Saturday, July 23, 2016

Screenwriting Tips: What Father's Day can Teach Us

People interested in screenplay writing can learn a lot from these examples of best Hollywood dads


Hi, Eric Edson here.


Father’s Day is a great opportunity to get to know one of the most important men in your life.
Aspiring screenwriters might also try thinking about what really impresses them most about Dad. Is it his sense of humor, turn of a phrase, or just the way he notices and appreciates what you do? All of these observational skills come in handy when writing a screenplay, because character development is so crucial to the success of a script.
If you don’t have a male role model in your life, you can always watch a movie to pick up some worthwhile screenwriting tips. Study the many ways in which dads are portrayed – some are heroes, some are villains, some have a heart of gold, and some struggle for redemption. People interested in screenplay writing can learn a lot from these examples of best Hollywood dads:
  • Atticus Finch: Gregory Peck’s masterful portrayal of Harper Lee’s hero in To Kill a Mockingbird presented the ultimate ideal of a principled man. But how would he have played the Atticus she wrote about in her recently-unveiled original manuscript for Go Set a WatchmanWhich character is more nuanced and real?
  • Father of the Bride: Whether it’s the classic Spencer Tracy version in 1950 or the updated Steve Martin version in 1991, this dad is full of love and humor as he prepares to see his daughter get married.
  • Darth Vader: No, not your typical dad, but a father nonetheless. What effect did his father’s conversion to the dark side have on the impressionable young Luke Skywalker?
  • Royal Tenenbaum: Does it take the news of impending death for a father to deal with the dysfunction he has created in his child prodigies? Gene Hackman showed how this can be accomplished with bittersweet humor, some of it brutally honest, and some with a lot of love.
  • Marlin, the Clown Fish: The story of a devoted father who searches desperately for his son Nemo, but also somewhere along the way, Marlin learns how to let his son go.
Take your pick – there are so many great examples of screenplay writing. If Dad’s a screenwriter like you, I’m sure he’d appreciate a copy of The Story Solution, one of the best books on screenwriting about writing a movie script. In it I present everything screenplay writers need to know about story structure, dynamic characters, rewrites, dialogue and Hero Goal Sequences. If Dad is just a film fan, take him to the movies with you and have a great time enjoying some quality time together.
Happy Father’s Day!
Eric Edson

The Story Solution, by screenwriter and tenured university professor Eric Edson, is an in-depth handbook for authors who are writing a movie script. It reveals the 23 actions screenplay writers should use to create dynamic, three dimensional heroes.

Recent Developments in Publishing


The 21st century has brought some new technological changes to the publishing industry. These changes include e-books, print on demand and accessible publishing. E-books have been quickly growing in availability in major publishing markets such as the USA and the UK since 2005. Google, Amazon.com and Sony have been leaders in working with publishers and libraries to digitize books. As of early 2011 Amazon's Kindle reading device is a significant force in the market, along with the Apple iPad and the Nook from Barnes & Noble.[citation needed] Along with the growing popularity of e-books, some companies like Oyster and Scribd have pursued the subscription model, providing members unlimited access to a content library on a variety of digital reading devices.



The ability to quickly and cost-effectively print on demand has meant that publishers no longer have to store books at warehouses, if the book is in low or unknown demand. This is a huge advantage to small publishers who can now operate without large overheads and large publishers who can now cost-effectively sell their backlisted items.

Accessible publishing uses the digitization of books to mark up books into XML and then produces multiple formats from this to sell to consumers, often targeting those with difficulty reading. Formats include a variety larger print sizes, specialized print formats for dyslexia,  eye tracking problems and macular degeneration, as well as Braille, DAISY, audiobooks and e-books.

Green publishing means adapting the publishing process to minimise environmental impact. One example of this is the concept of on-demand printing, using digital or print-on-demand technology. This cuts down the need to ship books since they are manufactured close to the customer on a just-in-time basis.

A further development is the growth of on-line publishing where no physical books are produced. The ebook is created by the author and uploaded to a website from where it can be downloaded and read by anyone.

An increasing number of small authors are using niche marketing online to sell more books by engaging with their readers online. These authors can use free services such as Smashwords or Amazon's CreateSpace to have their book available for worldwide sale. There is an obvious attraction for first time authors who have been repeatedly rejected by the existing agent/publisher model to explore this opportunity. However, a consequence of this change in the mechanics of book distribution is that there is now no mandatory check on author skill or even their ability to spell, and any person with an internet connection can publish whatever they choose, regardless of the literary merit or even basic readability of their writing.


