I have no idea how to write a screenplay or to write for screen so I looked in A's shelf and found a few books on screenplay. This one by Syd Field analyses four screenplays of successful films - 'Thelma and Louise', 'Terminator II', 'Silence of the Lambs' and 'Dances with Wolves'. As usual with the masters, there is no point trying to review their work - best draw some nuggets for future reference. Here are some nuggets I found.
The art of screenwriting is all about revealing character.
Good screenplay is the art of discovery.
Good screenwriting plays against the grain, against the obvious, against the way you expect things to happen.
The true test of good screenwriting is the chord of truth it touches within each of us. A universal truth goes far beyond culture, race, age or geographic location.
Art of screenwriting is finding places where silence works better than words, a story told in pictures.
Film is behavior.
Screenplay is a story told in pictures, in dialogue and description, and placed within the context of dramatic structure.
A screenwriter has to learn the art of writing in pictures.Enter the scene late, get out early.
In a screenplay everything is related to everything else. Every scene, every line, every action, every reaction is all related. A screenplay is organic.
Search for another, original way to say what needs to be said, indirectly, to avoid the obvious. Play against the grain of the scene.
The first 10 pages are the most important. Almost everything you need to know about the movie is found here - if you know what you're looking for.
You must grab the reader's attention, setting up critical information that will pay off in the reader's and audience's understanding of the film's opening situation.
Give essential information about the story and the character.
Open with an action sequence or with an expository character-driven sequence.
Most readers need only 10 pages to know whether a script is working. They look for 3 things - the main character, the dramatic premise and the dramatic situation.
What is character but the determination of the incident. And what is incident but the illumination of character..
In most screenplays the real story begins at Plot Point 1.
All drama is conflict. Without conflict you have no character.Without character you have no action. Without action you have no story and without story you have no screenplay.
Character can be brought out by incidents.
Action in the screenplay keeps the story moving forward.
When you enter the scene becomes important - enter late, get out early. Every scene has a beginning, middle and end. If you design the scene in this way, then you can enter the scene at the last possible moment just before the purpose of the scene is established. Then you can end the scene literally before it ended.
Illuminate the character with little insights.
Pinch 1 - keeps the story on track, literally holds it together. Primary function is to move the story forward.
Act II - all about obstacles.
Sub text is what is not said during the course of the scene.
Scene bridges time and distance, and moves the story forward.
In mythic terms the 1st part of any journey of initiation must deal with the death of the old self and the resurrection of the new, the hero, the heroic figure moves not into outward space but into inward space to the place from which all being comes into the consciousness that the source of all things is the kingdom of heaven within. The images are outward but the reflection is inward.
Visual metaphors reflect the inward state.
Hindi scriptures consider the outside and inside as one - what's inside our heads, our thoughts, feelings, memories, and emotions - are reflected outside in our everyday life. Our mind creates the experience.
To construct subplot, write each line of action separately. Once the progression of events is laid out from beginning to end, each thread of scene, can be intercut.
Plot point is always an incident, episode or event that's dictated by the needs of the story.
To love yourself is to find yourself - kill their past.
Community of emotion is where the audience becomes one.
Break down the book, scene by scene, line of events, Put scenes on cards.
Who's story is it?
Has to die to be reborn - character.
Tell the story with pictures- shots, scenes, sequences.
Focus on what the camera sees.
A scene is defined by time and place. If you change either, change the scene.
In the 2nd 10 pages section, the story line must stay focused on the main character.
Keep the dramatic need intact - dramatic need is what your main character wants to win, get or achieve during the screenplay
Part of what makes us human is our moral code
The 4 elements that make up the visual dynamics of screen character 1) main character must embody a strong dramatic need 2) strong Point of View, the way your character views the world, a belief system, what he believes to be true 3) attitude, manner or an opinion 4) change - does the character change during the course of the screenplay
In 2 pages of the screenplay we know everything we need to know about the main character
Good screenplay allows the main character to discover what's going on at the same time as the audience discovers what's going on
The hero's journey is one of death and resurrection, leaving one way of life and journeying to find another source of life that brings him into richer, more mature condition
Act 1 is 30 pages (set up story, establish who's who), Act 2 is 60 pages (held together with dramatic context called 'confrontation', obstacles, dramatic need, what main character wants), Act 3 is 30 pages (Resolution)
Tension comes when the audience wants the character to know what the audience knows (audience knows, character does not - open ended, both audience and character knows - closed)
Language of film is shots, scenes, sequences
Visual transitions - picture to picture, sound to sound, image to image, word to word, fades and dissolves, last line of current scene over first line of next
Break down the book, scene by scene, establish line of events, what sticks in your mind
Screenwriting is to learn the craft of writing in pictures
Screenplay is a story told in pictures, in dialogues, description and placed within the context of a dramatic structure
Community of emotion - audience becomes one entity, joined together in the fabric of movie experience
Each scene - beginning, middle and end
From Callie Khouri, writer of Thelma and Louise
'When I was sitting in that room, it was just me and the screenplay and it was the most perfect experience of my life. Regardless of how anybody felt about it, regardless of anyone's perception of it, when I was alone with those characters, it was the perfect experience.
Writing it was the first real love affair I had with myself. The first time I ever really loved myself.
....
Lovely. Lot of takeaways.

