Archive for the ‘Screenwriting’ Category

Blueprint for Screenwriting: A Complete Writer’s Guide to Story Structure and Character Development

Blueprint for Screenwriting: A Complete Writer’s Guide to Story Structure and Character Development

Product Description
Blueprint for Screenwriting demystifies the writing process by developing a “blueprint” for writers to follow for each new screenplay–from original concept to completed script. Author and international script consultant Dr. Rachel Ballon explores the writing craft and emphasizes creativity in the writing process. She blends her expertise in script analysis and writing coaching with her personal experience as a screenwriter to help writers construct their stories and characters.

Starting with the story’s framework, Dr. Ballon helps readers to understand the key “building blocks” of story structure and character development, including characters’ emotional and psychological states, story conflicts, and scene and act structure. She also covers the essential components in the script writing process, such as outlines, script treatments, synopses, and formats. Dr. Ballon devotes a chapter to overcoming writer’s block–the writer’s greatest obstacle–and offers guidance for taking the next steps once a script is completed.

A practical tool for any writer, this distinctive resource:
*offers a blueprint for writers to follow, breaking the writing process down into specific, easy-to-follow steps;
*stresses the psychology of the characters as well as that of the writer; and
*offers first-hand knowledge of the screenwriting process and gives practical advice for completing and marketing scripts.

With its unique and insightful approach to the writing process, this book will be indispensable for scriptwriters, fiction writers, and professional writers, and it will serve as a useful text in screenwriting courses.

Blueprint for Screenwriting: A Complete Writer’s Guide to Story Structure and Character Development

Screenwriting Tricks For Authors

Screenwriting Tricks For Authors

Product Description
Are you finally committed to writing that novel but have no idea how to get started? Or are you a published author – but know you need some plotting help to move your books and career up to that next level?

Screenwriting is a compressed and dynamic storytelling form and the techniques of screenwriting are easily adaptable to novel writing. You can jump-start your plot and bring your characters and scenes vibrantly alive on the page – by watching your favorite movies and learning from the storytelling tricks of great filmmakers.

With this workbook, based on award-winning author/ screenwriter Alexandra Sokoloff’s internationally acclaimed Screenwriting Tricks For Authors blog and workshops, you’ll learn how to use techniques of film writing such as:

- the High Concept Premise
- the Three-Act, Eight-Sequence Structure
- the Storyboard Grid
- the Index Card Method of Plotting

- as well as tricks of film pacing and suspense, character arc and drive, visual storytelling, and building image systems – to structure and color your novel for maximum emotional impact, unbearable suspense and riveting pacing, no matter what genre you’re writing in.

You’ll create your own personalized workbook of genre tricks based on your favorite books and movies and tailored to your own brand of storytelling, and a collage book to build visual image systems. And the emphasis on premise is invaluable for crafting that all-important query and pitch.

In this rapidly changing world of publishing, more and more agents and editors are looking for novels that have the pacing, emotional excitement, and big, unique, “high concept” premises of Hollywood movies (and the potential for that movie or TV sale!).

Whether you’re just starting to develop a book or script, or rewriting for maximum impact, this workbook will guide you through an easy, effective and fun process to help you make your book or script the best it can be.

Includes detailed film breakdowns and analysis as well as chapters and resources on how to get a literary agent, writing a query letter, professional networking, and screenwriting contests.

“Sokoloff’s advice is spot-on, and her teaching style is direct and effective. A must-have book for authors and screenwriters.”
- JA Konrath, A Newbie’s Guide To Publishing

For sample chapters please visit http://thedarksalon.blogspot.com

Screenwriting Tricks For Authors

Screenwriting Tricks of the Trade

Screenwriting Tricks of the Trade

  • ISBN13: 9781879505131
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description

Here is practical, write-from-the-gut advice that resounds with experience and integrity. William Froug explores how to keep the dramatic tension in your script and how to find the single line of action and the lines of counteraction. “What you feel is what counts,” he says. He advises keeping the dialogue lean, getting intimate with your characters, revealing information only when it has impact, and knowing how to use the technique of foreshadowing.

