Screen and Stage Plays
Screen and Stage Plays
Screen and Stage Plays
little cross-dressing.
This movie script typifies the pile-on structure of
story telling. The central characters are drawn
unwittingly into an adventure and each effort they
make to extricate themselves from their situation
propels them into deeper trouble (and funnier
predicaments). Lemmon and Curtis play two
unemployed musicians who innocently witness the
St. Valentines Day massacre. To avoid being rubbed
out by the mob, they take refuge (disguised as
women) in an all-girl jazz band bound for a gig at a
Miami resort.
This award-winning screenplay was a collaboration
between writing giants - Billy Wilder and I. A. L.
Diamond, from a story by M. Logan and Robert
Thoeren. Comic complications develop when Tony
Curtis falls in love with Monroe, and a millionaire (Joe
E. Brown) falls in love with Jack Lemmon. These two
unlikely love stories captivate us brilliantly. But the
movies energy and appeal ratchets up several
notches when the gangsters from the opening
sequence show up at the Miami resort.
The mix of danger, slapstick, sex, and frustration is
tantalizing. The gangster plot and the show biz love
stories feed off each other, without distracting us or
one plot diminishing the other. We are so involved
with each ball that Wilder and Diamond juggle in the
air; were unaware of cut-aways. You must read this
script to appreciate the craft. Viewing the movie is
not enough; youll be distracted by the brilliance of
the performances. The story structure is the
unacknowledged star here. Read this script and see
Format
Here is a basic list of how your script
should be formatted.
Typeface Always use Courier12pointfont!
Margins Because of the 3-hole punched paper, the Left margin
should be 1.5 inches and the Right is .5 inches.Top and
Bottom should be 1 inch each. Dialogue -2.5 inches from
the left- will be about 3 to 3.5 inches wide and shouldn't
extend more than 6 inches from the left. Character's Name
at 3.7 inches and above the dialogue.
Page Numbers should be located in the upper right hand
corner and then double space and continue writing.
First Page A screenplay begins with FADE IN:
Last Page At the end of your script you should type The End
and center it, or double space, to the far right of the page,
and type FADE OUT.
return to top
Plot Points
This is the basic outline of the average movie
made today. Give or take a few minutes.
Your COMMENTS are welcome!
FADE IN:
Between pages 1-5: The HOOK, something that grabs our
attention and pulls us in.
Page 10: At this point in your script you should have the "MINI
CRISIS". The "MINI CRISIS" should lead us into...
Page 17: ...The DILEMMA. Creation of the team and what the
movie is about.
Page 30: The REACTION to the dilemma or situation.
Page 45: First "REVERSAL" of the 17 minute point. This point
furthers the characters and pushes them deeper into the
situation or the dilemma.
Page 60: The "TENT POLE" of the movie. Where the passive
characters become active or vice versa.
Page 75: Second "REVERSAL" to the 17 minute point. To
reaffirm what the story is about.
Page 90: The LOW POINT of action. The place from which our
main character has to rise up from.
FADE OUT.
return to top
Character
Here is a list of requirements for a
cinematic character.
Questions???
These questions might be helpful to ask
yourself about character before you start your
screenplay.
Script Checklist
Opening hook
Primary conflict up front
Set the Genre and Tone
Post a general question
Introduce the protagonist in a unique way
Why does the story start today
ANTAGONIST: Who? Why? What?
What power does the antagonist hold over the hero?
10 minute point
Event and declaration
17 minute point
Reaction/30 minute point
Main goal or plan
What's at stake?
How is the hero trapped?
Time Lock
Are there teams? Hero's and Antagonist's
Mid Point
How does hero seize control of destiny?
How does the hero voice this new awareness and need
An Action that conveys the seizing of control
How does the hero face the antagonist on their own turf
How are the stakes raised raised for the 2nd half of the movie
What Unforeseen Obstacle is now in the way
When does the hero realize his/her worst fear
Tighten the screws
Epiphany; it should put your hero at a crossroads
Creates a New Goal
Climax
What truth emerges?
*******
SCREENPLAY STRUCTURE
The Five Key Turning Points of All Successful
Scripts
Hollywood movies are simple.
Though writing a successful Hollywood movie is
certainly not easy, the stories for mainstream
Hollywood films are all built on only three basic
components: character, desire and conflict.
Film stories portray heroes who face seemingly
insurmountable obstacles as they pursue compelling
objectives. Whether it's Clarice Starling trying to stop
Hannibal, Captain Miller Saving Private Ryan, or
Billy Elliott trying to gain admission to a ballet
school, all these protagonists confront overwhelming
conflict in their pursuit of some visible goal.