Source: Wikipedia

The Story Solution: People are so Excited!

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Dear Friends,
I’ve told you a little bit about (Virtually) Everything Story in the last little while – and the response has been INCREDIBLE!
Thank you to everyone who has written to me sharing how much value they have received listening to my interview.
I’m personally SO excited about the opportunity here, and of course all of the other presentations that are going to be happening in just a few days! I thought you might like to get a peek at the full list – so I’ve got the schedule here for you.  These are the absolute TOP names in the industry sharing CUTTING EDGE information, which is going to put you 5 to 10 years ahead of your competition. This is what storytelling is going to look like in the future, and I don’t intend to miss out on ANY of it.
If you want to jump the line and get your ticket, click here and register:
“Yes, I want to register for (Virtually) Everything Story!”
Wednesday, June 15th
John Truby ~ Novels: The Number One Screenwriting Strategy Today: Why Being a Novelist is Your Ticket to Hollywood Success
Michael Hauge ~ Crafting Transformative Characters: Taking Your Characters From Identity to Essence
Sara-Jayne Slack ~ Cut the BS! – Busting Traditional Publishing Myths,
and Navigating the Industry
Thursday, June 16th
Jeff Goins ~ How to Use Blogging as a Creative Writer and Storyteller
Lee Jessup ~ Why Having an Agent Won’t Save You
Audra Casino ~ Storytelling Through Audio
Friday, June 17th
Jen Grisanti ~ Writing A TV Pilot That Sells: Setting Up The Structure
Katie Karlovitz ~ Talking to Ego: How to Present Well and Look Confident
When Talking to People Who Outrank You
Carole Kirschner ~ The Unwritten Rules of Hollywood: What They Don’t Teach You in Film School
Saturday, June 18th
Sarah Carbiener and Erica Rosbe ~ You Never Stop Breaking In:
Writing for TV in a Digital World
Marx Pyle and Kathie Fong Yoneda ~ Workshop:  Developing and Getting Your Web Series Off the Ground
Eric Edson ~ How to Write Plots Like a Hollywood Pro: For Screenwriters, Novelists, and All Storytellers
Sunday, June 19th
Pamela Jaye Smith ~ Creating Our Next Mythologies
James Napoli and Mindi White ~ The Story Dragons: A Meet-The-Reader Panel in which Seasoned Industry Story Analysts will Breathe Fire on Your Premise and Slay Your Narrative Dragons
Monday, June 20th
Sam Landstrom ~ Making Reading Addictive Via Interactive Fiction
Allison Moon ~ Transforming Your Story Into Income
Tuesday, June 21st
Kristan Higgins ~ Missed Opportunities: Making Sure You’ve Ticked Every Box to Create a Multilayered Story
Megan Dougherty & Elija Renard ~ Funding Options for Stories with a Greater Purpose
Matt Group ~ Game Writing:  How to Tell Stories Through Technology and Games
Wednesday, June 22nd
Lisa Bloom ~ Get out of the Attic: Storytelling to Attract Massive Interest, Book Gigs & Close Deals
John Bucher and Jeremy Casper ~ Creating Cross-Platform Characters: From Feature Films to Webisodes; From Video Games to Television
Thursday, June 23rd
Sarah MacLean ~ Mastering the Art of Great Conflict
Joan Stewart ~ How to Use Email to Attract Fans, Create SuperFans, Tell a Story, & Sell
Michael Jorgensen ~ Power Narrative: the Secrets of Documentary Storytelling
Friday, June 24th
Dan O’Shannon ~ What Not to do in a Writers’ Room
Save The Cat Peeps ~   Genre and Beats
Chris Vogler ~ E-Motion Pictures: How to Channel the Power of Emotions in the Body
If you’re as excited about this as I am, go ahead and register before the doors close:
There are TONS of bonuses available for attendees, and I’ll let you know about them in the next couple of days!

About The Story Solution: 
 The Story Solution, by screenwriter and tenured university professor Eric Edson, is an in-depth handbook for authors who are writing a movie script. It reveals the 23 actions screenplay writers should use to create dynamic, three dimensional heroes.

Publishing



Publishing is the dissemination of literature, music, or information — the activity of making information available to the general public. In some cases, authors may be their own publishers, meaning originators and developers of content also provide media to deliver and display the content for the same. Also, the word publisher can refer to the individual who leads a publishing company or an imprint or to a person who owns/heads a magazine.