Screenwriting Tricks of the Trade

Screenwriting From the Soul: Letters to an Aspiring Screenwriter

Screenwriting From the Soul: Letters to an Aspiring Screenwriter

Product Description
How often have you gone to the movies and come out of the theater thinking, “I could have written that!” Many of us believe we have what it takes to turn out a Hollywood blockbuster, if only we had the right tools to help us do it. Screenwriting from the Soul is that tool. It simplifies the process, and at the same time acknowledges that writing, especially screenwriting requires a great deal of patience, stamina, and faith.

There are many books on the art of screenwriting, but none approaches the subject from the unique perspective of a dialogue between expert and novice. Screenwriting from the Soul is geared to instruct the user in the practicalities, discipline, and emotional resources required to produce that winning screenplay.

Written with wit and style in the form of an ongoing series of letters between a highly experienced, successful, but tired professor and a screenwriting novice, Screenwriting from the Soul is a heartfelt exploration of the screenwriting world that will become a mainstay of writing program curriculums across the world. It goes far beyond the textbook market to appeal to anyone who has ever wanted to write, or understand Hollywood and the creative process.

This master guide helps the reader to:
· gain new insights and knowledge about screenwriting and the filmmaking industry
· gain the necessary skills, techniques, discipline, and mindset to produce successful screenplays
· touch upon the crucial spiritual aspects of the craft

Screenwriting From the Soul: Letters to an Aspiring Screenwriter

Teach Yourself Screenwriting, Third Edition

Teach Yourself Screenwriting, Third Edition

  • ISBN13: 9780071621007
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description

Unleash your inner Charlie Kaufman or Sophia Coppola

Teach Yourself Screenwriting is a comprehensive, jargon-free guide for all budding screenwriters. Its aim is not just to guide you through the techniques and skills you need to write for the screen (film and television), but also to give you guidance on how to approach the industry as a whole.

Focusing on every aspect of screenwriting, from how to start the writing process and develop your characters, plot, and structure, to how to break into this highly competitive industry and make a career for yourself as a writer, this book uncovers all.

Teach Yourself Screenwriting, Third Edition

The Four Magic Questions of Screenwriting: How To Structure Your Screenplay Fast

The Four Magic Questions of Screenwriting: How To Structure Your Screenplay Fast

Product Description
The Four Magic Questions of Screenwriting will end the agony that plagues screenwriters of all levels how to structure a script. This revolutionary technique helps writers structure, write, and rewrite scripts with ease. By asking your characters these four simple questions, you will be able to outline your screenplay like magic. The Four Magic Questions of Screenwriting, part of The Horowitz System of writing taught at New York University for over ten years, has helped hundreds of writers create their screenplays fast.

The Four Magic Questions of Screenwriting: How To Structure Your Screenplay Fast

Screenwriting: The Sequence Approach

Screenwriting: The Sequence Approach

  • ISBN13: 9780826415684
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
The great challenge in writing a feature-length screenplay is sustaining audience involvement from page one through 120. Screenwriting: The Sequence Approach expounds on an often-overlooked tools can be key in solving this problem. A screenplay can be understood as being built of sequences of about fifteen pages each, and by focusing on solving the dramatic aspects of each of these sequences in detail, a writer can more easily conquer the challenges posed by the script as a whole.

The sequence approach has its foundation in early Hollywood cinema (until the 1950s, most screenplays were formated with sequences explicitly identified), and has been rediscovered and used effectively at such film schools as the University of Southern California, Columbia University and Chapman University. This book exposes a wide audiences to the approach for the first time, introducing the concept then providing a sequence analysis of eleven significant feature films made between 1940 and 2000.

