Mistakes That Screenwriters Make On Page 1 - Shannan E. Johnson

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2020
  • In this Film Courage video interview, Writer/Instructor and Script Consultant Shannan E. Johnson (The Professional Pen) shares her thoughts on a Mistakes That Screenwriters Make On Page 1.
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Komentáře • 294

  • @filmcourage
    @filmcourage  Před 2 lety +9

    Subscribe to Shannan E. Johnson's CZcams Channel
    czcams.com/users/ShannanEJohnson

  • @OoziHobo
    @OoziHobo Před 4 lety +586

    I feel like you could throw any question at this woman and she would hit a homerun.

    • @hdpmrr
      @hdpmrr Před 4 lety +8

      Exactly. She's so good.

    • @mdm5216
      @mdm5216 Před 4 lety +28

      I've watched a lot of other videos talking about screenwriting. She is clear and precise in what she is saying. The others... not so much.

    • @faibabernard
      @faibabernard Před 4 lety +9

      Factually Accurate

    • @jasonandrewwillford5267
      @jasonandrewwillford5267 Před 4 lety +7

      My thoughts too. I wish I could take a class from her.

    • @lacolem1
      @lacolem1 Před 4 lety +6

      Yeah, she's really concise and to the point.

  • @SkyHiGradtrw
    @SkyHiGradtrw Před 3 lety +70

    Her explanation of young writers/creators trying to essentially re-create their impressions from moments in movies that they love is spot on.

    • @vibovitold
      @vibovitold Před 4 měsíci +1

      Doesn't Tarantino do that all the time?

    • @SkyHiGradtrw
      @SkyHiGradtrw Před 4 měsíci

      @vibovitold Yea, but I think she means specifically young writers in this instance & many of Tarantino's points of reference and deeper impressions are more niche and/or come from a different time in cinema. I think I'd be willing to say most if not all creators have done this in some capacity.

  • @AgainstAllOddsFilms
    @AgainstAllOddsFilms Před 4 lety +232

    Funny story, i got my script to a director who called me and said he was only going to read 1 page and tell me he didn’t like it. He said before he knew it he was on page 12. We are releasing it on this youtube channel this summer. It’s going to be amazing and it all came down to me having to prove my script in the first page...

  • @zachsmith3903
    @zachsmith3903 Před 3 lety +35

    It's funny how industry folks talk about what doesn't work which is counter to what we always seem to see. Bad movies are green lit aaaallllllllll the time.

    • @jarelllevingston7882
      @jarelllevingston7882 Před rokem +2

      The great irony of all of this.

    • @DavidZoaka-fh1lr
      @DavidZoaka-fh1lr Před 8 měsíci +3

      She doesn’t know anything or have any connections lol, nothing works the number 1 true and only unshakable rule is write a good story that you adjust so many times and rewrite till it’s perfect that’s it.. everyone has 100 opinions

    • @Ah_Yote
      @Ah_Yote Před 6 měsíci +3

      I think it’s more about they green light great movies but then producers and/or directors have a “new vision” for it

    • @vibovitold
      @vibovitold Před 4 měsíci +1

      the "design by committee" effect

    • @Anderson88ProductReviews-ei1mj
      @Anderson88ProductReviews-ei1mj Před 2 měsíci +1

      I'm wondering, if a lot of poorly cast, and made movies we see today, are due to film students making movies that automatically get released before going through the Hollywood filter, which would be equivalent to say, science students writing and publishing a dissertation, as part of their syllabus upon graduation.

  • @CKGoldiing
    @CKGoldiing Před 4 lety +144

    seriously, who else loves Shannan? 🏆 🏆

    • @vikkytube1
      @vikkytube1 Před 3 lety +1

      I love Shannan too, but jokingly.

    • @Bepeze
      @Bepeze Před 3 lety

      🤚🏾

    • @chopstyx141
      @chopstyx141 Před 3 lety

      Myself

    • @Nic7320
      @Nic7320 Před 3 lety +1

      She'd be a great screenwritng instructor.