Traditionally, the term refers to the distribution of printed works such as books (the "book trade") and newspapers. With the advent of digital information systems and the Internet, the scope of publishing has expanded to include electronic resources such as the electronic versions of books and periodicals, as well as micropublishing, websites, blogs, video game publishers, and the like.

Publishing includes the following stages of development: acquisition, copy editing, production, printing (and its electronic equivalents), and marketing and distribution.

Publication is also important as a legal concept:


  • As the process of giving formal notice to the world of a significant intention, for example, to marry or enter bankruptcy;
  • As the essential precondition of being able to claim defamation; that is, the alleged libel must have been published, and
  • For copyright purposes, where there is a difference in the protection of published and unpublished works.


There are two categories of book publisher:

Non-paid publishers: A non-paid publisher is a publication house that does not charge authors at all to publish their books.

Paid publishers: The author has to meet with the total expense to get the book published, and the author has full right to set up marketing policies. This is also known as vanity publishing.

Source:
Wikipedia

Will Smith Talks Story with Michael Hauge, and Laura Leigh | The Story Solution

Will Smith talks Story with Michael Hauge, and Laura Leigh Clarke
“The First Ever ONLINE Screenwriting and Storytelling Conference, JUNE 15 – 24”

Hi, Eric Edson here.
Wanted to let you in on something very special…
My dear friend MICHAEL HAUGE just interviewed his longtime client WILL SMITH about Will’s insights into STORY.  Our producer for the upcoming (VIRTUALLY) EVERYTHING STORY event, the amazing Laura Leigh Clarke, joined Will and Michael for a three-way chat.
Here is a rare and insightful interview… one that offers tips on screenwriting from one of the most important filmmaking personalities in the world – Will Smith.
Will lays out for us the most CRITICALLY IMPORTANT STORYTELLING CONCEPTS major filmmakers and producers look for in screenplays and novels.
Thought you might want to take a look.
Here’s the link:
During the interview Will talked about the powerful starting point he uses which becomes the north star in the creation of any movie:
The Universally Relatable Emotion.
He gives the example of I Am Legend where the emotion is being ALONE. He talks about how this guided the script, and everything else through to the tag line:
The last man on Earth… Is not alone.
Powerful stuff.
And have you checked out the (VIRTUALLY) EVERYTHING STORY conference schedule yet?  This one-of-a-kind Online Conference runs June 15 – 24!
They’re will be presentations and seminars with yours truly, Eric Edson, and Michael Hauge, John Truby, Jen Grisanti, Chris Vogler, Pamela Jaye Smith, along with some 25 other top speakers and producers in film, television, publishing, gaming and more, as well as many free bonus extras.
There has never been an online “virtual” ten-day conference on Storytelling event like this before.
As in Never.
If you’re a storyteller who wants to grow, then you are going to LOVE this line-up of teachers and experts.


In this interview you will learn from Will Smith:
  • Why identifying the SINGLE RELATABLE EMOTION in a screenplay is essential to a film’s success.
  • The FOUR PRIMARY QUESTIONS that he asks about the hero of every story.
  • How to create POWERFULLY EMOTIONAL MOMENTS where everything collides for a hero or heroine.
  • The key tools for creating TRANFORMATION in a character – and in the audience.
  • His BEST ADVICE FOR WRITERS AND STORYTELLERS for enduring and overcoming the challenges of being a working artist.
To SEE THE ENTIRE VIDEO of Michael Hauge and Laura Leigh Clarke’s amazing interview with Will Smith, just CLICK HERE.
Eric Edson
P.S. Doors close early this week, so check out the rest of the presentations and workshops we’ve got lined up for you. One ticket gets you access to everything, and the recordings, in case you can’t attend everything live.

About The Story Solution: 
 The Story Solution, by screenwriter and tenured university professor Eric Edson, is an in-depth handbook for authors who are writing a movie script. It reveals the 23 actions screenplay writers should use to create dynamic, three dimensional heroes.

