Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting

Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting

  • ISBN13: 9780385339032
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
A generation of screenwriters has used Syd Field’s bestselling books to ignite successful careers in film. Now the celebrated producer, lecturer, teacher, and bestselling author has updated his classic guide for a new generation of filmmakers, offering a fresh insider’s perspective on the film industry today. From concept to character, from opening scene to finished script, here are easily understood guidelines to help aspiring screenwriters—from novices to practiced writers—hone their craft. Filled with updated material—including all-new personal anecdotes and insights, guidelines on marketing and collaboration, plus analyses of recent films, from American Beauty to Lord of the RingsScreenplay presents a step-by-step, comprehensive technique for writing the screenplay that will succeed in Hollywood. Discover:

•Why the first ten pages of your script are crucially important
•How to visually “grab” the reader from page one, word one
•Why structure and character are the essential foundation of your screenplay
•How to adapt a novel, a play, or an article into a screenplay
•Tips on protecting your work—three legal ways to claim ownership of your screenplay
•The essentials of writing great dialogue, creating character, building a story line, overcoming writer’s block, getting an agent, and much more.

With this newly updated edition of his bestselling classic, Syd Field proves yet again why he is revered as the master of the screenplay—and why his celebrated guide has become the industry’s gold standard for successful screenwriting.

Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting

5 Responses to “Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting”

  • Reading reader reviews of books on writing for the screen is about like reading reviews of movies: There’s a lot of disagreement between the eyes of beholders. I sometimes think I should ask the reviewers at Mr. Showbiz what I should get high on before going to see what they consider a masterpiece.

    “Screenplay” was sent to me by a movie producer who asked me to write a screenplay for a book I wrote. When I lamented that I knew nothing about writing screenplays, he said the book he’d just read proved to him I could write; all I needed was to understand some important aspects of the screenplay vs. the book.

    I’ve learned a lot from Syd Field. “Screenplay” clearly showed me the visual aspects of film, “It’s all about pictures,” Field stresses over and over. If I learned nothing else from him, how to put a screenplay into professional format would make “Screenplay” worth the trip.

    Sure, I had to study the book, go back over it several times before I got this, or that. But gosh, diving into writing screenplays isn’t like a lesson in Microsoft Windows — click here, drag that over there.

    There’s a lot to learn, and Syd Field offers a lot of guidance for the serious student. I don’t care if he’s never written a screenplay. Some of the very best book editors wrote nothing except editorial marks on others’ works. The fabled Scribner’s editor of old, Max Perkins, who brought some of their best out of Scott Fitzgerald, Hemingway, James Jones, Marjorie Kennan Rawlings, etc. etc., never wrote a book.

    I’ll say this: If you want to read a book on screenplays and put it down with the feeling you’re ready to roll, don’t bother with anybody’s book on the subject. But if you really want to learn, if you have the requisite creativity — AND gritty energy — you’ll get your money’s worth from Syd Field’s “Screenplay.”

    Also, his “Four Screenplays” has been very helpful to me. Field has a way of reinforcing things by saying them a different way, in a different setting. I really didn’t get his advice to “get into a scene late and get out early” until I read this book. And didn’t he pick some dandies? “Thelma and Louise” and “The Silence of the Lambs” are the two I studied most diligently, and what a ride it’s been. Two great, great movies, to my mind, both demonstrating what Syd Field repeatedy shows us are important elements of fine screenplays.

    One other thing, Field’s coaching has put a tiny new edge on my writing skills as regards books, too, a benefit he probably didn’t expect a writer would obtain.

    Rating: 5 / 5

    Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting

  • Syd Field’s SCREENPLAY is a great book for a beginner. The author takes the reader through the basic steps of writing a screenplay, from the first idea to fleshing out the characters to the structure of the entire piece. He explains what a set-up is (and what it needs to be) and tips for beginning and ending the screenplay, two of the more difficult tasks a writer will face. Perhaps most importantly for those who have never written a script before, he devotes a chapter to the screenplay format, showing indentation and capitalization rules, defining terms used within the script, and explaining abbreviations.

    Novices to the form should start with this book before moving to more advanced books. I also recommend studying actual professional screenplays in their entirety.

    Rating: 4 / 5

    Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting

  • For the absolute beginner with no clue how to write a screenplay, this book (for better or for worse) is probably essential reading. It effectively describes the basic structure of a basic screenplay. The problem is that what Syd Field does not realize is that many truly great screenplays effectively break his “rules.” Granted, that is only done by accomplished screenwriter who spent years following the rules when they wrote screenplays. But the fact of the matter is that if all screenwriters followed Field’s advice to the letter, Hollywood cinema would be even worse off than it currently is!