The Shop Around the Corner / Double Indemnity / Nights of Cabiria / North by Northwest / Lawrence of Arabia / The Graduate / One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest / Toy Story / Air Force One / Being John Malkovich / The Fellowship of the Ring

Screenwriting: The Sequence Approach

Final Draft Version 8

Final Draft Version 8

  • Final Draft 8 combines powerful word processing with professional script formatting in one self-contained, easy-to-use package specifically designed for writing movie scripts, television episodics and stage plays
  • No need to learn about script formatting rules–Final Draft automatically paginates and formats your script to industry standards as you write
  • Television show, screenplay, stage play and graphic novel templates are included to help get you started
  • Have your script read back to you by assigning different male and female voices to each of your characters with text-to-speech
  • New XML file format for compatibility with a wide variety of other products

Product Description
Everyone has a story. The problem is giving that story life. Final Draft is a unique word processing application that helps take your story ideas and make them ready for stage and screen.
Do you have the dream of writing and selling million-dollar scripts to Hollywood and Broadway, and achieving fame and fortune? The first step in realizing this dream is Final Draft, the same software used on nearly every television show, feature film, and theatre production. Using Final Draft is like knowing the insider handshake. It enables a new, aspiring writer to create a professional-looking script like those passed around in studio writers’ rooms. Scripts for sale are first judged by how they are formatted and how they appear. Final Draft has made it impossible for Industry agents to know the difference between a professional writer and an aspiring one. Dynamically compares two scripts and highlights any changes, allowing you to easily see the differences from one file to the next Over 50 television show, movie and stage play templates are included, complete with characters and locations Checks your script for common formatting errors, such as missing dialogue, extra spaces, carriage returns and blank elements Pop-up windows that can hold ideas, notes, suggestions or scene fragments without taking up space onscreen Write, edit and discuss a script with other Final Draft users in real time, over the Internet, anywhere in the world Have your script read back to you by assigning different voices to your characters. It’s like having a live script reading in your computer An interactive problem-solver with legendary screenwriting teacher Syd Field, television writer Larry Brody, playwright Jon Dorf and WGAW’s The Creative Rights Handbook System Requirements (Windows) – Microsoft Windows Vista or Windows XP Intel Pentium III processor or later Minimum 512 MBAmazon.com Product Description
Use your creative energy to focus on the content; let Final Draft take care of the style. Final Draft is the number-one selling application specifically designed for writing movie scripts, television episodics and stage plays.

It combines powerful word processing with professional script formatting in one self-contained, easy-to-use package. There is no need to learn about script formatting rules–Final Draft automatically paginates and formats your script to industry standards as you write.

Its ease-of-use and time-saving features have attracted writers for almost two decades positioning Final Draft as the Professional Screenwriters Choice. Final Draft power users include Academy, Emmy and BAFTA award winning writers like Oliver Stone, Tom Hanks, Alan Ball, J.J. Abrams, James Cameron and more.

Scene View lets you outline your script ideas and re-order scenes. Click to enlarge.

Manage and view the important details of your scene in the Scene Navigator. Click to enlarge.

Add scene titles and colors to track your story lines, characters, etc. Click to enlarge.

Easily outline your story and restructure your script by dragging and dropping multiple scenes at a time. Click to enlarge.

New in Final Draft Version 8

  • Scene Navigator
    Manage and view all the important details of your scene in this sortable floating palette

  • Page Count Management
    Now you have even more control about what fits on a page
  • File Format (now XML)
    Outline your script ideas in story development software and seamlessly read them into version 8
  • Scene Properties Inspector (SPI)
    Add scene titles and colors to track your story lines, characters, etc.
  • Scene View
    Outline your script ideas and re-order scenes in this high-level overview
  • Remember Workspace
    No more searching for the correct draft you were just working on

Story Development Features

Scene View

Outline your script ideas and re-order scenes in this high level overview.
With the Scene View you can look at your script from a 5,000 foot view and select, drag and drop one or more scenes to reorganize your ideas as you outline. Insert new scenes easily, and hide or show information important to you such as the scene’s action, title and summary. Scene View also displays a scene’s color so you can quickly identify one scene from another. Print your Scene View or just view it alongside the script. With a double-click you can sync the script to instantly go to any scene you’ve selected in Scene View.