Quote from Joe Wright

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Screenwriting 101: Your Romantic Screenplay Starts Here

With Valentine’s Day approaching, even the most cynical minds might find their thoughts drifting to romance. Shops and restaurants bombard us with symbols of love, and Hollywood is gearing up to release this year’s romantic movie offerings. On February 14th the theaters will fill up with singles and couples, either escaping their singledom with dreams of future romance or hoping their significant others will pick up some new tips on romantic gestures.
Who doesn’t love a good romance story? Well, most of us do anyway! It comes back to the fact that no matter how technologically advanced we become as a planet, our needs for romantic love and intimate companionship don’t change. The elements of a good romance – sexual tension, adversity, plot-driving change, high-stakes conflict – are all here to stay.
Your Romantic Screenplay Starts Here
Another reason for the popularity of the romance genre is that it lends itself to mixing with other genres. In the early days of film, many romance movies had a strong dramatic element in them. But since then other sub-genres like Chick Flick, Romantic Thriller, Romantic Comedy, and even Romantic Action Comedy have emerged to add more humor. If you’re not sure which one is best for you as a writer, read on for a breakdown of the different romantic sub-genres.
There are five of them, each with their own way of telling a romance story and featuring different types of conflict between the main character (hero or heroine) and the love interest character.
Romance Dramas: romantic dramas are serious in tone, center around the hero and their love interest caught in a serious real-world problem. The main conflict is to overcome whatever troubling obstacles prevent the couple from coming together. They’re the classic love stories, often immortalized on the big screen, like Titanic,The English Patient and An Officer and a Gentleman that resonate with us long after we leave the cinema. Romantic dramas often receive critical acclaim, along with the actors who play the lead characters. Perhaps the reason is that the drama genre gives more space to an in-depth exploration of the source of the adversity, be that social class, cultural or age differences, circumstances such as war or other physical disaster, or the protagonist’s own psychological barriers to the relationship. Lead characters in a romantic drama generally have more depth, and the unfolding of these characters acts as an extra source of audience involvement.
In this and all other sub-genres, the love interest character doubles also as the adversary while the lovers struggle to resolve the big problem keeping them apart. The conflict could be a result of outside influences, such as Memoirs of a Geisha orPride and Prejudice (social hierarchies), or, like Casablanca or Titanic, where it’s the presence of another interfering character such as a competing spouse or fiancé. Alternately, the conflict can be the result of internal or personal influences, such as A Walk to Remember and Love and Other Drugs (inner struggle and sickness). In romantic dramas, the clash of hero and love interest characters always creates a serious central dramatic conflict, although humor can sometimes be used as well.
Chick Flicks (often called)this sub-genre generally targets a female audience by emphasizing emotion and relationships over action, or by featuring a woman or a group of women as the central characters. While a “Chick Flick is not necessarily a pure romance movie, the central relationship is often between the hero and a love interest character (as in The Notebook, in which the main conflict is one woman resolving her feelings for two different men and choosing between them). It can often, however, revolve around the relationships of multiple characters with each other – the love interest relationship being one within a wider circle of dynamics. An example of this is The Holiday, a film about the relationships between four people involved in two simultaneous love stories, but also about the connections between all four people. The “Chick Flick can also focus primarily on the profound changes in a woman’s life as a new love interest comes into the picture, as inGreaseClueless, or Pretty Woman. Generally, a Chick Flick is a movie with a main theme of relationships, including a romantic relationship, that centers around a woman lead.
Your Romantic Screenplay Starts Here
Chick Flicks are probably best described as films having a central character that women can very much relate to, and that focus on the ups and downs of being a modern woman. Bridesmaids written by Kristen Wiig & Annie Mumolo is a great example.  DOWNLOAD ERIC EDSON’S HERO GOAL SEQUENCES FOR BRIDESMAIDS HERE. Although the film is about an upcoming wedding, the theme of the movie is really female friendships and where would women be without them. Thelma and Louise is often said to be the grand dame of Chick Flicks, and here the theme is freedom, usually from the impositions men place on women which stop them from gaining that freedom, as opposed to 500 Days of Summer which is a romantic comedy but not a Chick Flick, since the story is told from the male perspective.
Romantic Comedies: light-hearted fare that features humor within a love-themed story. The main conflict could revolve around the hero and a love interest character, like The Proposal, in which the polar-opposite personalities of the two potential lovers make for laughable encounters, or as in How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, where the conflict between a woman and her love interest plays out in other humorous ways.Your Romantic Screenplay Starts Here