    • @Brandon.manga.
      @Brandon.manga. Před 3 lety +4

      She doesn't waste time, everything she says is basically valuable and I'm soaking it all in

  • @JonasPolsky
    @JonasPolsky Před 4 lety +76

    2:53 When you drop a truth bomb so atomic that the camera shakes

  • @Roockie117
    @Roockie117 Před 4 lety +69

    She just dropped straight FACTS.

  • @MilitantTalker
    @MilitantTalker Před 4 lety +129

    She's right. It's just like reading a novel, it has to be interesting from the beginning. And it helps if everything has relevance...

    • @polaroidandroidjeff6383
      @polaroidandroidjeff6383 Před 4 lety +6

      I don't personally think what she's saying stretches to novel writing, I've read a lot of books who didn't really kick into gear until after page 100. I think because screenwriting is a primarily visual medium you have grab people's attention straight away whereas book have the luxury of slowly building up.

    • @Lurklen
      @Lurklen Před 4 lety +15

      @@polaroidandroidjeff6383 But there has to be something engaging on page one or two, there has to be something worth investigating or that makes you want to get those 100 pages turning. It doesn't have to be the inciting incident, and it doesn't have to layout the whole book, but it should be telling us something, and it should grab the reader. You only get to make one first impression, after that you can take your time to build up to things, but right at the beginning, you gotta have something to say that makes me go "Oh, where's this going?".

    • @raulruizdevelasco6215
      @raulruizdevelasco6215 Před 3 lety

      I think novels require more patience, as they take longer to unfold. If I would’ve given up on certain novels in the first hundred pages, let alone the first ten, I would’ve missed out on some incredible stories.

    • @SMacCuUladh
      @SMacCuUladh Před 3 lety +6

      Writing 101 - everything you write has to one of two things. 1. Increase the readers understanding of the characters 2. Move the action forward. Anything else and you're wasting the reader's time.

    • @felipemonteiro4646
      @felipemonteiro4646 Před 2 lety +5

      @@SMacCuUladh exactly! Pages and pages of "Just Wait till the next half of the book. It's gonna be so great" is just bad writing, stalling, and the story should just be shorter.

  • @ChrisOvens51
    @ChrisOvens51 Před 4 lety +68

    This is so damn true. She knows exactly what she is talking about.
    My own take is that if your film/pilot opens with your protagonist waking up in their own bed and there isn't anything inherently wrong with the situation, you've picked the wrong opening moment.

    • @terencejay8845
      @terencejay8845 Před 3 lety +13

      If you open with a character in bed and the alarm clock-radio goes off, (as per hundreds of spec scripts ) and he/she reaches out a lazy arm to hit the snooze button.. have the clock explode and wreck the bedroom, blowing the bed through the wall and out onto the street, because someone's switched the clock for a bomb-clock.
      That's a good first page, wrapped up in a big-deal, Yawn opening.

    • @yellow-ish4200
      @yellow-ish4200 Před 2 lety +4

      @@terencejay8845 I literally imagined that. Take this as a joke but your comment itself is an interesting opening and I would want to copy that-

    • @rodschmidt8952
      @rodschmidt8952 Před rokem +1

      I recall a story that began with the character waking up...
      in a DumpSter™

    • @rodschmidt8952
      @rodschmidt8952 Před rokem +1

      @@terencejay8845 But then the saboteur must be central to the story!

    • @ckrug32
      @ckrug32 Před rokem +3

      Unless your inciting incident is going to be a "problem" and not an "opportunity." A story with a "problem" inciting incident can open with the character feeling pretty good about their life. Everything is seemingly fine until the "problem" gets dumped in their lap. Now they spend the rest of the story trying to fix the problem and maybe by the end they realized their life wasn't as great as they thought, but NOW after solving the problem it finally can be -- or if it's a tragedy, solving the problem can make their life worse than when the story began. (Think "Chinatown.")
      The flip side of that is the story opening with the protagonist feeling pretty low about their life, and then an "opportunity" drops onto their plate. (Think "Rocky.")

