PRIDE AND PREJUDICE dir. Joe Wright
Sylvia Ballhause.
Cinemas.
Hi I want to try out screenwriting for the first time, are there any online resources I can try out? Thank you xo
hey! YES, there’s a plethora of wonderful resources online that you can use to get started!
FIRST:
The best thing to do is to watch a TON of short films. Writing a short is often times harder than writing a feature because you have to pack an entire story into like 30 minutes or less (the best shorts are honestly 15 min or less). And watching and writing a lot of shorts will teach you the basic building blocks of writing anything for the screen.
LINK TO THE 50+ BEST SHORT FILMS ON YOUTUBE
Also while you’re at it, just watch a ton of movies and read a ton of scripts.
NEXT:
Writing a screenplay for anything—film, tv, web series—is absolutely not the same as writing a longform work like a fic or a novel. You can’t just translate one to the other and suddenly you have a functioning movie.
I know this might be pretty obvious, but it’s worth saying—
You know how most film adaptations of books are bad? It’s cause movies are like max an hour and thirty minutes and so the adaptors have to just pick the one BEST plot point (the main, overarching plot) and writing the story around that. So all your favorite book subplots, little character details, and amazing throughlines, get nixed because there just isn’t enough time to get into all of that. You have 120 pages to tell an entire novel’s worth of story, and every second has to be entertaining, because you’re asking people to sit still for ALMOST THREE HOURS and consume this story. That’s why we end up with watered down movie versions of our books. AND that’s why films often add random shit into the story that’s not in the book—because they’re gonna make the movie as cinematic and as action packed as they possibly can. What works in the novel, doesn’t always work in a film. Also, Hollywood doesn’t give a shit if they stick to the book, they have boxes to check when it comes to entertainment, “””family values”””, and $$$$.
All this to say, there are completely different story standards for film than for long form writing. And you MUST learn the those standards before you even do the first beat sheet for your idea. If you don’t know how to shape a story for a film you’ll end up with a 300+ page screenplay that would make a bad film. And I’m not going to include my rant on storytelling for tv or a web series because that’s a WHOLE different thing. And the story standards for those differ from a feature or a short.
So I would for sure buy and read the book “Save the Cat”. I had to read it in undergrad and when I go accepted to AFI, they told me to read it again. It’s an excellent manual for coming up with screenplay ideas and how to write them.
LINK TO BUY “SAVE THE CAT”
LINK TO “SAVE THE CAT” WEBSITE THAT HAS A TON OF COOL RESOURCES
Also, and this has been the most useful thing to come out of my education so far—
LINK TO “THE NINE BIG BEATS”
LINK TO THE BEAT SHEETS FOR POPULAR FILMS
This shows you how to break up your story, the acts within your story, and the major beats your idea has to hit for it to work as a film. Always do a beat sheet before starting to write.
LASTLY:
You gotta have that formatting down. Screenplays follow a pretty strict formatting structure that you just gotta know. Reading the screenplays to some of your favorite films will help!
LINK TO A GUIDE TO FORMATTING YOUR SCREENPLAY
LINK TO SCREENPLAYS FOR POPULAR FILMS
Also, it will be easier to format things correctly if you have screenwriting software that helps you! The industry standard is Final Draft but that costs $$$ so here’s a good free alternative—
LINK TO SCREENWRITING SOFTWARE “FADE IN”
And there you go! There’s a lot to learn, and it’s not easy, but dude it’s fun as hell.
TL;DR
(”Beats” refers to story beats)
ꜱʜᴏᴡ, ᴅᴏɴ'ᴛ ᴛᴇʟʟ (ɪɪ)
fear - open mouth - backing away - fake smiles - hugging themselves - long / dragged breaths - rocking
jealousy - snide remarks - darting looks - self-deprication - visible judging - folded arms - arguing a fair point
hurt - steadying breaths - overly bobbing head - teary - anger - trembling - pressed lips - insisting everything is 'fine'
lying (ticks) - picking at nails - touching hair - licking lips - laughing too loud - avoids subjects - won't meet eyes
worry - reaching out physically - pursing lips - looking to others - reassuring smiles - looking you up and down - tilted head - sympathetic nod
shame - will not meet eyes - feet turned away - teary - desperate - fidgeting - begging
humiliation - lashes back - cheeks flush - palms turn sweaty - face frowns -> brows scrunch, lips pull back - teary
love - looks for approval - blushing / turning red - clammy palms - nervous around certain people - laughs hard - turning clumsy - slip of thought
zlibrary gone... FUCK TIKTOK FUCK BOOKTOK I hope that app burns in hell
site that you can type in the definition of a word and get the word
site for when you can only remember part of a word/its definition
site that gives you words that rhyme with a word
site that gives you synonyms and antonyms
the worst thing about writing is that you aren’t just a writer. you have to be a thousand things. a poet, a flirt, a weapons expert, a bleeding heart, a scholar, a legendary cook, a theorist, an engineer, a reckless teenage girl, a dying god. you have to be able to write monologues and speeches and heartfelt confessions, and you have to make them believable. writing is putting yourself into someone else’s shoes.
writing is really hard (◕︿◕✿)
Press conference for Crash
Having just finished my first year of my screenwriting masters program, i wanna share this thing that I was told at the very start of the year that I have not been able to stop thinking about
they got all 28 of us screenwriters in a room on like the second day and straight up told us—
“you will suffer for your entire career if you make this into a competition.”
they told us that, while we might like the write similar things, like in the same genre, or same settings—we’d never be in competition, simply because we were all different people.
from our big differences in life experience and in personality, down to our smaller differences in story preferences and writing style, it all made everything we all did unique.
and while we were all one of a million people trying to achieve the same goal of making writing a career—individually we were the only ones who could tell our stories.
You are the only one who can write like you, who can draw like you, who can cosplay like you, who can sing like you, who can make art like you. Don’t ruin the love you have for your craft by comparing yourself to others, by putting yourself in competition with them just because you want to be “the best”.
And finally, here’s the tough love part that we all got reminded of constantly—
The moment you decide you are better than everyone, is the moment you fail. Because you will have closed yourself off to valuable critique. You will have inflated your ego so big that the second you get rejected you’ll spiral. You will have become so high and mighty that one day you’ll look around and realize you have pushed all of your peers, and your entire support system, away.
There literally is no “best”. There is only growing with others as artists, supporting your peers, and telling your story in the way only you can. That’s how you succeed.
Meg married, Amy off to Europe, now that you’re a graduate, you’ll be off on a long holiday. I’m not good like Beth so I’m angry and restless. — You don’t have to stay here. — Why? Should we run off and join a pirate ship?
LITTLE WOMEN 2019 › dir. Greta Gerwig
the sense of knowing that you're in a big transitional stage of your life. such a surreal feeling. exciting and terrifying and grief-filled and joyous all at once.