Monday, November 26, 2012

Screenwriting Structure Series Part 9: Your First Ten Pages & The Hook

Here is more about screenwriting structure from The Unknown Writer.  )


About The Unknown Screenwriter

A working screenwriter and producer, The Unknown Screenwriter makes his home in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of Northern California and somewhere in the state of New Mexico with just a little bit of Los Angeles thrown in when he feels he can breathe the air.
     I'm glad to here readers are enjoying this articles by The Unknown Writer. I think they are great to. They are explaining exactly what I have been telling writers. It is nice to have a second party perspective.)



You got that hook, right? You know... That thing that happens somewhere in the first ten pages that makes me wonder if I turned the oven off? Closed the garage door? Put the cats out? Fed the dogs? Locked the car? 

Why does your hook make me wonder about all these things? Because I don't want to be interrupted as I read through the rest of your screenplay. I want to unplug my phone so that everyone who wants to borrow money from me can't get through. 

Your hook did that to me. It gave me goose bumps. It made me settle myself down and get really really comfortable in preparation for the rest of the ride. 

That something that I can immediately understand and captures my interest. Your hook doesn't have to be anything other than something that gets me interested in going on with your screenplay or movie. It should be commensurate with your genre and story but it doesn't necessarily have to be about your story. 

It could be something that your Protagonist just completed from another adventure. It could be your Antagonist doing something we've never seen before. It could be a minor character that exposes themselves to some vague obstacle that you'll flesh out to us later on. It could be an arrival. Somebody or something comes to town. How about a death? What about your theme? What about your Protagonist's flaw? Hell, maybe you just want to introduce your Protagonist... 

It's all good. 

Can you hook us in ten pages? How about five? The sooner the better? 

Your hook doesn't have to scare me. Doesn't have to abhor me. Doesn't have to surprise me. Doesn't have to make me fall in love. Doesn't have to make me feel happy or sad. 

It just has to hook me. 

Make me turn the page but be careful... Lots of specs are written (today) to be read and not made into a film. Don't do that. Don't write a book. Don't watch your characters in your mind's eye and then relay that information to us. Relaying information is passing that information along. Past tense. He is doing this or she is doing that. 

Tell me what's happening right now - as it happens. He does or she does. I want to be there with your character. I want to observe him or her through my very own reality television camera. Mine's set up on a Steadicam and I'm the operator. Make me use it. Make me do things with that Steadicam that I've never done before. See things I've never seen before. 

Write visually. Write it to be filmed. Write it to play. 

Maybe your hook brings up some question that I know I have to have answered by the end of your movie. That question could be about your Protagonist, Antagonist, theme, or even be the central question that needs to be resolved by the end of your movie. 

Don't want to give too much away? Hook me with a visual. Some image that makes me question the universe of your story. Spoon feed me just enough information to make me lean forward for another bite and pull it away. Force me to follow. Give me no other choice. 

Hook me. 

Is your hook some kind of backstory? Some piece of relevant information that we can't do without? Maybe it's just the introduction of your Protagonist's status quo. His or her ordinary world. What is there about their world that will hook me? 

Find it. 

Maybe you want to set up a few things that you'll pay off later on down the road. I can get behind that. Just be sure you do in fact pay them off. Is your hook something that one of your lead characters want? Or, is it something that keeps them from getting what they want? 

Hmmm. 

Maybe you need to show us how your Protagonist or some other lead character is quintessential. Maybe he or she is the quintessential cop, private detective, drunk private detective, homeless, student, cheating spouse, car mechanic, soldier, sailor, marine, teacher, doctor, janitor, spy... 

Get it? 

Don't start your ten pages off with talking heads. Don't show me two characters standing in frame just shooting the breeze. I don't give a damn what you got'em talkin' about - I promise you that's not gonna hook me. If you must have two heads talking, please, please give them something else to do while they talk. I don't care if one of 'em is just swatting flies - just give 'em something to do. This is such a pet peeve of mine but really... Don't do it. LOL. The more visual the something you give them to do, the better. 

I've agreed to read your screenplay or watch your movie. You've agreed to give me something worth my investment. We've struck a deal. Don't welsh on our deal. Stick to the deal. Suspend my disbelief. Use subtext. Show me something that requires me to think about what you just showed me. When your characters speak, don't let me just hear their words and think their words. 

Let me hear their words and think to myself, he or she is really telling me something else. Something not on the surface. Something not on the nose. Something deeper. 

Reveal character through your character's dialogue. Maybe he's an idiot. Reveal that. Maybe she's a romantic. Reveal that. Maybe he's a republican. Reveal it. 

Your hook helps kick your story into motion - reveals conflict - can be fun - generates interest in your premise. 

Hook me with two characters that are the exact opposite of each other. That's always interesting and catches our interest especially if you can really figure out a couple of opposites we've never seen before. Maybe it's just one character who is opposite of his or her current self. 

Put familiar against unfamiliar and you have instant conflict every time. Conflict is interesting. It's why we take an interest. It's why we watch. 

Try to release your hook as early as possible to grab us... We want you to do that. That's our deal. I invest, you pay off... 

With interest. 

No not all movies have that hook but you're trying to sell a script, right? 

Hook me. 



Go, writers! Go!


I have been getting a lot of request for loglines. I give different prices . Since I have so many requests for this service, I decided to set a single fix price.

Logline: $5.00 Flat Fee

A synopsis or summery is required. It well be used to form the logline. The logline is just one line.



Screenplays

Critique: $50.00 Flat Fee, 

 Includes evaluating the basis elements of a script

  •  Introduction
  •  Development
  •  Climax
  •  Conclusion
  • Character development 
  •  Mid point development

Critiques also provide suggestions for improvements and enhancement. 


Payments are made by Paypal or cashier check by mail.


Other services are at regular price.



Query Letters: $25.00 Flat Fee  


Editing: $46.00 Flat Fee
  •  Evaluating formatting to industry standards
  •  Spelling, grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, etc.

Turnaround time:

Editing: 2 weeks

Critique: 2 weeks
Query Letters: 2 weeks


Feel free to contact me at ahicks4298@q.com or  ahicks4298@msn.com.
Feel to call me at (360) 696-4298. Ask for Frances.

I also critique and edit books. I am currently organizing the service prices for working on books. If you are interested in me critiquing or editing a novel you have written, feel free contact me.
*
*
Film script format, writing film scripts, screenwriting services, coverage service, screenplay formatting margins, screenplay writing, screenplay format example, Search terms: screenplays, screenwriting service, edit and critique service, writing screenplays, screenplay format, loglines, query letter, film scripts, movie scripts, screenplay format, screenplay synopsis, script synopsis, treatment, proofreading service for writers, novels, writing services, fiction writing, film script format, writing film scripts, screenwriting service, coverage service, screenplay critique service, screenplay format margins, screenplay writing, screenplay format example, free writing tutorials,   script consultant, screenwriting jobs, film production companies

Friday, November 23, 2012

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!



Hello Everyone.

Thanksgiving was yesterday. Now we're on the road to Christmas, which means spend money on stuff you don't need and run up your credit card debt. That's what Christmas is about, at least here in the US.

My family and I had a quiet Thanksgiving. We had a simple meal and fruit for desert instead of cakes and pies. We stayed at home instead of going out in the "Black Friday" rush. People are crazy on Black Friday.

I hope everyone of you are enjoying your holiday. Don't eat too much and don't spend to much.

I posted another article from the Unknown Screenwriter on screenwriting structure. It's focused on the first 10 pages. take a look at it.










Go, writers! Go!


I have been getting a lot of request for loglines. I give different prices . Since I have so many requests for this service, I decided to set a single fix price.

Logline: $5.00 Flat Fee

A synopsis or summery is required. It well be used to form the logline. The logline is just one line.



Screenplays

Critique: $50.00 Flat Fee, 

 Includes evaluating the basis elements of a script

  •  Introduction
  •  Development
  •  Climax
  •  Conclusion
  • Character development 
  •  Mid point development

Critiques also provide suggestions for improvements and enhancement. 


Payments are made by Paypal or cashier check by mail.


Other services are at regular price.



Query Letters: $25.00 Flat Fee  


Editing: $46.00 Flat Fee
  •  Evaluating formatting to industry standards
  •  Spelling, grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, etc.

Turnaround time:

Editing: 2 weeks

Critique: 2 weeks
Query Letters: 2 weeks


Feel free to contact me at ahicks4298@q.com or  ahicks4298@msn.com.
Feel to call me at (360) 696-4298. Ask for Frances.

I also critique and edit books. I am currently organizing the service prices for working on books. If you are interested in me critiquing or editing a novel you have written, feel free contact me.
*
*
Film script format, writing film scripts, screenwriting services, coverage service, screenplay formatting margins, screenplay writing, screenplay format example, Search terms: screenplays, screenwriting service, edit and critique service, writing screenplays, screenplay format, loglines, query letter, film scripts, movie scripts, screenplay format, screenplay synopsis, script synopsis, treatment, proofreading service for writers, novels, writing services, fiction writing, film script format, writing film scripts, screenwriting service, coverage service, screenplay critique service, screenplay format margins, screenplay writing, screenplay format example, free writing tutorials,   script consultant, screenwriting jobs, film production companies

Screenwriting Structure Series Part 8: Your First Ten Pages

Here is more about screenwriting structure from The Unknown Writer.  )

About The Unknown Screenwriter

A working screenwriter and producer, The Unknown Screenwriter makes his home in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of Northern California and somewhere in the state of New Mexico with just a little bit of Los Angeles thrown in when he feels he can breathe the air.
     I'm glad to here readers are enjoying this articles by The Unknown Writer. I think they are great to. They are explaining exactly what I have been telling writers. It is nice to have a second party perspective.)



So where were we? We discussed how you really shouldn't be confusing genre with structure... Cool. Let's get back to story real quick... What is a story? A story - and not necessarily a story for a screenplay - is pretty much when something comes along to disturb the status quo. 

So we start out with a status quo, or the Protagonist's ordinary world. Something comes along to disturb that status quo... The inciting incident. Now this disturbance has to be quashed so that we end up with a new status quo. Not the same ol' same ol' status quo but something just a little different than what we started out from. 

That's story and as a matter of fact - a way to structure your story.
  • Establish a status quo
  • Bring in a disturbance that disrupts the status quo
  • Fight, subdue, defeat, conquer the disturbance
  • Establish a new status quo
Whew... If it were only that easy. LOL. 

So let's go back to the common screenwriting structual elements and flesh them out just a bit more so that we understand why they are so important to have in our screenplay... 

Ah but before I go on, let me once again toss in my little disclaimer. This is what I believe to be true. These are the structural elements that I perceive to be important to a film because these structural elements grab us by the throat and catapult us to the next beat, scene, or sequence of the story. In other words, if you don't - at a minimum - concentrate on these elements, don't expect that big pay day to be happening any time soon.

Your first 10 pages!

I know you've heard it before and while this isn't exactly considered a structural element per se - I like to include it as such because it really has become so important today in the world of spec screenwriting. Having said that however, there's certainly nothing wrong with having the first 10 pages be really really good and that goes for anyone writing any kind of screenplay. 

I remember when the first 10 pages kinda started out as this devious little trick to get the reader of your screenplay so engrossed in what he or she was reading that he or she simply couldn't bear to put it down... They just had to keep reading! 

And while I for one still subscribe to that way of thinking when it comes to the first 10 pages - I now think that the first 10 pages are so essential that I like to make them part of my own screenwriting structure. 

These first 10 pages have to grab the reader and hopefully, your audience - and inject them with quite a few things but probably most important of all? These 10 pages have to send a clear message to the reader and your audience that they are in for the read and or movie of their lives! These 10 pages need to scream out to the reader and audience that everything they ever thought they knew about screenplays and movies is now going out the window because Baby... You ain't seen nothing yet! 

Now before we go on, think about what I just wrote. What was the last movie or screenplay you wrote that made you think or feel this way? Be honest. Be truthful. Be serious. Don't sit there and tell me that the movies we see in the theater don't really do this to us so of course we don't have to do this either with our own screenplays. 

