Screenwriting For Dummies
by Schellhardt, Laura; Logan, JohnRent Book
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Summary
Author Biography
Original works include The K of D, The Chair, Courting Vampires, Shapeshifter, The Apothecary’s Girl, Inheritance, and Je Ne Sais Quoi. Adaptations include The Phantom Tollbooth, The Mysteries of Harris Burdick, The Outfit (Jeff Award Nominee), and Creole Folktales.
Laura is a recipient of the Theatre Communications Group 2007–8 Playwriting Residency, The Jerome Fellowship, the New Play Award from ACT in Seattle, and a Dramatist Guild Playwriting Fellowship. She has participated in the SoHo Rep. Writer/Director Lab and the O’Neill National Playwright’s Festival. Laura has assisted in the development of new work at The Goodman, Steppenwolf Theatre, Northlight Theatre, and Trinity Repertory Company. She has studied writing with the likes of Paula Vogel, Maria Irene Fornes, Erin Cressida Wilson and has taught alongside Oscar-nominated John Logan of Aviator and Sweeney Todd fame.
Laura currently heads the playwriting program at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois and teaches workshops across the country.
Table of Contents
| Foreword | p. xvi |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| About This Book | p. 1 |
| Conventions Used in This Book | p. 1 |
| Foolish Assumptions | p. 2 |
| How This Book Is Organized | p. 2 |
| Icons Used in This Book | p. 3 |
| Where to Go from Here | p. 4 |
| So You Want to Write for Pictures | p. 5 |
| Introducing the Art of Screenwriting | p. 7 |
| Thinking Visually | p. 7 |
| Developing the Writer's Mind | p. 8 |
| Approaching Screenwriting as a Craft | p. 9 |
| Finding Your Screenplay's Story | p. 9 |
| Working through the Writing Process | p. 10 |
| Formatting Your Screenplay | p. 10 |
| Constructing Your First Draft | p. 11 |
| Rewriting Your Script | p. 12 |
| Adapting Your Screenplay from an Outside Source | p. 12 |
| Selling Your Screenplay to Show Business | p. 14 |
| Preparing to Think Visually | p. 15 |
| Exploring Other Mediums | p. 15 |
| Fiction | p. 16 |
| Stage plays | p. 17 |
| Poetry and studio arts | p. 17 |
| Screenplays | p. 18 |
| The Visual Life of a Screenplay | p. 20 |
| From the outside in | p. 21 |
| From the inside out | p. 22 |
| Diving In to the Screenwriter's Mind | p. 23 |
| Learning from Other Writers | p. 24 |
| Reading for dramatic intent | p. 25 |
| Recognizing a screenplay's genre | p. 26 |
| Art and Life: What's the Difference? | p. 27 |
| Developing an Artistic Sensibility | p. 28 |
| What a writer sees | p. 29 |
| What a writer hears | p. 30 |
| What a writer remembers and what a writer forgets | p. 31 |
| Recognizing a Story When You See One | p. 33 |
| Identifying the call to write | p. 33 |
| The four important P's of story | p. 34 |
| Finding an opening image | p. 34 |
| Approaching Screenwriting as a Craft | p. 37 |
| A Look at the Creative Process | p. 38 |
| Imagination: Your Creative Arsenal | p. 39 |
| Flexing the imagination | p. 39 |
| Putting the imagination to work | p. 41 |
| Identifying your writing voice | p. 44 |
| Craft: A Vehicle for Your Imagination | p. 46 |
| Form | p. 46 |
| Technique | p. 46 |
| Discipline | p. 50 |
| Breaking Down the Elements of a Story | p. 53 |
| Unpacking Your Idea | p. 55 |
| I Have This Great Idea. Now What? | p. 55 |
| Pinpointing your interest in the idea | p. 55 |
| Documenting your interest in the idea | p. 57 |
| Getting to Know Your Audience | p. 58 |
| Matching the story to the audience | p. 59 |
| Connecting with your audience | p. 61 |
| Knowing What Happened Before Your Story Began: Creating the Backstory | p. 63 |
| Elements of the backstory | p. 63 |
| Developing a screenplay through backstory | p. 65 |
| Identifying the Tone of Your Piece | p. 66 |
| Establishing Your Story's Time Clock | p. 67 |
| Deciding When to Start Your Story | p. 69 |
| Getting to Know Aristotle: A Dramatist's Best Friend | p. 70 |
| What's It All About?: Writing a Nutshell Synopsis | p. 72 |
| Plot Part I: Beginnings | p. 75 |
| Enhancing Your Opening Images | p. 75 |
| Person, place, or thing: What do you want to present first? | p. 76 |
| Conflict: What's wrong with your story? | p. 79 |
| Possible ways to begin your story | p. 80 |
| Tracking Success: Three Compelling (and Contrasting) Movie Beginnings | p. 81 |
| The Untouchables | p. 81 |