Common themes are the idealization of love and one’s partner, love at first sight, and the idea that love conquers all. These films share some characteristics with romantic drama in that the two people seem to be well matched, but they are kept apart by some obstacle. However, as the plot and characters develop, they learn to overcome such obstacles and the ending is a happy one. The 1998 film, The Wedding Singer has all the elements of a classic romantic comedy, it’s about two likable main characters, both of whom are engaged to other people in less than ideal circumstances, but they seem to be a good match for each other. The female character in particular has to do a lot of soul searching before she defies societal conventions and calls off her wedding to her wealthy and successful fiancé in order to opt for the poorer but genuine hero, and they eventually become husband and wife. Romantic Comedy is similar to Romantic Drama in that the story hinges on adversity, but in Romantic Comedy, the obstacles are always overcome, leading to a permanent mate bond and happy-ever-after. In Romantic Drama, this is often not the case.
Romantic comedies can also be more like Chick Flicks, highlighting a romantic relationship within a larger scheme of characters and relationships. Examples areThe Family Stone or Crazy Stupid Love, which combine the romantic conflict with family/friend relationships that complicate the conflict resolution in humorous ways.
Romantic Action Comedies: these combine a romantic storyline with both humor and action. As opposed to a romantic comedy in which the humor is most often verbal, the humor in a romantic action comedy can be physical or slapstick as well. This genre of romance film has only been around for a comparatively short time, beginning (more or less) with the 1984 classic, Romancing the Stone. More than any other genre, romantic action comedy has seen its female protagonists undergo a transformation. No longer content to be the damsels in distress, a female protagonist in this genre is as likely to be wielding a gun as the male protagonist, and somewhere during an adrenalin rush, the fires of romance burst forth. One of the better known romantic action comedies is Mr. and Mrs. Smith, in which the central characters resolve their marital conflict through a series of action scenes as they try to kill each other. Other examples include A Knight’s Tale and The Princess Bride, where the hero characters fight to win the love interest character through various physical battles and funny interactions with other characters, especially those presented as adversaries. Romantic Action Comedies center around barriers that must be physically overcome to resolve the conflict.
Romantic Thrillers: have plotlines where the romantic conflict manifests in ways that are physically dangerous for the hero and/or the love interest character, adding in elements of rising suspense from the thriller genre. Examples include The Phantom of the Opera, where the main character and her love interest’s safety is threatened when they fall in love because of the disapproval of the menacing Phantom, or Hitchcock’s Vertigo, a psychological thriller/romance. Romantic Thrillers can involve danger from an outside force fought by a united couple, or a threat of physical danger created by conflict between the hero and love interest that keeps them apart. Other examples are Wicker Park and Match Point, romance thrillers where the threat comes from the love interest character themselves, who may or may not be the adversary, but somehow threatens the hero.
New York Times Best-Selling Author Rebecca York says romantic thrillers are books or films where, “the plot focuses on two people meeting, falling in love and working out their conflicts against a backdrop of danger and suspense. External forces threaten to destroy these people, but by the end of the book they triumph over the danger and make a commitment to each other.”
Where sexual tension is always the driving force behind a romance, in a romantic thriller the tension is heightened by the added element of life-or-death danger. This can sometimes be achieved by using  the ‘shapeshifter’ character, i.e. the one who starts off disguised as a love interest, but who is later revealed as someone whose real intention is to do harm to the central character, while the real love interest, at first a background character, finally steps forward and wins the lead character’s love in the end. The Bodyguard is a shining example of the Romantic Thriller genre, when the romance develops amid the tension of protecting the female love interest from a dangerous stalker. The fact that this was one the highest grossing films of 1992 is testimony to the potential of the romance thriller.
Your Romantic Screenplay Starts Here
Writing in the romance genre gives screenplay writers a chance to delve into one of the most profound human emotions, love. The five sub-genres of romance movies highlight the rollercoaster of experiences associated with love: happiness, fear, humor, intrigue, action and danger. The introduction of a love interest character adds depth to a screenplay and gives us insight into human truth through an experience anyone can relate to. Creating an engaging conflict between a hero/heroine and a love interest adds tension and meaning to a screenplay, and draws the audience in emotionally. There’s nothing more human than love – or more Hollywood than romance.
About The Story Solution:  The Story Solution, by screenwriter and tenured university professor Eric Edson, is an in-depth handbook for authors who arewriting a movie script. It reveals the 23 actions screenplay writers use to create dynamic, three dimensional heroes. Visit the website athttp://www.thestorysolution.com to download a sample chapter of the book. “Like” theFacebook page to receive screenwriting tips and insider insights on writing screenplays.
Download A Sample Chapter of The Story Solution - 23 Actions All Great Heros Must Take

