Home
NEW TODAY
FEST DEADLINES
FREE EVENTS
Sept. 25 FILM FEST
Sept. 25 TV Script
WATCH MOVIES
NEW MOVIES
FESTIVAL VIDEOS
PICTURES
READ POETRY
MOVIE SCENES
SUBMIT A SCRIPT
SUBMIT your FILM
POETRY CONTEST
TV CONTEST
1PG. CONTEST
WATCH TV
DAILY PODCASTS
WATCH FREE FILMS
THE LAST RITE
2010 MOVIES
ACTORS
ACTRESSES
DIRECTORS
MOVIES by YEAR
FILM FRANCHISES
MOVIE GENRES
CLASSIC MOVIES
NOTES and IDEAS
WATCH VIRAL
GET OUR E-ZINE!
CONTACT US

Enter your E-mail Address

Enter your First Name (optional)

Then

Don't worry -- your e-mail address is totally secure.
I promise to use it only to send you WILDsound News.

Subscribe To This Site
XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Subscribe with Bloglines
 

PLOT SCREENWRITING
PART 3 - How to Write a Script

plot screenwriting
Screenplay Contests
Search 10,000s of MOVIES
Film Festival
CLICK and WATCH MOVIES ONLINE!

Columns/Reviews/Movies
FILM MOVIESCREATIVE IDEAS
Producing a Film
Film Crews
Directing a Film
Screenplay Writing
Directing Actors
STORY Pitching
The Writers Way
Film Photography
Film Editing
Sound Design
Art Direction
Documentary Film
Writing a Grant
Film Distributing
Acting Quotes
Director Quotes
LISTEN TO MOVIE RADIO
2009 MOVIE GENRES2010 MOVIE REVIEWS
Drama Movies
Comedy Movies
Action Movies
Thriller Movies
Animation Movies
Horror Movies
Kids Movies
Romance Movies
Adventure Movies
Crime Movies
Fantasy Movies
Mystery Movies
Sport Movies
War Movies
Biography Movies
Comic Book Movies
History Movies
Sci-Fi Movies
Western Movies
MOVIE KILLWATCH TOP 100 MOVIE KILLS
WATCH the best in film history
KISSING SCENESWATCH TOP 100 KISSING SCENES
WATCH the best in film history, MUST SEE!
GREATEST SEX SCENETOP 100 GREATEST SEX SCENES
Watch the top movie scenes of all-time!
EXCITING WRITING AND FILM CONTESTS - FULL FEEDBACK on ALL ENTRIES
SCREENPLAY CONTESTSUBMIT your SHORT or FEATURE Script
Voted #1 screenplay contest in the world!
TV CONTESTSUBMIT your TV PILOT or TV SPEC Script
Original or script from existing show!
FILM AUDIENCESUBMIT your FILM
Feature or short films. Get it seen and moderated!
POETRY CONTESTPOETRY CONTEST
All entries get exposure on this site!
Search MOVIES and VIDEOS
WATCH FREE MOVIES!
Action Movies
Animation Movies
DOC Movies
Family Movies
Film-Noir Movies
Horror Movies
Musical Movies
Superhero Movies
War Movies
2009 Movies

Sex Videos
Life Videos
Superhero Videos
Sports Videos
Pop Culture

Film Festival
Feature Scripts

Action Scenes
Dance Scenes
Drama Scenes
Kissing Scenes
Monologues
Romantic Scenes
Sports Scenes
Adventure Movies
Comedy Movies
Experimental
Fantasy Movies
History Movies
Romance Movies
Thriller Movies
1min. Movies
2007 Movies
2008 Movies

Parody Videos
Political Videos
Music Videos
Animal Videos
Movie Parody

TV Scripts
Short Scripts

Comedy Scenes
Death Scenes
Kids Scenes
Love Scenes
Oscar Scenes
Scary Scenes
Violent Scenes
FILM MOVIESCREATIVE IDEAS
Producing a Film
Film Crews
Directing a Film
Screenplay Writing
Directing Actors
STORY Pitching
The Writers Way
Film Photography
Film Editing
Sound Design
Art Direction
Documentary Film
Writing a Grant
Film Distributing
Acting Quotes
Director Quotes


How to Write a Screenplay? PART 3 - PLOT Screenwriting

For most writers, PLOT is the most interesting part of screenplay writing, and why they begin to write to write the script in the first place. They have a good idea for a story, and they want to write it.