| American Beauty | p. 82 |
| Jaws | p. 83 |
| Plot Part II: Middles | p. 85 |
| Deciding What Comes Next | p. 85 |
| From Lights to Camera to ... ACTION! | p. 87 |
| Presenting both action and activity | p. 88 |
| Revisiting the story's time clock | p. 89 |
| Status: Where's the Upper Hand? | p. 90 |
| What's Your Problem? Introducing Conflicts and Obstacles | p. 92 |
| Exposition: From Clunky to Creative | p. 94 |
| Sharing info the characters know | p. 95 |
| Sharing info the characters may not know | p. 96 |
| Determining What to Write from What You've Already Written | p. 97 |
| Continuing Success: Tracking Three Successful Movie Middles | p. 99 |
| Jaws | p. 100 |
| The Untouchables | p. 101 |
| American Beauty | p. 101 |
| Plot Part III: Endings | p. 103 |
| How Do You Know When You're Done? | p. 104 |
| Tracking the change: What's different now? | p. 105 |
| Crafting your story's conclusion | p. 109 |
| Danger Will Robinson: Threats to an Otherwise Healthy Plot | p. 112 |
| Would that really happen? The probable versus the possible | p. 113 |
| Scenes where nothing happens: Two final threats to watch for | p. 116 |
| Ultimate Success: Tracking Three Movies through Their Triumphant Conclusions | p. 117 |
| Jaws | p. 117 |
| The Untouchables | p. 118 |
| American Beauty | p. 119 |
| Character Building | p. 121 |
| Portrait of a Person: Constructing a Physical World | p. 122 |
| Your character's physical being | p. 122 |
| Your character's physical environment | p. 125 |
| The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Constructing an Internal World | p. 129 |
| Dreams, desires, and passions | p. 130 |
| Talents and expertise | p. 130 |
| Internal obstacles | p. 131 |
| Your character's argument | p. 132 |
| From the Inside Out: Making the Inner World Visible | p. 133 |
| Balancing character dialogue with character action | p. 134 |
| Crafting concrete character goals | p. 135 |
| Providing character opportunities | p. 135 |
| Establishing routines that change | p. 136 |
| Forcing your characters to choose | p. 136 |
| Using a mentor | p. 137 |
| Using a narrator | p. 137 |
| Crafting secondary characters | p. 138 |
| Say What? Constructing Dynamic Dialogue | p. 139 |
| Diction: What's in a Word? | p. 140 |
| Isn't versus ain't: Diction's determining factors | p. 141 |
| The highs and the lows of language | p. 145 |
| Name That Tune: Crafting Your Character's Music | p. 148 |
| Sound 101: Using poetry as a guide | p. 149 |
| Fascinating rhythm: Crafting your script's pulse | p. 150 |
| Listening: The Other Half of Conversation | p. 152 |
| Putting It Together: Letting Your Characters Speak | p. 154 |
| Setting the scene | p. 155 |
| Dialogue do's and don'ts | p. 156 |
| The Nontraditional Film | p. 163 |
| Breaking with Tradition - Other Ways to Get the Job Done | p. 164 |
| Thinking Out of Time | p. 165 |
| Song and Dance: The Movie Musical | p. 167 |
| Original musicals | p. 168 |
| Musical adaptations | p. 169 |
| Maintaining an Audience's Trust | p. 171 |
| Screenwriting and Ethics | p. 171 |
| Screenwriting and Responsibility | p. 173 |
| What are you willing to put your name on? | p. 173 |
| Approaching difficult subject matter | p. 174 |
| The Immunity Factor | p. 175 |
| Turning Your Story into a Script | p. 177 |
| Mapping Out Your Screenplay | p. 179 |
| Conceptualizing Your Concept | p. 180 |
| How to Treat Your Treatment | p. 182 |
| Before you begin | p. 182 |
| Putting it on the page | p. 183 |
| Exploring the Ins and Outs of an Outline | p. 184 |
| One sentence at a time | p. 185 |
| One step at a time | p. 187 |
| What to Do When the Outline's Through | p. 188 |
| Surviving Writer's Block | p. 191 |
| From Panic to Peace: Switching Mind-Sets | p. 192 |
| The top ten reasons for writer's block | p. 193 |
| A survival guide | p. 196 |
| Reevaluating Your Routine | p. 197 |
| Seeking Outside Help | p. 198 |
| Formatting Your Screenplay | p. 201 |
| How the Screenplay Looks on the Page | p. 202 |
| Setting your typeface and your margins | p. 202 |
| Spacing your script correctly | p. 203 |
| Making your computer work for you | p. 205 |
| Creating a PDF | p. 206 |
| Key Formatting Elements | p. 207 |
| Character introductions | p. 207 |
| Cinematic description | p. 210 |
| Camera concerns | p. 214 |
| Terms that defy categorization | p. 218 |
| A Sample Scene | p. 220 |
