A few years back, when I was living in London, I joined Shooting People (www.shootingpeople.org). I enjoyed being part of a community of filmmakers, even if it didn't mean much. I wasn't doing much those days, mainly rewriting a script with no results, but ShootingPeople gave me some hope.
And, some connections too. Networking is part of any game, and in times like this, when you're writing and stay most of the days in-doors, on-line networking can help.
ShootingPeople grew since I last visited them. They are not what you'd call a mean machine, but they're big enough to make things happen. Its main focus is short films and documantries, but you can find there almost anything, and for sure sombody to share the lonely times of being a filmmaker, a screenwriter, or just an unemployed editor.
Other communities are out there, too, of course. You just need to find your ONE. And stick to it.
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Shooting People, why do you need it?
Labels: filmmakers communities
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Who're you calling a writer?
Something I read today:
I've written all my life, both non-fiction and fiction. i've wanted to tell stories all my life. but writing fiction - specifically screenplays as i've done little short story writing and no novels - has always been very difficult, painful and not a process i would ever describe as one i enjoyed.
Labels: screenwriters blogs, screenwriting
Should they teach you screenwriting at all?
An interesting post I've read on the Twelvepoint blog. There's this agent, he represents both screenwriters and book writers. Now, he thinks screenwriters should write prose as well. Why? Read on.
I believe that one of the great fallacies in the teaching of scriptwriting is precisely that I do not believe we should be teaching ’scriptwriting’. Instead I believe writers should study (and learn to appreciate) storytelling. One of the most important motivations, apart from making money, for a writer should be that he or she is compelled to be a storyteller and after forty years of working with writers, I believe it’s easier to tell the story in prose than in script. As Alexander Mackendrick, the director of The Ladykillers said: ‘Don’t try to work out story in script form; do it in prose first.’
Labels: screenwriting, scriptwriting tips
Saturday, March 20, 2010
Rules for writing fiction
Today I found this great page on the website of The Guardian. It's a collection of writers' 10 tips for writing fiction. Some are serious, some less so, but it's interesting for sure. It's not always relevant for screenwriters, but first of all, many screenwriters write other things too. And besides, screenwriting is still not too far from fiction writing, in some senses. Neil Gaiman had one great tip, I think it's the one I liked most:
Write.
Labels: scriptwriting tips
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Where the wild things are - the movie
I want to begin with the conclusion here. WTWTA is a good movie.
Labels: adaptation, Spike Jonze
Friday, March 5, 2010
All Oscar 2010 guesses
Oscars are coming, and the best part of the ceremony is the speculations on the winners of this year's golden man. Myself I have my hopes and fears, but here are the biggest name on the business making theirs:
Oscar 2010 speculation list
Roger Ebert will be probably right in most Oscar categories. Pretty much the sane version of the Oscar Bingo. He even admits it by saying:
I can't remember a year when it seemed easier to predict the Oscars.My guess is that he means Avatar. Money remains the key to Hollywood Hysteria.
Other lists that look pretty much like Ebert's is this and this.
A slightly different approach is apperent on that list of The Daily Tar Heel. Only the main categories are included here, and no word about Avatar.
Another surprising list is the one of OscarFrenzy.
The voice of the people: the forum of Rotten Tomatoes shows that the crowd is not very single-minded on the 2010 Oscar wins.
But the really interesting fight this year is the one on the Best Animated Feature. It has been a year full of superb animation movies, some will include Avatar as well in that list. The Fantastic Mr. Fox, Up, Coraline. the Village voice talks about one film that should not be left out, in an article entitled: The Illuminating Power of Oscar Nominee.
And when you just can't have any more of the Oscars, The Envelop brings you even more.
Labels: oscar, oscars 2010
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Another scriptwriter with something to say
I read an interview with a screenwriter, jack Sekowski, and he said:
It's frustrating since I go to the movies and see that most of the stories told are fairly simple. So why am I driven to make things more complex...thereby giving myself more work? I don't know the answer to that.
I sometimes feel exactly the same, but the truth is that even what seems very simple and straight forward on screen is the result of complex thinking, of narrowing too many ideas to one crystal-clear story. A simple movie was once a complex script in someone's mind. How to make the complex into simple, that's the craft of screenwriting.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Enneagram of Personality: 9 types of characters
Lately I found this page on wikipedia, about the Enneagram of Personality. It's a very comfortable way to look at your script's characters and understand their personality pattern. There are nine patterns: The Reformer, The Helper, The Achiever, The Individualist, The Investigator, The Loyalist, The Enthusiast, The Challenger, The Peacemaker.
The Enneagram describes those personality patterns, including character's motivation, healthy- and unhealthy state of being, fears etc.
I find it extremly helpful for screenwriters to use such tools, as George Clooney says in Up In The Sky: "I stereotype. It's faster".
Labels: Character Development, Enneagram, George Clooney
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
A scriptwriting tip from ScriptShadow
What I learned: Once you have your gimmick down, once you have your hook, forget about it. Forget about how you’re going to sell the thing. Switch your focus over to the story and the characters. Make them the best they can possibly be. I think that’s the problem with a lot of today’s writers. Is they rely too much on their premise. They think that that’s going to do all the work for them. It’s a casualty of movies like “The 40 Year Old Virgin” and “Knocked Up” doing well. Because so much of the joke is implied in the title and the marketing, that writers assume if they get that part squared away, their job is over. But Executive Search goes back to a time where writers still cared about their characters. You need to do the same thing in your rom com.
Labels: scriptwriting, scriptwriting tips
Sunday, January 10, 2010
hot topic: should ScriptShadow stop?
The community is on fire: a script analyst who owns a website called ScriptShadow publishes unproduced scripts online and writes an analysis. Wired Magazine and John August already posted articles against this habit of our secret guy.