How to write a screen play....

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That is why you have become my nemesis!

BEGONE YOU FOUL BEAST!
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The only man who can decode the Complex Tapestry of Femanine Emotion!



Yeah, stop e-mailing me.

Meanwhile, let Ladies Man tell us about his work as a writer/filmmaker.

How's it all going LM?
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www.esotericrabbit.com



A novel adaptation.
LM, Your totally unprovoked, and barely coherent insult was a true delight.
I'm all the better for reading it.



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"We are all worms, but I do believe I am a glow-worm."
--Winston Churchill



No, no, let him speak [and search for his old threads, my God it's funny stuff]...

Ladies Man, Writerdirect? Tell us how your writing is going...



The Future Ed Wood
congrats silver bulet. so how old are you? just so i know how long it will take me? im writing one script and am just about to film my first short film
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Accually, I am working on a short film piece for Trop next year called Cold Blood and also a new idea with I now name collage of beauty.



Cold Blood, eh? Sounds original, tell me more.

And it's actually, not accually.



The Future Ed Wood
so how long you been making films silver? i bet your going to be the next orsen wells!



A novel adaptation.
I'm sensing a certain amount of subtle sarcasm in this thread, which is about to boil over.
Anyways... what is Cold Blood about LM?
And you might want to find out if Truman Capote's book In Cold Blood ever became a movie (I think it did) just to see if you should adjust the title.
Even if it did I don't think that changing the title would be neccessary, I was just giving you a heads up.



In Cold Blood is what made Robert Blake famous. It's a classic.
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"Today, war is too important to be left to politicians. They have neither the time, the training, nor the inclination for strategic thought. I can no longer sit back and allow Communist infiltration, Communist indoctrination, Communist subversion and the international Communist conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids."



A novel adaptation.
I thought as much, but I was unsure of the title they used for the film.



The Future Ed Wood
im not tying to be sarcastic. im really interested. how long have you been making films.



Not long.

Digitally only about a year, on analogue and stuff about two years before that. I've been writing for absoloutley ages. First screenplay 1999/2000, second April 2000, third August 2000, fourth 2000/2001, number five first draft January 2002, ninth draft June 2002, sixth screenplat started a week ago.

All of my films [well, the digital ones, and those that I'm actually proud of] can be tallied, I guess, at www.esotericrabbit.cjb.net

Mind you, they're not all there. The one film I've made that won an award isn't on there. How hilarious.



The Future Ed Wood
are all of these films yours?

i have a great deal of respect for you. finding the time to shoot aswell as otherthings is hard work. im still on script writing.



The Future Ed Wood
i just downloaded your demo trailer. very good. i would like to see the Bj father full. are you studying film now before you go off to LA etc?



All of those films are films that I directed, yes. Except for the mediocre film Suds, which I just edited. Unfortunately, I couldn't cut enough, and it's a hulking monster of a short non-fiction film.



Finding the Discipline to Write
By Stephen J. Cannell

The hardest thing for most writers to do is to write. Many of the writers I know hate writing, but love having written. The reason for this is that we often put the need on ourselves to be "brilliant." After all, this stuff is going to be studied in universities long after we die. People will be quoting lines for untold centuries: "Out, out damned spot!" "To be or not to be." Since this is the standard we have set, we reason, "I have to be perfect," and secondarily, "I sure don't want to suffer a bad review. If it's not perfect, I'll die of embarrassment. Yada-yada-yada."

Of course, no one is perfect. We're all flawed and, deep down, even the most egotistical of us knows that we have big holes in our character we're still working on. So, if we're not perfect, how in blazes are we going to write perfectly? This dilemma is what causes writer's block. We can't get that first word on the page because we know, in our hearts, that it is being written by an imperfect being and it most likely won't be brilliant. So, what happens? We stall. We procrastinate. We don't write. How do we solve this?


Stephen J. Cannell's Rule Number One:
Give Yourself Permission to be Bad


Every great writer who ever lived has, on occasion, written garbage (in my case it happens all the time). It's okay to write garbage. You're a good critic; you'll fix it later. Shakespeare wrote garbage, Hemingway wrote garbage, Faulkner wrote garbage. It is okay. Every writer has bad days, or a day when he or she isn't connecting with the material. A day when, unknown to us, the story or the character we are writing has been improperly designed. When this happens, writing becomes a struggle. That doesn't mean you've lost your muse, or that you're a creative burnout. It just means that you have a problem in your story structure or with character motivation. Something is dishonest that seemed okay when you set it up. Rewriting is part of the process. Most writers plot with their heads and write with their hearts. Sometimes that causes unintended dishonesty. You start to push to make it happen. It feels forced, you freeze and your creative fire starts to gutter and burn low. You say, "I'm outta here. Time to go to the beach."

Don't go! Stay right where you are. Start asking yourself a few questions. Put yourself in the place you've designed for your principal characters. Ask yourself, "If this was really my problem, would I do what I'm having this character do? Would I say what he or she's saying?" If the answer is "no," start redesigning, get out of your head-plotting demeanor and deal with your emotions.

My favorite story dishonesty (which I see constantly) is where the hero is in trouble, but doesn't seek police help because then the police would solve the case and there would be nothing left for the hero to do. It would wreck the story. You cannot let this flawed logic stand. You must redesign. For example, put the hero's fingerprints on the murder weapon. He's now wanted by the cops, so he can't go to them. This is a much more compelling reason -- one which the audience will buy.

Why is this problem so common? Because we are pushing story points around on our chessboard without regard to what the character would be thinking and feeling.

Once I had this problem TV script early in my writing career. I had a character that was being threatened with murder by a mob boss, and he met with the mob boss to discuss it. He wanted to know why this "mob hitter" had a contract out on him.