PLOT Screenwriting is a mixture of two things:
1) What happens to the characters
2) What they do because of WHO they are

Most PLOTS wouldn't happen if it wasn't for the CHARACTERS. A CHARACTERS should drive the story, and vice versa.

You always know you're watching a BAD FILM when any human being can insert themselves into the film. The UNIQUE character has to drive the PLOT.
The last thing you want is for you, the writer, to be a character in the plot.


"The stuff that I got in trouble for, the casting for The Godfather or the beginning scene I wrote in Patton, was the stuff that was remembered."
-Francis Ford Coppola Writer/Director (Godfather Trilogy, Apocalypse Now)


LET'S TALK ABOUT THE BASICS

Every story has a BEGINNING, MIDDLE and END, and every story has to come from a certain point of view. It can come from the point of view of a character (or characters from scene to scene) OR it can come from the audience's point of view. WE the audience are looking into the story and seeing what is happening.

Think about reading a NOVEL. Either it's written in the first person, where the character is telling the story, OR it's in third person, where the actions are telling the story. The same goes for a script.

KNOW WHAT'S AT STAKE IN THE MOVIE - WHAT IS THE CONFLICT?

1) SURVIVAL - Many good films are about survival - human instinct - do-or-die situations. If you're into Hollywood scripts and stories, think about the top-grossing films of all time. 99 out 100 are stories with characters in DO-or-DIE situations.
2) SAFETY AND SECURITY - Need to find a secure/protected setting once again.
3) LOVE AND BELONGING - Someone longing for connection - wanting to feel LOVED.
4) ESTEEM AND SELF-RESPECT - Wanting to be looked up to, and be recognized for their skills.
5) THE NEED TO KNOW AND UNDERSTAND - Curiousity, and understanding how things happen and what they have to go through to get answers.
6) THE AESTHETIC - Trying to be connected with something greater than themselves - a higher power.
7) SELF-ACTUALIZATION - The characters need to express themselves - to communicate who they are. The audience roots for someone to succeed. A lot of comedies have this plot.

RAISING THE STAKES WHILE THE CHARACTER GOES AFTER THE GOAL: PRESSURE AND ROADBLOCKS

SCENE DESIGN

SCENES are unified around DESIRE, ACTION, CONFLICT and CHANGE

Each scene has to be a minor, moderate, or major turning point

The effects of TURNING POINTS are fourfold:
SURPRISE
INCREASED CURIOUSITY
INSIGHT
NEW DIRECTION

You need to lead the audience into EXPECTATION, make them think they understand, then CRACK and open a SURPRISE

SURPRISE and CURIOUSITY always bring the audience into the story

Give the audience the pleasure of discovering life, pains and joys at a level - and in directions - they have never imagined

SETUPS/PAYOFFS
-Setup is layering-in knowledge
-Payoff is closing the gap and delivering the knowledge to the audience

THREE POINTS YOU NEED FOR THE AUDIENCE TO FOLLOW YOUR STORY
1) Empathy with the characters. We don't need to like them, but understand them and feel for them.
2) We must know what the character wants and let the character have it.
3) We must understand the values at stake in the character's life.

The more often the audience experiences something, the less effect it has.

EMOTION peaks and valleys rapidly in a great story. It's the catalyst for the PACE of the story.

THE LAW OF CONFLICT - Nothing moves forward in a story except through conflict.

As long as conflict engages our thoughts and emotions, we travel through the hours unaware of the VOYAGE that is leading us.