Scene Navigator

Manage and view the important details of your scene in this sortable floating palette.
Manage the pace and flow of your story and keep track of up to 9 categories of information related to your scenes. The Scene Navigator is a sortable, customizable floating palette that displays details about your script such as a scene’s title, color, page number, length and location, and best of all it syncs with the script with a single-click. As your script progresses you can pick and choose the columns of information that are relevant for that phase of writing.

Scene Properties Inspector (SPI)

Add scene titles and colors to track your story lines, characters, etc.
Track data specific to each scene in this new floating palette such as the scene’s story beats that will eventually make up the Action, Characters and Dialog of the scene. Add and edit your scene’s title such as ‘Villain introduced’, and add color to the scene to help you track things like storylines, character arcs, and material you need to get back to later. Like the Navigator, the SPI will display the details of whatever scene you’re working on in your script so that you have your summary notes handy as you need them.

Index Cards

Easily outline your story and restructure your script by dragging and dropping multiple scenes at a time
This improved feature has double-sided cards that display the script’s scene on one side and the summary on the other. The Summary View allows you to enter ideas directly into the index card such as your basic outline, notes, sequence or act markers, comments, locations, blocking… anything you need to build and organize your story. You can also color your Index Cards to help organize themes, character arcs, A and B stories, etc. Select and rearrange multiple cards at once if you need to re-order your scenes or print your Index Cards directly on 3×5 or 4×6 cards for use in the ‘traditional’ way if you want to visualize and organize scenes outside of the application. Double-clicking on a card in Split Panel View will automatically sync the scene selected with your script.

File Format (now XML)

Other software now works seamlessly with the new Final Draft .fdx file format.
Final Draft version 8, has a new file format that we have shared with a number of technology partners to make the writer’s overall experience better. Now you can save to the new Final Draf’t file format in a variety of products. Your information can then be opened directly in Final Draft with perfect format and structure. No more reformatting in Final Draft and no more re-typing or lost information!

Final Draft Testimonials

“My entire writing staff uses Final Draft. Even if you don’t own a computer, I recommend buying Final Draft.”

J.J. Abrams–Writer / Director / Producer

What do other Hollywood professionals have to say about Final Draft? View testimonials (PDF format).

Writing/Rewriting Features

The Panels System

Keeps your script in sync with Index Cards and Scene View
Like most writers, you probably need to keep a lot of ideas at the front of your mind while you’re writing. With the Panels System, you can split your screen into separate panels and view your script pages in one panel while you view another section of the script, your Index Cards or Scene View in the other panel. With the Panels System you can compare two scenes’ dialog and pacing side by side even though they may be separated by a vast number of pages. If you want an overview of each scene, use the Index Cards or Scene View on one side and the script in the other. A double-click in any scene will keep the panels in sync.

Templates

Jumpstart your writing by using one of our built-in templates
Television show, screenplay, stage play and graphic novel templates are included to help get you started. Looking for an old series no longer on the air? The Final Draft Online Template Library is updated regularly and allows registered users to download additional templates directly from finaldraft.com.

Page Count Management

Now you have even more control about what fits on a page
Our new Leading Style in version 8 allows you to adjust the spacing of the entire script or you can select individual sections of text and adjust their spacing to help manage your page count

Keep your script in sync with the Panels system. Click to enlarge.

Jumpstart your writing by using built-in templates. Click to enlarge.

Adjust spacing to help manage your page count. Click to enlarge.