I wrote the scene and it sucked.

I wrote it again and it sucked.

I gave the hero a bad cold to make him more interesting (with attitude), "This damn cold, I can't breathe."

I wrote it again...sucked.

Something wasn't right at the core. Finally, I said, "What would I do if I was this guy?" Answer: I wouldn't sit there asking dumb questions, like why are you trying to kill me? I'd be pissed. I had left out the anger. The scene was dishonest and my heart told me it was. So, I hated everything I was writing. Once I wrote it with the correct emotion, it was fine.

All of this, and many other factors that cause bad writing make us afraid to sit down at the keyboard. Writing then becomes a sporadic endeavor. Fear of failure leads to a lack of effort.

Trust me, it's okay to write garbage. You can learn from bad writing. Don't try to be brilliant. It's a standard that you most likely will never attain, and if you're trying to be brilliant, the most common by-product isn't brilliance, it's pretentiousness. It's not that hard. Make up a good story, then let it flow. Leave the brilliant work to the dead.

The only other thing I want to say about getting ready to write is that it is very important to write at the same time every day. Two hours at the minimum. Writer friends of mine sometimes alibi, "I can't do that, I have a job driving a truck. I gotta be at work at eight." Okay then, get up at four. Write from five to seven, then go to work.

You have to make a place in your day for this activity or it will never happen. The one great thing about writing is that you will always improve! With each script, short story or novel, you get slightly better. The ones you write next year will be better than the ones you wrote this year. Keep going -- your talent will grow, but you have to be at the keyboard for that to happen.

**Stephen J. Cannell is the Emmy® award-winning producer/creator of over 42 television shows including The Rockford Files, Baretta, The A-Team, The Commish, Wiseguy, Greatest American Hero,
Hunter, Profit, 21 Jump Street, Renegade and Silk Stalkings. One of television's most prolific writers, he has scripted more than 350 episodes of the series he has created. At the age of 50, he decided to pursue his lifelong dream of being a novelist. His first book was, The Plan, a political thriller, which was quickly followed by national bestselling novels Final Victim, King Con, which is soon to be a full-length feature film, and the exciting new action thriller, Riding the Snake (Morrow, Oct., 1998). He is the Chairman of of Cannell Studios, and lives in the Los Angeles area with his wife and family. His website can be found at http://www.cannell.com.
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Hey...Found this on the net too, thought it would be fun for us to do the excercises and maybe post'em in this thread... what do you guys think? yay or nay? come on.. it will be FUN...

Fifteen Craft Exercises for Writers
Article by John Hewitt

Writing exercises are a great way to both increase your skill as a writer and to generate new ideas for future work. They can also give you a new perspective on your current project. One of the great benefits of private writing exercises is that you can free yourself of fear and perfectionism. To grow as a writer, it is important to sometimes write without the expectation of publication. Don’t be afraid to be imperfect. That is what practice is for. What you write for any of these exercise may not be your best work, but it is practice for when you will need to write your best work.



1. Pick ten people you know and write a one-sentence description for each of them.

2. Record five minutes of a talk radio show. Write down the dialogue and add narrative descriptions of the speakers and actions as if you were writing a scene.

3. Write a 500-word biography of your life.

4. Write your obituary. List all of your life’s accomplishments. You can write it as if you died today or fifty or more years in the future.

5. Write a 300-word description of your bedroom.

6. Write a fictional interview with yourself, an acquaintance, a famous figure or a fictional character. Do it in the style of an appropriate (or inappropriate) magazine or publication such as Time, People, Rolling Stone, Cosmopolitan, Seventeen or Maxim.

7. Pick up a newspaper or supermarket tabloid. Scan the articles until you find one that interests you and use it as the basis for a scene or story.

8. Keep a diary of a fictional character.

9. Take a passage from a book, a favorite or a least favorite, and rewrite the passage in a different style such as noir, gothic romance, pulp fiction or horror story.

10. Pick an author, one you like though not necessarily your favorite, and make a list of what you like about the way they write. Do this from memory first, without rereading their work. After you’ve made your list, reread some of their work and see if you missed anything or if your answers change. Analyze what elements of their writing style you can add to your own, and what elements you should not or cannot add. Remember that your writing style is your own, and that you should only try to think of ways to add to your own style. Never try to mimic someone else for more than an exercise or two.

11. Take a piece of your writing that you have written in first person and rewrite it in third person, or vice-versa. You can also try this exercise changing tense, narrators, or other stylistic elements. Don’t do this with an entire book. Stick to shorter works. Once you commit to a style for a book, never look back or you will spend all of your time rewriting instead of writing.

12. Try to identify your earliest childhood memory. Write down everything you can remember about it. Rewrite it as a scene. You may choose to do this from your current perspective or from the perspective you had at that age.

13. Remember an old argument you had with another person. Write about the argument from the point of view of the other person. Remember that the idea is to see the argument from their perspective, no your own. This is an exercise in voice, not in proving yourself right or wrong.

14. Write a 200-word description of a place. You can use any and all sensory descriptions but sight: you can describe what it feels like, sounds like, smells like and even tastes like. Try to write the description in such a way that people will not miss the visual details.

15. Sit in a restaurant or a crowded area and write down the snippets of conversation you hear. Listen to the people around you -- how they talk and what words they use. Once you have done this, you can practice finishing their conversations. Write your version of what comes next in the conversation. Match their style.


This article was written by John Hewitt, Director of the Writer's Resource Center at http://www.poewar.com. John Hewitt is a freelance writer and an Internet strategy consultant with the OSI Group. If you wish to reprint this article, please contact John Hewitt at [email protected].