Plot structure simply determines the sequence of
events that lead the hero toward this objective. And
here's the good news: whether you're writing
romantic comedies, suspense thrillers, historical
dramas or big budget science fiction, all successful
Hollywood movies follow the same basic structure.
******
THE SCREENPLAY-STRUCTURE CHECKLIST
Let's make the screenplay -structure of your movie
indestructible. This article shows you how-to-write-a-screenplay
with excellent structure.
What follows is a tried and tested way of keeping an eye on
traditional 3-act Screenplay-structure. When you are deep in the
screenplay outline jungle, a compass helps to show the way. (As
always He is also She - No sexism intended)
How-to-write-a-screenplay my friends - like this. Understand
screenwriting lingo with this - my screenwriting tutorial on how
to structure your screenplay.
Page 30. Does the end of the first act find you Hero entering a
new and even more difficult arena of challenge? How does he feel
about this?
Page 45. Has the Hero overcome some challenges and beaten
back a few obstacles? Has he been tested a little, but not
destroyed,
Page 75-76. The Hero hits rock bottom. All looks hopeless and
irreversible. There seems to be no way out. He must now
discover a new strength, a new way of dealing with his
predicament and rebuild his hope in his ability to get the goal,
achieve his desire.
Pages 85-90. The build up towards the Second major plot point.
What starts to set it all up? Name the events. Why these?
Page 90. The start of Act Three Plot point Two. Show how the
Hero has changed. Show the growth he has made to begin the
next part of the journey. Show dont Tell. Moving Pictures! Ready
for the final challenge. Nervous, afraid, insecure... but he will feel
the fear and do it anyway.
Page 115. The climax. This is it. The showdown. The battle with
the Opponent. The big one. Pull no punches and make sure the
Hero is the one doing it. He defeats the Opponent and comes to
terms with his own true self. The absolutely most important
Screenplay-structure point.
*******
*******
SCREENPLAY STRUCTURE--A QUICK REFERENCE
byBarry Pearson
In my screenwriting seminar, Create Your Screenplay, I deal
extensivelywith the creative and structural nature of the
screenplay. That takes twoseven-hour days. Nevertheless, I'm
going to lay out the Quick Referenceversion here. (Watch for my
e-book which comes out later this year,and which will detail the
principles and techniques that I teach.)
Please note that I created some of the terms I will be using here,
sothey will be unfamiliar to you. Here's a short glossary:
BONDING CHARACTER - the second most important character in
your story,the character who carries on a relationship with your
Hero.
BONDING EVENT - the event, sequence of action, that brings the
Hero andthe Bonding Character into contact and into a
relationship with each other.
himself or herself.
Until a moment arrives when the Hero is in such a hellish
situation thathe or she starts to go on the offensive and fight
back. In essence, theHero is driven to state of mind like Peter
Finch in Network who yells,"I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to
take it any more!"
This sequence typically occupies the pages from 60 to 75 or
thereabouts.
THE PLAN THAT FAILS.Next there is a sequence of scenes in
which the Hero plans to defeatthe forces opposing him. The Hero
put a plan into motion and locks hornswith the opposing force or
forces in an effort to defeat them. This is the"plan-that-fails"
segment of the script.This sequence will fall somewherearound
pages 75 to 85. (Again, I caution you not to be a slave to the
pagecount. Use page numbers very approximately).
At this point, I should mention the issue of how much screen
time youshould be spending on each aspect of the storyline.
Obviously if you findyour Hero being "mad as hell" at page 45,
your script is out of whack.
As a sidebar, in the scripts that I see from writers, a common
weaknessis that the writer has skipped either the Locking Event
or the Escalating Event.That error will throw the whole shape of
the story out of balance.
THE HIDDEN WEAKNESS.When the Hero's plan has failed and he
or she looks to be utterly, finallydefeated, there is a sequence in
which he or she discovers what appears tobe a hidden weakness
in the opposing force or forces. This of course is aweakness that
you the writer built in when you created the Opposing/Attacking
force of your story.
THE PLAN THAT SUCCEEDS.This revelation (when the Hero has
discovered the hidden weakness ofthe opposing forces) initiates
the "plan-that-succeeds."
The ensuing sequence -- the one in which the Hero battles and
defeatsthe opposition - occupies pages 85 to 95 approximately.
******
*****