Quote from Alan Moore

Quote from Kenneth Lonergan

Screenwriting Tips: 5 New Year's Resolutions for Screenwriters

Happy New Year From The Story Solution


You’ve survived another holiday season, and a new year has begun. Traditionally, now is the time we vow to mend the errors of our ways and make lists of lifestyle changes with the best version of ourselves in mind. Although a few of these resolutions may fall by the wayside, there is merit in the desire to create a “better you” for the new year. While formulating resolutions for 2016, be sure to set a few goals that will help you become a better screenwriter. Below are some ideas to spark your thinking in the right direction.

5 New Year’s Resolutions For Screenwriters


1. Write: Resolve to simply write more. Avoiding “paralysis by analysis” is a big key to success in screenwriting. If you want to be a successful screenwriter you must sit down and write! Writers often fall into the trap of mulling over their ideas, perfecting them internally before committing them to page. This over-thinking complicates the process unnecessarily. Getting your ideas on paper (or screen) in any form will help them grow and mature.  The written word gives you perspective.  A concrete representation of your thoughts can aid in their progression and development. There’s no such thing as a weak screenplay, only an unfinished one.  Set a schedule that works for you and resolve to write every day, even if it’s only for 20 minutes.

2. Be patient: Albert Einstein famously said once, “It’s not that I’m so great, it’s that I stay with my problems longer.”  Good screenwriting requires patience. Move forward with a long-view mindset. Everyone has to pay their dues. Seeing a screenplay through from inception to completion can be an arduous task fraught with pitfalls, rejection, delays, and many script drafts. A little patience will go a long way to assist you in seeing your project through to a result you’ll be proud of. In fighting this good fight, you will hear “NO” many times. But, to launch a career you only need one “YES”. For most screenwriters, getting to that “yes” takes years, not months. Real writers know they are in it for the long haul. And throughout that long haul, you are doing what you love! Take a deep breath, and enjoy this remarkable ride.

3. Get back to the basics: The new year is a perfect time to review basic screenwriting tenants and be sure that you are applying them to your screenplay. Besides paying attention to proper page layout and formatting of stage directions, settings and dialogue – inspect the dramatic elements of your work and be sure you are including essential components consistently and correctly. For example, wherever in the process you might be, even if you already have a draft or two of your current screenplay, stop for a moment and write down for yourself the following: WHO IS MY HERO/HEROINE? (Who are they on the inside, and what are their motivations to undertake action?) WHAT IS THEIR WOUND? (Identify the major trauma they experienced earlier in life that made them emotionally self-protective and isolated from true connection.) WHAT DOES MY HERO WANT? (It must be ONE THING that is tangible and      visible. Never lose sight of this.)  There are four basic goals in all of screenwriting. WIN. STOP. ESCAPE. RETRIEVE.   (Which of these is your hero’s ultimate goal?) And WHAT SPECIFIC HUMAN ADVERSARY is out to stop your hero/heroine at all costs?

4. Know & accept yourself: The new year gives you an opportunity to take stock and identify your strengths and weaknesses. Reflect on your innate writing style to isolate what works for you. What is your natural tone? What pace or structure do you instinctively follow?  This is not to suggest that you limit yourself based on current abilities, but rather identify the strongest starting point and build on it. No screenwriter is great at absolutely everything. Identify your strengths and weaknesses. Lead with your strengths in writing while working to improve on your weaknesses. A thorough knowledge of where you are is the best place to develop a means to get where you want to be.

5. Study classic screenplays: Just as you wouldn’t attempt to rebuild a car engine with no knowledge of its mechanics, you cannot write a screenplay without understanding how other classic screenplays have come together. It is important to commit to the practice of researching and reflecting on classic screenplays every week. Read. Read. Read. This will help you develop interesting characters, set the tone of your screenplay, better comprehend story structure, and expand your descriptive vocabulary. You cannot write well that which you do not read. (And this part also happens to be a lot of fun!)

So there you have it!  5 resolutions to help you become a better screenwriter this year.  Make writing a priority for 2016.  Focus on being aware of your skills and strategies as a writer. Know the needs and preferences of your audience, which are the elements of your genre. Study the classic screenplays and keep the lessons fresh in your mind as you write.  Realize that your early script drafts will not be your best work, they are only steps in a journey. Exercise self-discipline, and above all else…WRITE!

About The Story Solution:  The Story Solution, by  screenwriter and tenured professor Eric Edson, is an in-depth handbook for authors who are writing a movie script. It reveals the 23 actions screenplay writers use to create dynamic, three dimensional heroes. Visit the website at http://www.thestorysolution.com to download a sample chapter of the book“Like” the Facebook page to receive screenwriting tips and insider insights on writing screenplays.
Download A Sample Chapter of The Story Solution - 23 Actions All Great Heros Must Take

Quote from Marc Jacobs


Writing a Screenplay: The Story Solution's Classic Holiday Heroes

Quote from Omar Dorsey