    A few examples: Field insists that a good screenplay’s first plot point must occur around page thirty. The first plot point in Star Wars (a film Field makes reference to) occurs around page fifty. Additionally, I would love to see Field sort out the plot points of Pulp Fiction and fit it into his beloved paradigm!

    Field insists that a good screenplay must have three acts. Shakespeare wrote the bulk of his works in five acts. Enough said.

    Field claims that “a name is a name” as he names a character Sara Towsend in an example exercise. Would Huckleberry Finn have had the same magic if Huck had been named Jim Johnson? Dickens’ names added another dimension to his stories, Oliver Twist for example. Other names to consider: Scarlett O’Hara, Yossarian, or even Dr. Wilbur Larch, as a more modern example. To Field’s credit, he focuses on building a character in the same chapter that he downplays the importance of names. Undoubtably, what’s inside a character is more important than the label slapped on him or her. But equally undoubtable is the ability of the perfect name to enhance an effective character.

    I could nit-pick this book apart chapter by chapter, but the most troubling issue surrounding “Screenplay” is this: Syd Field is an awful screenwriter. He wrote a decent how-to book on the subject, but he can’t write a screenplay himself. If you have a copy, take note of how the “about the author” section doesn’t mention any screenplays Field has had produced. There’s a reason for that. Then read the exerpt from Field’s unproduced screenplay “The Run” in chapter 13 and you’ll begin to understand. The story premise is laughable and the dialogue is an embarassment to screenwriters everywhere.

    The bottom line: “Screenplay” is an fine choice for beginning screenwriters. It was my first screenwriting book and it gave me a good foundation. Just don’t expect to follow Field’s instructions to the letter if you want to write a truly unique and memorable screenplay. A better idea: read lots of screenplays, plays, and novels by people who are actually good at writing them.

    Rating: 3 / 5

    Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting

  • Screenplay is a fine book, in a sense, simply because it has achieved such popularity that it has affected what studios expect from spec screenplays. A lot of it still holds true: most screenplays seem to have a “three act structure”, whether or not the writer was thinking in these terms; most screenplays are very formulaic and created with buzzwords and phrases like “less black per page” and “show don’t tell” in mind… Basically, most people want an easy paint-by-numbers approach to screenwriting. And all too often the paint-by-numbers crowd gets something produced (thankfully, most of them fail).

    The problem with this book is that the “Syd Field paradigm” isn’t such a hot thing anymore. Movies such as Pulp Fiction, LA Confidential, and Unforgiven, to name a few, have shown us and Hollwood that story is much more important than structure. The other major problem is that many suggestions within the book will get your work rejected at a glance. For instance, Syd Field basically suggests that we “direct on the page” when he advises occasional references to camera angles, reverses, POV, and close-ups in the slug line. Bad idea.

    I found this book interesting but creatively stifling and a bit misleading. The author has his heart in the right place but seems a bit too sure of his theories.

    Story and creativity are much more important than structure. The best way to tell if you’re “on track” with your story is to ask yourself, “Do I like this?” Don’t ask yourself, “How can I get Act One to end on page 27?”

    Rating: 2 / 5

    Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting

  • I am a professional screenwriter and I also teach advanced and beginning screenwriting at a prominent Bay Area university. Field is the benchmark teaching text, and I used it last semester to teach Screenwriting 1, the Basics. For this class, Field is as good as any text. I don’t particularly like texts and don’t usually use them to teach as I have a wealth of my own experiences to guide me and my students. But I did find Field useful, at least at this stage of the teaching process.

    Field gives new students a good overview of what is important in a screenplay: formatting; setup, confrontation, resolution, known as the “arc;” and he is helpful in creating characters.

    But it is my considered opinion that the best way to learn to write screenplays is to read screenplays. Personally, I would say that the person desirous of learning how to write a screenplay get his or her hands on as many screenplays as they possibly can. Reading them is what taught me to write them. And I had several bought, produced and shown in theaters and on TV. There is really no need to fill your shelves with textbooks on the subject.

    So I give Field three stars. Not so much because his book is faulty (in some places it is out of date: the screenplay today should be closer to 100 pages long, not the recommended 120 pages in Field), but because I doubt the need for books to learn this craft. Still, one book, like Fields, can be useful as a quick reference for a problem.

    Rating: 3 / 5

    Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting