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Screenwriting Fundamentals: Writing for Film and Television, Study notes of Playwriting and Drama

Guidelines for writing effective screenplays for film and television. It covers the use of formatting tools such as bold, underlining, italics, and exclamation points, keeping action text quick and to the point, and having clarity in headings. It also emphasizes the importance of avoiding unnecessary details and parentheses, and being clear and concise in dialogue.

Typology: Study notes

2021/2022

Uploaded on 09/27/2022

bradpitt
bradpitt 🇬🇧

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Download Screenwriting Fundamentals: Writing for Film and Television and more Study notes Playwriting and Drama in PDF only on Docsity! Screenwriting Fundamentals 1. Write in black 12-point Courier font 2. Bold, Underlining, Italics, and Exclamation Points Bold and underlined text points out a specific camera move or references the camera in the action. Use this when certain narrative moments need a specific view that can be illustrated in the text. Do this sparingly. Screenwriters do not have authority over shot selections for their scenes. Examples: The man turns to look at the camera and grins. We tilt up from the dead body to see the gun held in the man‟s hand. The man walks off screen dragging the body. Italics in dialogue emphasize the importance of a word in a sentence. Use sparingly. They put limitations on the actor‟s performance and inflections. MAN: I didn‟t do anything. What are you talking about? Exclamation points act like italicized words. You can use them, but sparingly. The more you use, the less importance they have. Compare: MAN: I hate you! I want you gone! I‟m going to kill you! Tonight! MAN: I hate you. I want you gone. I‟m going to kill you. Tonight! 3. Keep action text quick and to the point. Don‟t use unnecessary adjectives. If you point out a detail, it must have narrative relevance: BAD: “The man sat on a blue chair and stroked his blond hair.” Why do we need the chair to be blue? What if the production designer wants it to be red? And why does his hair have to be blond? What if the director casts someone bald or with red hair? GOOD: “The man sat on a chair and stroked his hair.” Center paragraphs on a single main action. Don‟t change paragraphs unless something significant has taken place. The most important part of the page is the white. This means write as little as possible to express what is happening. 4. Have clarity in your headings. Outside of a car: EXT. CAR/PARKING LOT - DAY A room inside a larger building: INT. BEDROOM, APARTMENT - NIGHT Leave out details in heading. “INT. MESSY BEDROOM - NIGHT” is better than “INT. A CHILD’S MESSY AND UNLIT BEDROOM – NIGHT.” Let the action describe the location, not the heading. If moving from one room to another in real time in one location, write „continuous‟: INT. KITCHEN - DAY Man walks to the door of the kitchen and steps out into EXT. BACKYARD - CONTINUOUS 5. When introducing characters for the first time, put their names in ALL CAPS: GERTY walks into the bar. She orders a beer. Then she leaves. It isn‟t necessary to over describe the characters. Their age, and maybe a distinct appearance trait, is enough: BRUCE, 32, is a balding hippy. 6. Avoid parenthesis under dialogue, unless it’s an action. Pointing out the emotion that a character is feeling as they say their lines limits the freedom of the actor/director. GOOD: BOB (chewing) Hello.
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