Make sure to check out WILDsound's Screenplay Festival where you can submit your script and get it read in front of hundreds of industry people.


"Usually when you have a block, it's because you've lost the motor of the story."
Amy Holden Jones, Screenwriter (Indecent Proposal, Mystic Pizza)


<
KISSING SCENESWATCH TOP 100 KISSING SCENES
WATCH the best in film history, MUST SEE!
MOVIE KILLWATCH TOP 100 MOVIE KILLS
WATCH the best in film history
KATHERINE HEIGLBest of KATHERINE HEIGL
Over 120 pages of SCENES, VIDEOS and PHOTOS
ACTorTHE MOVIE ACTOR
Reviews, Photos and Scenes
OVER 500 actors
DIRECTORTHE MOVIE DIRECTOR
Reviews, Photos and Scenes
OVER 200 directors
ACTRESSTHE MOVIE ACTRESS
Reviews, Photos, Videos and Scenes
OVER 400 actresses
SUPERMODELSUPER-
MODEL PHOTOS and VIDEOS

See 1000s of pics and movies
CAMERONBest of CAMERON DIAZ
100s of photos, videos and scenes!
FRANCHISETHE MOVIE FRANCHISE
Watch, see and explore over 40 of the greatest
TORONTO FREE EVENTSTORONTO FREE EVENTS - Weekly
RSVP TODAY!
LEGS PHOTOSLEGS PHOTOS
See the best of LEGS PHOTOS
BREASTS PHOTOSBREASTS PHOTOS
See the best of BREASTS PHOTOS
SCARLETT JOHANSSONBEST OF SCARLETT JOHANSSON
Watch movies and photos!
GWYNETH PALTROWBEST OF GWYNETH PALTROW
Watch movies and photos!
EVA MENDESBEST OF EVA MENDES
Photos, scenes and best scenes!
BEYONCE MUSIC VIDEOSBEST OF BEYONCE
Photos, scenes and every music video!
JESSICA ALBABEST OF JESSICA ALBA
Watch movies and photos!
IN A STORY THERE ARE APPROXIMATELY
-Forty to sixty scenes
-Twelve to eighteen sequences
-THREE ACTS - Beginning, Middle, End

THE HOLLYWOOD WAY

I remember reading books on screenplays and taking screenplay courses during my beginning years. They all seemed to say the same thing. Most of you already know which books and writers those are. This is what they all had to say about PACING your STORY.

BREAKING DOWN THE THREE ACTS

FIRST ACT - 25-30 pages
SECOND ACT - 50-60 pages
THIRD ACT - 20-25 pages


FIRST ACT
-Show where you are, what the story is about, who the main character is and where we are going.
-Something needs to happen right away. By page 10, if you haven't described what the MAIN PLOT is, then you're in trouble. Same with the main character. They have to be introduced right away.
-Then, at the end of ACT 1, introduce the central question: Will (so and so) do (what and what) and (usually something to do with them becoming a better person)?
-Study successful films. They get right into the PLOT and establish the characters immediately.

SECOND ACT
-In the beginning, the main character is in WANDERING mode. They are figuring out what they need to do in order for them to obtain their goal.
-Then they face a major conflict and usually fail at it. It sets up their inner/outer fears and obstacles so they can overcome them in the third act.
-Usually in the tail of the second act they jump into WARRIOR mode, where they are determined to get things done and succeed. And this is when all the pieces start coming together in the PLOT so it sets up the final (third) act.
-Second act ends with the major event/obstactle which sets up the usually high-paced third act.

THIRD ACT
-What usually happens is a huge lift for the main character. They are on their way.
-Then they are hit with a major blow, and you think all is lost.
-But of course they meet their major blow and succeed in the end.
-Third act concludes everything - the main plot and all the subplots in the script. It all ties together.
-It is usually very tense and fast-paced. Audience is on the edge of its seat.

Lets go back to the FIRST ACT.
There is a thing called the INCITING INCIDENT.