  • @benjaminnewton8859
    @benjaminnewton8859 Před 4 lety +55

    I'm a simple man. I see an advice video from Shannan E. Johnson and I click it.
    This one has encouraged me to pay attention to other departments in films when I think stuff like "oh man this is soo badly written!!".
    Corey Mendell covered the 10 page rule I think, but this is a good refresher for that note. Following up with these ideas of doing something interesting that prepares the audience for what to expect from the rest of the film is great.

  • @BusterDarcy
    @BusterDarcy Před 4 lety +35

    100% true when you first start screenwriting you’re drawing on and trying to create moments as opposed to crafting an actual story. That’s why your first screenplay feels like it’s soooo many pages to fill.

  • @tonylogan6442
    @tonylogan6442 Před 4 lety +75

    Having an idea doesn't make you a writer. You need the skill to put the idea down on paper as story- great advice.

    • @lawswon4857
      @lawswon4857 Před 2 lety +1

      And vice versa. Your prose can be majestic, but without a compelling story you're just a wordsmith. A writer tells stories. We'd rather read bad prose that carries us through a great adventure than stick with a wordsmith who has nothing of value to say.

  • @FuzzyDunlots
    @FuzzyDunlots Před 4 lety +25

    Writers are the only ones who get it. I could listen to her forever.

  • @nithindominickoshy
    @nithindominickoshy Před 4 lety +16

    Thank you for sharing your thoughts, Shannan. This video helped me mentally revisit the action movies that people still care about decades after their release:
    1. 'Aliens' - After surviving an alien attack on her ship, Ellen Ripley struggles to cope with a world that has changed before she tackles the aliens.
    2. 'Die Hard' - While struggling with his married life, John McClane is under pressure when gunmen arrive, but he slowly learns to overcome.
    3. 'Lethal Weapon' - Healing from the death of his wife is hard, but Martin Riggs springs to action when his friend's daughter gets abducted.
    4. 'Predator' - Despite his confidence in his weapons and combat skills, Dutch has to scale down while defeating a far-powerful enemy.
    5. 'The Terminator' - While trying to make ends meet and get educated, Sarah Connor must fight an entity that threatens her existence.
    None of these movies start off with the heroes / heroines showing off what they can achieve. If they did, that would kill the suspense.

  • @NIKONGUY1960
    @NIKONGUY1960 Před 4 lety +22

    Movie moments. Sums up my life! She is so brutally honest you can’t help but listen.

  • @AndySpring210
    @AndySpring210 Před 4 lety +18

    I'm an editor and Shanon just taught me tons of golden wisdom....

  • @TheGoddon
    @TheGoddon Před 3 lety +26

    She sounds like a great teachers.

    • @TheGoddon
      @TheGoddon Před 3 lety

      She is just one person, dipshit. Singular.

  • @yappygm7433
    @yappygm7433 Před 4 lety +29

    I love her energy when providing answers. It makes me excited about writing!

  • @queenofweaves916
    @queenofweaves916 Před 4 lety +100

    I’m finally taking my first class this summer I’m so excited!

  • @JoshuaLoganjoshuadlogan
    @JoshuaLoganjoshuadlogan Před 4 lety +20

    This woman is in my head! Everything she says is so right on for me.

  • @twentyeight4626
    @twentyeight4626 Před 3 lety +6

    I'm shaking with excitement at the valuable content I am getting.

  • @c.k.mallick2474
    @c.k.mallick2474 Před 4 lety +11

    Great teacher! She articulates and shares her wisdom without making the listener feel intimidated or ignorant. Bravo! Thank you film courage for so much great consistency.

  • @arthousefilms
    @arthousefilms Před 4 lety +15

    Great point she made about jumping into something on page one that is not going to carry the story/character forward.

  • @Ruylopez778
    @Ruylopez778 Před 4 lety +14

    It can help in the rewrite to think about how the opening scene and final scene compare or contrast, in terms of tone, character, expectations, theme, setting. It might inform the writer how to make changes to the opening. Alternatively, if working on a fifth or six draft, it might be helpful to go back to early drafts and see if an important line or idea got lost along way.

  • @yerabbit6333
    @yerabbit6333 Před 3 lety +4

    her point about 'movie moments' - dang!! That is a good insight!