Built-in Spell-Checking and Thesaurus

Now you have the ability to select an additional language
The vastly improved spell-checking engine comes with English (US) and a built-in thesaurus plus the option to install one of 15 additional language spell-checkers and thesauri. The application provides real time auto-spell check, catches capitalization errors and will assist you in finding synonyms. With definitions for 80,000 plus words from Merriam-Webster and a full thesaurus, you have all the tools at your fingertips. In addition, all the words you added to your user dictionary from version 7 will automatically populate your user dictionary when you install version 8.

Remember Workspace

No more searching for the correct draft you were just working on
It’s important if you are working among multiple drafts to make sure that you are editing the correct one. With the new Workspace preference, you can have Final Draft open all the files you had open, in the order you were working on them, the last time you worked in Final Draft.

Final Draft Courier Font

An improved appearance at high magnification helps your eyes during those long rewrite sessions
Having a consistent page count that production companies and studios can depend on to help them estimate their budgets is crucial when working on a script. That’s why Final Draft offers its own font that will ensure proper pagination on both Windows and Macintosh. With version 8 we have made the font easier on the eye so you can better endure when you’re writing for long periods of time.

Printing and PDF Options

Greater flexibility, more options and improved printing interface put you in the driver seat
Now, not only can you print your script in its entirety, you can choose which sets of revisions you want to print and you can print other views such as the Scene View and Index Cards. We’ve added the ability for you to print directly on 3×4 or 4×6 index cards and print your script directly to PDF so you can decide whether to send a full script or subset of pages to someone via PDF. The Title Page is also conveniently available as an option to include in your PDF or printed output.

Writing Management

Track your daily writing goals
Use the Statistics Report to check how much content you’ve completed in a writing session to help you manage your writing goals. You can also track things such as your ratio of Action to Dialog and whether there may be some unnecessary profanity in your script if you’re attempting to ‘clean it up.’

ScriptNotes

Keep track of ideas and feedback about sections of your script
These effective pop-up windows hold your ideas, suggestions or scene fragments that you’ve cut but don’t want to toss without taking up space onscreen. Use ScriptNotes to provide feedback on a particular scene when reviewing your partner’s script or print your ScriptNotes as a report for easy reference when reviewing your script.

Tab and Enter functions

Simple keystrokes make learning Final Draft a snap
You can install and start using Final Draft within minutes due to the easy-to-use Tab and Enter functionality that helps format all of the various types of script elements to Industry Standards.

ScriptCompare

Easily track your changes between drafts of your script
Compare two drafts of the same script (.fdr or .fdx) and Final Draft will highlight any changes, allowing you to easily see the differences from one file to the next.

Text to Speech

Have a ‘table reading’ anytime you want
Have your script read back to you by assigning different male and female voices to each of your characters. You can even assign a narrator for action and other non-dialog script elements. Powered by the text-to-speech engines built-in to Windows and Mac OS — it’s like having a live script reading in your computer.

Keep track of ideas and feedback about sections of your script with ScriptNotes. Click to enlarge.

Have your script read back to you by assigning different male and female voices to each of your characters. Click to enlarge.

Scan your script for common formatting errors. Click to enlarge.

CollaboWriter

Write with other Final Draft users anywhere with an Internet connection
Write, edit and discuss a script with other Final Draft users in real time, over the internet, anywhere in the world. You can transfer ‘control’ back and forth between individuals so that one person makes changes at a time, ensuring that information isn’t lost during rewrites.

Format Assistant

Scan your script for any errors–it’s like having a copy editor at your side
This useful tool checks your script for common formatting errors, such as missing dialogue, extra spaces, carriage returns and blank elements. You can set it to run every time you print or only when you want it to.

100% Cross-Platform

Share your script files with Mac or Windows users
Final Draft scripts are identical on both Windows and Macintosh platforms and can easily be exchanged between both.

Script Registry

Direct access for registering your work
Final Draft is a preferred file format and the only scriptwriting software with an authorized agreement with the WGAW online registry service.