-This is when you set your STORY into ACTION (happens by page 10).
-You begin the story in relative control. Then life gets out of balance for everyone, and the story really begins.
-The Main Character reacts to the inciting incident and tries to restore balance.
-This is the SPINE of the story. The deep desire and effort by the protagonist to restore the balance of life.

All stories take the form of a question.
QUEST is always the story. Will they or won't they? That is the question.

DESIGNING THE INCITING INCIDENT
It happens only one of two ways - RANDOMLY or CASUALLY. Either by a coincidence, or by a decision.


"The singular image is what haunts us and becomes art."
-Julia Cameron, Author (The Artist Way)


REMEMBER, THE SCENE IS NEVER WHAT THE SCENE IS ABOUT
1) Define Conflict
-Who drives the scene, motivates it and makes it happen?
-Look at the character; what does she/he want?
Then ask:
-What blocks that which they want?
-What do the forces of the Antagonist want?
2) Break the scenes into BEATS
-A beat is an exchange of action/reaction in character behavior
3) Survey BEATS and locate the Turning Point
-Find the ARC in each character's transaction
4) Note what begins the scene and what ends the scene
-The great industry cliche is to LEAVE THE SCENE EARLY and ENTER THE SCENE LATE

RHYTHM AND TEMPO - Set by the length of scenes. How long are we in the same time and place? Two or three minutes average for a scene (but come on - it's not always that easy).

UNITY AND VARIETY - Because something happens in the beginning, something has to happen in the end.

PACING - Rhythm, serenity, harmony, peace, revelation. But we desire change - challenge, tension, danger, FEAR - never repetition.

JUST LET THE STORY BEGIN IMMEDIATELY, THEN LET THE CHARACTERS BRING NEW PEOPLE ON BOARD.

TRUST YOUR CHARACTERS TO TELL YOU HOW THE PLOT CAN EVOLVE IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION. THERE'S ALWAYS SOMEONE IN YOUR STORY WHO CAN BE INTRODUCED TO SEND THE ACTION TOWARD THE CLIMAX.

One of the greatest aids when writing a screenplay is to BELIEVE in the story - believe you are discovering it, instead of creating it. If you believe it already exists somewhere in your head in its entirety, there is no problem you can't solve with a little detective work.
CLICK and WATCH MOVIES ONLINE!
CLICK and SEARCH more MOVIES!

Search Classic Movies
MOVIE REVIEWS 2010ARTISTS PROFILES
Pages of over 1,000 actors and directors
NEW MOVIE REVIEWSNEW MOVIE REVIEWS
Read Today's POSTED REVIEWS
MOVIE GENRES500+ MOVIE GENRES
See films with various plots and situations

WATCH TVWATCH TV
Daily Television of RECENT and CLASSIC television
WATCH 2009 MOVIESWATCH SHORT FILMS
Best films from all over the world!
MOVIE TRAILERMOVIE TRAILERS
WATCH all the upcoming movies!
GREATEST SEX SCENETOP 100 GREATEST SEX SCENES
Watch the top movie scenes of all-time!

OUT ON DVDOUT ON DVD

See what's out at the comfort of your home!
BOX OFFICE RESULTSBOX OFFICE RESULTS
Weekend summaries of the top money earners!
VIRAL MOVIESWATCH VIRAL VIDEOS
Funny and Insightful films everyday!
DAILY NEWSDAILY NEWS

Top ET News everyday!

SUPERHERO NEWSSUPER-
HERO NEWS

Weekly Comic Book movie summary!
INTERNET RADIOONLINE RADIO
Listen to ENTER-
TAINMENT RADIO PODCASTS
MOVIE SCENESWATCH MOVIE SCENES
Greatest scenes in film history
SEX VIDEOSSEX VIDEOS
Watch the best of sexy, sex and relat-
ionships
plot screenwriting, plot screenwriting Return from Plot Screenwriting to WILDsound Filmmaking Feedback Events home page


footer for Plot Screenwriting page