If you're one of those people that do not believe in competition... Whew. I feel for ya and maybe, just maybe you need to rethink your career option because spec screenwriting is competition of the fiercest kind. 

I make note of this because somehow, a lot of the scripts I read never really feel like they're competing. It's more like they just showed up. Screenwriting competition and no, I do not mean screenwriting contests - is not for everyone. It's definitely not for the purists who are not willing to scrap it all, sit back and dig in deep and start getting creative. 

Are there any kind of competitions you like to watch? Either in person or on television? Take your pick of competitions. Most of the time, you must admit that the competitors definitely bring it to the audience, right? They put on one hell of a show or at least they sure as hell try to put on one hell of a show. 

Why aren't you doing that with your screenplay? Why do you think it's just good enough instead of better than anything else out there? Is this horse dead yet? LOL. Nope. Not until I get it through your head that you are a competitor! You are competing! You have to symbolically inject your own kind of steroids into your screenwriting just like the baseball players do right before the game! 

Ouch. 

You gotta give it all you got or it's just not worth writing. It's got to be different yet similar. It's got to grab as wide an audience as possible and somehow persuade them to invest the rest of their 90 minutes to 2 and a half hours into your script and ultimately, your movie. 

That's right... Even if you're writing a little Indie film, why not make those first 10 pages out of this world? It doesn't have to be all action. It doesn't have to be all dialogue. It just has to be great! It has to give me goose bumps. It has to split my brain in two - make me glad I bought my ticket yet at the same time, make me wonder what's gonna happen next. 

Do you want to know the best part about all this? No? Well I'm gonna tell ya anyway. We all want your screenplay and movie to do this to us! Yup. As a producer, I want your screenplay to grab me. I want to read the best damn screenplay that I've ever read before. As an audience member, I want my rollercoaster ride! I want to walk out of your movie and tell my friends! I want your story... Your screenplay... Your movie... To disrupt my status quo and by the end, establish a new status quo for me. 

You can do this with your first ten pages. You must do this with your first 10 pages! If you want the likes of people like me to read the entire script then you've got to frontload like there's no tomorrow! You want to take my breath away! 

If you're not doing this with your first 10 pages then what makes you think you can compete with those who are? 

So by now you're maybe wondering what all goes into those first 10 pages... 

That's for next time 



Go, writers! Go!


I have been getting a lot of request for loglines. I give different prices . Since I have so many requests for this service, I decided to set a single fix price.

Logline: $5.00 Flat Fee

A synopsis or summery is required. It well be used to form the logline. The logline is just one line.



Screenplays

Critique: $50.00 Flat Fee, 

 Includes evaluating the basis elements of a script

  •  Introduction
  •  Development
  •  Climax
  •  Conclusion
  • Character development 
  •  Mid point development

Critiques also provide suggestions for improvements and enhancement. 


Payments are made by Paypal or cashier check by mail.


Other services are at regular price.



Query Letters: $25.00 Flat Fee  


Editing: $46.00 Flat Fee
  •  Evaluating formatting to industry standards
  •  Spelling, grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, etc.

Turnaround time:

Editing: 2 weeks

Critique: 2 weeks
Query Letters: 2 weeks


Feel free to contact me at ahicks4298@q.com or  ahicks4298@msn.com.
Feel to call me at (360) 696-4298. Ask for Frances.

I also critique and edit books. I am currently organizing the service prices for working on books. If you are interested in me critiquing or editing a novel you have written, feel free contact me.
*
*
Film script format, writing film scripts, screenwriting services, coverage service, screenplay formatting margins, screenplay writing, screenplay format example, Search terms: screenplays, screenwriting service, edit and critique service, writing screenplays, screenplay format, loglines, query letter, film scripts, movie scripts, screenplay format, screenplay synopsis, script synopsis, treatment, proofreading service for writers, novels, writing services, fiction writing, film script format, writing film scripts, screenwriting service, coverage service, screenplay critique service, screenplay format margins, screenplay writing, screenplay format example, free writing tutorials,   script consultant, screenwriting jobs, film production companies