Production Features

Final Draft Tagger 2

Break down your script and prep it for scheduling applications
This updated stand-alone application reads any Final Draft script and enables you to “tag” elements within the script [cast, costumes, props, etc.] and export the results into most scheduling applications. Tagger allows you to select text from the script and add any element with a click of the mouse in any category for that scene–or for any or all scenes where that element appears. The element text is highlighted and color coded, and can be customized to suit the way you like to work. Created with the help of veteran Assistant Directors, Producers and Unit Production Managers, Tagger means no more going over a paper script again and again with highlighters.

Revisions/Page Locking

Easy-to-use tools for handling script changes once you go into production
From the ability to omit scenes, lock pages and A-pages as well as set your revision colors, version 8 provides you all the tools you’ll need to take your script through production. With version 8, we’ve created a new feature that will automatically track the page header’s revision color so you can issue one set of revisions or all of them as needed. Merging pages that have been cut once a script is locked is also a snap. With new how-to tutorials, you have step-by-step instructions on how to merge pages without affecting your overall page count. Final Draft also includes standard revision colors in each film and television template.

Title Page, Cast Pages and Locations Pages

Cover pages come pre-formatted for industry standards
All of the Final Draft Television Templates come pre-set with easy-to-use information for each series such as the specific cast list and typical sets/locations. Our Standard One-Hour and Half-Hour Templates will also help you get started on pilots by providing what information should appear in the finished product. The added bonus is that the Title Page uses its own numbering for tracking the following pages so it won’t add to your overall page count.

Customizable Reporting

Get immediate stats to help you develop your script and keep it on budget
Final Draft offers seven different reports to give you quick facts about your script. The Scene Report, for example, provides a snapshot of the scene’s length, cast, starting page number and location. The Location Report will inform you how often a location is used and will group the scenes by INT/EXT. The Character Report includes an ‘appearance summary’ so you know how frequently one character speaks, versus the other characters, as well as the total word count for the character. Use the ScriptNotes Report to get a quick scan of all the notes in your script based on each scene and page. The Statistics Report will allow you to track daily writing goals by displaying how many words you’ve written along with details on the types of elements you used and what percentage of the script they make up. Need to cast your characters? You can instantly create then print or email Character Sides for any speaking parts in your script.

Final Draft Version 8

Power Screenwriting: The 12 Stages of Story Development

Power Screenwriting: The 12 Stages of Story Development

  • ISBN13: 9781580650410
  • Condition: USED – VERY GOOD
  • Notes:

Product Description
Beyond Joseph Campbell and the much ballyhooed hero’s journey, Michael Chase Walker takes the aspiring screenwriter into the rarely discusses alternative structures of outlaw stories, inverted myths and Messiah tales.

Power Screenwriting: The 12 Stages of Story Development

The Tools of Screenwriting: A Writer’s Guide to the Craft and Elements of a Screenplay

The Tools of Screenwriting: A Writer’s Guide to the Craft and Elements of a Screenplay

  • ISBN13: 9780312119089
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
In The Tools of Screenwriting, David Howard and Edward Mabley illuminate the essential elements of cinematic storytelling, and reveal the central principles that all good screenplays share. The authors address questions of dramatic structure, plot, dialogue, character development, setting, imagery, and other crucial topics as they apply to the special art of filmmaking.

Howard and Mabley also demonstrate how, on a practical level, the tools of screenwriting work in sixteen notable films, including Citizen Cane, E.T., One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Rashomon, The Godfather, North by Northwest, Chinatown, and sex, lies, and videotape.
Amazon.com Review
A comprehensive guide to writing screenplays by an experienced screenwriter and a respected writing teacher. Along with sections on the sreenwriter’s craft, basic storytelling, and the parts and objectives of a screenplay, the book is distinguished by detailed analyses of sixteen successful films’ screenplays, including the likes of E.T., Some Like It Hot, North by Northwest, Citizen Kane, and Annie Hall.

The Tools of Screenwriting: A Writer’s Guide to the Craft and Elements of a Screenplay