RSS

Tag Archives: John August

Where do I start? Jennifer’s Top 10…

If you just stumbled upon screenwriting, or think you have a great idea and don’t know where to start, and before your fingers hit the keyboard, here’s a few tips to ease your way in…  these are things that you, at the very least, should consider doing.  This list is my opinion in case you have a problem with any of them…

1.  Get screenwriting software.  Celtx is free and easy to use.  There are others.  You don’t have to use Word, and you really shouldn’t.  It’s kinda ugly for formatting.  Upgrade later to something more professional when you’re sure this is something you’re going to stick with for the long haul (like more than a few years…)

2.  Read some modern screenwriting books – like Crafty Screenwriting, or Save the Cat, or The Way of the Screenwriter.  (I’ll add here, read books, period.  All kinds of books, but mostly good ones.  It’ll make you a better writer.)

3.  Read modern screenplays (if you can find them online…).  They’re not only a good indication of the types of things that get made, but they will provide you a wealth of information about how to construct your screenplay (which will mostly be taken care of when you get software…but still…)

4.  Watch movies that you like and ones you don’t like.  Try to figure out why there is a difference.  Deconstruct the story, once you know the elements (see #2 above).

5.  Follow screenwriting podcasts and blogs to keep up to date on what is going on in the world of the pros.  They were once in our shoes.  I follow John August (US) and Alex Epstein (Canada), among others.  These two guys have been online for years now, and have covered everything you will need to know, and then some.

6.  Get out and meet other writers and people doing the same thing you want to do.  Talk to them.  Meet directors, attend movie gatherings.  Get involved.  Writing is a solitary business, most of the time.  It’s the only way you are going to say sane.

7.  Outline your stuff and pitch it to someone.  Get their feedback.  This is where the real work is done.  Refine the story at this stage and the rest will be easier.

8.  Write shitty stuff.  Who cares.  Unless you show it to someone, it never happened…right?

9.  Rewrite better stuff.  Search each line for the nugget that’s going to make it POP.  Hear the characters in your head.

10.  Don’t let anyone tell you that (insert your vice here) is not part of the writing process.  It most certainly is.

That’s all for now!

Jen

 
1 Comment

Posted by on February 18, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Resource of the Week: Go Into the Story

Each week I’m highlighting a screenwriting resource that I’ve found useful. It could be a blog, a podcast, a contest, a book or a slightly addictive narcotic that may or may not be legal.

Go Into the Story

Today, let’s take a look at Scott Myer’s blog, Go Into the Story.  It was ranked the number one screenwriting blog by a site I had never heard of but seemed like it was a pretty reputable source.  He even placed above John August (who we’ll profile in an upcoming week)

According to Scott’s blog:

Since selling his spec script K-9 in 1987, Scott has written nearly 30 projects for every major Hollywood studio and broadcast network. His film writing credits include K-9 starring Jim Belushi, Alaska starring Vincent Kartheisher, and Trojan War starring Jennifer Love Hewitt. In 2002, he began teaching screenwriting in his spare time. He won the UCLA Extension Writers’ Program Outstanding Instructor Award in 2005 and currently teaches at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.  – go into the story

Scott’s blog is a veritable treasure trove of screenwriting advice, interviews, clips and quotes.  If you’re looking for a primer about the blog written in Scott’s own words, check out Welcome to GITS, an introduction to everything Go Into the Story.

Scott also hosts a peer script review site called, The GITS Club (GITS for Go Into The Story if you’re not following).  Further, he and his partner, Tom Benedek, launched Screenwriting Master Class, a “unique, online resource for anyone interested in learning how to write a professional quality script”.

Scott is one of the most generous teachers and writers in the screenwriting blogosphere.  The rate at which he posts and the quality of information coming through is incredible.  He’s quick with a response, candid with his posting and encouraging to writers of all levels.

Add Go Into the Story to your daily reading list if you know what’s good for you.

-b

Brad is a screenwriter living and working in Ottawa, Canada.  When he’s not doing that thing he has to do for money or doing that thing he has to do because they’re his kids, he can be found posting screenplays on his project site, Steal My Script.

 
4 Comments

Posted by on April 13, 2011 in Resources, Useful information

 

Tags: , , , , , ,

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.