holds true into adulthood: either make
films that appeal to guys or cut out fifty percent of your
market. Though the woman still picks the film, she wants the
guy to come along (and often wants him to pay for it). It might
be said the whole movie industry depends on this
interrelationship. While most women don't see the use in
"shoot 'em ups", guys avoid "chick flicks" like the plague. One
crossover seems to be horror films, which the gals seem to
enjoy even more than the guys, but this is a pretty specific
genre not beloved by all writers.
Vive la diffrence.
feminine masculine
internal
external
compassion
fairness
agenda
mission
people
things
feelings
actions
family
tribe
social
political
"no"
"yes"
blame
no excuses
security risk
complain fix
etiquette respect
relationships
alliances
emotions anger
manipulate
command
love
protection
form
function
mystical mechanical
glamour valor
practical philosophical
earth
sky
intuitive logical
verbal
mathematical
indirect
direct
mean
tough
home
abroad
shopping cars
victimhood
fuggedaboutit
The two most popular movies of all time, in terms of box office
sales, operate on two levels, one tending to appeal most to
women and the other to men. GONE WITH THE WIND posed a
torrid love affair against the backdrop of war, the bloodiest in
U.S. history. Who's to say men don't enjoy love stories, too, but
need to hide their interest behind the more "acceptable"
martial battles? Love stories appeal more to women, war
appeals more to men. Overlapping the two can make a
powerful combination at the box office. The longest-running
top grossing film of all time, TITANIC works a similar
compromise when it poses a love affair against the backdrop of
an engineering marvel, a massive steel ship, and it's ultimate
destruction, with all the adventure and blood that entails. It
became the only movie ever to outsell GONE WITH THE WIND
(in real dollars). Appealing to young and old audiences equally
helped, too.
See what women say about chick flicks in . . . "More
Movies
Should Be About Being Moved" by Donna Britt in the June 7,
2002 Washington Post; and
"Women
Hanging
Together:
How Long Must We Watch?" by Alex Kuczynski in the June 9,
2002 New York Times . . . "reprinted" here.
Men Writing the Feminine: Literature, Theory, and the
Question of Genders
CULTURE
"Don't write about what you know, write about what you didn't
know you knew." ARTHUR KOPIT
Metaphors Dictionary
ORIGINALITY
Fresh, non-derivative ideas--that's what Hollywood says it
craves. The most often heard complaint from producers is "I've
seen that movie before!" Before you write your movie, has
anyone seen it before? Have you seen it before? There is
something to be said for stories that are close enough to other
popular stories that comparisons can be made. This can
facilitate pitching--"it's a kind of KING KONG meets CINEMA
PARADISO"--and ensure producers that the idea isn't too "out
there". One writer has even suggested developing movie
concepts in the way he heard a writer of great popular songs
did--start with a hit movie and alter one note at a time until it's
yours.
"Businesspeople" . . .
Such linguistic abominations require no further discussion.
What would such people do in countries where the language
spoken uses concordance, i.e., most words have a gender
inflection?
Great Movies