| Putting It Together: Structuring Your First Draft | p. 223 |
| Navigating the Three-Act Structure | p. 223 |
| Introductions | p. 224 |
| Your opening moments | p. 225 |
| The first ten pages | p. 225 |
| The inciting incident | p. 226 |
| Plot point one | p. 227 |
| Salting the Wound | p. 228 |
| Know where the action is | p. 229 |
| The about-face | p. 231 |
| The midpoint: A halfway house | p. 231 |
| Plot point two | p. 231 |
| The Final Frontier | p. 232 |
| The climax | p. 232 |
| The resolution | p. 233 |
| A Note on Subplots | p. 234 |
| Take Two: Rewriting Your Script | p. 237 |
| Downshifting between Drafts | p. 237 |
| How to work when you're not working | p. 238 |
| Your first time back: Read-through #1 | p. 240 |
| A second glance: Read-through #2 | p. 241 |
| Back in the Saddle Again: Rewrites | p. 247 |
| Finding a Reader | p. 248 |
| Your Critique: Surviving the Aftermath | p. 250 |
| Adaptation and Collaboration: Two Alternate Ways to Work | p. 251 |
| Acquiring Rights to Primary Material | p. 251 |
| Understanding copyrights | p. 252 |
| Obtaining permission | p. 252 |
| Determining how much to adapt | p. 253 |
| Navigating between Forms | p. 254 |
| From fiction to film | p. 255 |
| From stage to screen | p. 257 |
| Poetry and music | p. 259 |
| The Process of Adaptation | p. 260 |
| How to approach an original work | p. 260 |
| What to do when you're stuck | p. 262 |
| The Art of Collaboration | p. 262 |
| What to look for in a writing partner | p. 263 |
| How to approach collaboration | p. 263 |
| Learning from the Masters | p. 265 |
| Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor | p. 265 |
| Joel and Ethan Coen | p. 265 |
| Selling Your Script to Show Business | p. 267 |
| Before You Send It: Premarketing Considerations | p. 269 |
| Understanding the "Biz" in Showbiz | p. 270 |
| Getting to know the players: The Hollywood hierarchy | p. 270 |
| Getting to know the buyers: The studio hierarchy | p. 271 |
| Getting a "grip": Hollywood jargon | p. 273 |
| Preparing Yourself for the Biz | p. 275 |
| Putting on a happy face: The art of attitude | p. 275 |
| Organizing your records | p. 276 |
| Acquiring the right information | p. 278 |
| Setting personal expectations | p. 281 |
| Polishing the Copy You Send | p. 282 |
| A last-minute checklist | p. 282 |
| Front-page news | p. 284 |
| Protecting Your Work | p. 285 |
| The Library of Congress | p. 285 |
| The Writer's Guild of America | p. 285 |
| The "poor-man's copyright" | p. 286 |
| Getting Your Screenplay Noticed | p. 287 |
| Designing Your Own Package | p. 287 |
| Highlighting the universal | p. 288 |
| Gaining the competitive edge | p. 290 |
| Considering the reader | p. 290 |
| Preparing to Pitch | p. 292 |
| The teaser pitch | p. 292 |
| The story pitch | p. 293 |
| Finding an Agent | p. 294 |
| Approaching an Agent | p. 296 |
| Small versus large: Does size matter? | p. 297 |
| The query letter | p. 298 |
| The "cold call" and the "drop in" | p. 301 |
| Pitching Your Script without an Agent | p. 302 |
| What to Do When They Say Yes | p. 304 |
| Meeting with an agent | p. 304 |
| Meeting with executives | p. 305 |
| Looking Ahead: Upon Achieving Success | p. 306 |
| A Final Note | p. 307 |
| The Part of Tens | p. 309 |
| Ten Screenwriters You Should Know | p. 311 |
| William Goldman | p. 311 |
| Ruth Prawer Jhabvala | p. 312 |
| Alan Ball | p. 313 |
| Nora Ephron | p. 314 |
| John Logan | p. 315 |
| Sofia Coppola | p. 316 |
| Wes Anderson | p. 317 |
| Charlie Kaufman | p. 318 |
| Christopher Nolan | p. 319 |
| Diablo Cody | p. 320 |
| Ten Screenwriting Myths | p. 321 |
| I Have to Live in Los Angeles to Write Screenplays | p. 321 |
| You Have to Go to School to Learn How to Write | p. 322 |
| Screenwriting Is Entertainment; It's Not a Real Profession | p. 323 |
| If You've Never Written Before, It's Too Late to Start Now | p. 323 |
| Writing Is a Lonely Profession | p. 323 |
| Hollywood Has No Ethics; It'll Ruin the Integrity of My Script | p. 324 |
| It's Not What You Know; It's Who You Know That Matters | p. 325 |
| I Have Too Many Obligations to Be a Writer | p. 325 |
| You're Only as Successful as the Last Screenplay You Sold | p. 326 |
| I'm Not Talented Enough to Be a Writer | p. 327 |
| Index | p. 329 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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