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Writing
Good Screenplays (Part One) |
by:
Aaron
Trinidad |
To
start on the road to authorship you have
to understand a key element in the making
of a successful writer and this may be a
novelist, a screenwriter or a playwright.
There is no such thing as writing badly
and whatever you may write, you have to
write it with pride. The second motto you
should condition yourself to live by is
"it's not as difficult to apply the pen
to the paper, as it is to apply your behind
to the chair." Indeed, what has made great
writers out of Cinderella Story's Akiva
Goldsman or King Kong's Peter Jackson is
many years of perseverance to become the
best at what they do. They were not born
brilliant artists and even today, they admit
to still having a lot to learn.
Shervin Youssefian (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1352346/)
who wrote this year's acclaimed Machiavelli
Hangman (http://www.hangmanmovie.com) was
told repeatedly that he should stick to
directing and that he could never become
a decent writer. After sticking to his passion,
eventually, he overcame the traps that often
cripple beginners: too much exposition,
senseless talk, no subtext, all characters
talk and look alike.
Steven Spielberg who recently finished War
of the Worlds said that what distinguishes
David Koepp from other action-adventure
writers is that he finds a link to humanity
and manages to tell the big budget extravaganza
through the eyes of an ordinary person.
This must have been exactly what attracted
Tom Cruise to the project in the first place.
While there may have been a lot of explosions
and a ton of special effects, the audience
was still connected to the story because
of the characters' relationship to one another.
Every writer knows that the best material
comes with inspiration but inspiration is
only a trigger to release material that
has been building up inside the writer's
head. You get your material through observation,
lots of it. And what good is it if you observe
and you forget... which is why it's always
good to keep with you the cliched writer's
notepad or audio recorder - guess what,
they do work! You have to sit back and listen
instead of talking so much and absorb...
and every time that something catches your
attention, let it be a trigger that it would
probably interest others too.
The third motto to live by is that we are
all alike. As human beings, we all experience
the same emotions and most often than not
go through the same life events. For this
reason, when you write something that has
happened to you and means a lot as far as
your personal experiences go, you can be
certain that a lot of other people will
relate to the material.
So as a recap, you have to sit down and
make yourself a writing schedule because
it's always better to write badly than to
write nothing at all. Second, you have to
start observing. Third, you need to tell
your own stories using the screenwriter's
structure which we will review next week.
Until then, do your homework and keep writing.
About the author:
Aaron Trinidad has worked as a writer
on various TV sitcoms, he's currently
taking a class in screenwriting in
New York. - Machiavelli Hangman:
http://www.hangmanmovie.com
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