  • @Aaron_Smith_OM
    @Aaron_Smith_OM Před 4 lety +4

    Now that I think about, all of my favorite films and tv shows have strong, opening, characteristic moments that tell who the person/people are! Holy shit!

  • @MarianoRodriguez
    @MarianoRodriguez Před rokem +2

    “I got the results of the tests back. I definitely have breast cancer.” I open the script with a woman saying that. We never see her again.

  • @yothatscrash3092
    @yothatscrash3092 Před 2 lety +3

    I just wanna say that Shannan is an AMAZING teacher! Learning so much just watching these videos.

  • @ladyredconstance
    @ladyredconstance Před 4 lety +14

    I wish myself luck in the future...

  • @FredwardDrawn
    @FredwardDrawn Před 3 lety +3

    beforehand I knew the general idea she talked about, but never how to apply it when writing. She really makes it clear on how to know "ok this is what I need to do" and my next rewrite is definitely going to be better. You can tell she's a wonderful teacher and writer!

  • @Maazzzo
    @Maazzzo Před 4 lety +3

    I always love seeing Shannen. Thanks for bringing her back, this was a great video. I feel like so many movies are so focused on movie moments rather than the stories. It's like they've built the trailer in their head with all the important scenes and then write the movie around those clips they see for a trailer rather than writing a good story.

  • @RachaelMorton95
    @RachaelMorton95 Před 2 lety +1

    Ok, just dropping in after bingeing all the interviews involving Shannan:
    These are two incredibly knowledgeable and talented women! I love the interviewer's insightful and creative questions, and Shannan's answers are always logical and bring so many "aha!" moments. Thank you Film Courage for sharing this!!

  • @firedrakeillusional9862
    @firedrakeillusional9862 Před 4 lety +4

    Thank you for these videos 🙏🏾 Valuable lessons!

  • @TheHunTwo
    @TheHunTwo Před 4 lety +25

    Events are not story. Rewrite, focus and rewrite.

  • @ivansosa3218
    @ivansosa3218 Před 3 lety

    In simple words: thanks for all the content you upload to this channel. It's a gold mine for us, amateur writers.

  • @Bepeze
    @Bepeze Před 3 lety +2

    The movie moment point really got me. Really punched me in the gut. Especially as a person whose coming out of being primarily a movie consumer to an actual aspiring screenwriter.

  • @tiagonunes113
    @tiagonunes113 Před 4 lety +3

    She just described the beginning of Mulholland Drive (two people talking in a diner about something abstract, but cool), although it setups the theme.

    • @sticksman1979
      @sticksman1979 Před 3 lety

      Right. As much as I like this sort of thing, certain filmmakers completely invert the prescribed way of doing something.

    • @shongage
      @shongage Před 3 lety

      And Pulp Fiction. 2 Random characters you don't see again until the very end of the movie.

  • @TheFeelButton
    @TheFeelButton Před 4 lety +8

    Maybe the 10th bite of this meal will be cooked properly? Nine bites of undercooked chicken is my limit! Get to it on page one. 😉 Good stuff Shannan!

  • @juniorlinden7030
    @juniorlinden7030 Před 3 lety +2

    This information is going to be very useful - thank you soo much - now to writing.

  • @missmiss9539
    @missmiss9539 Před 3 lety

    Love it ... thankful for this information !

  • @paulolodicora4471
    @paulolodicora4471 Před rokem +1

    I feel like to go back to the "drawing desk" and do it again! Greetings from Brazil.

  • @Garytyronejohnson
    @Garytyronejohnson Před rokem

    Awesome! She gave a very informative and educational response. Thanks Shannon.

  • @RodMartinJr
    @RodMartinJr Před 2 lety

    Purpose and motivation! The visceral connection... I love it!

  • @christirva339
    @christirva339 Před 4 lety

    Clear, concise and useful advice. This was extremely helpful.

  • @incasolja1
    @incasolja1 Před 3 lety +3

    pulp fiction opens up on two people in a diner talking and are absent for 90% of the rest of the film. tarantino won the oscar for that screenplay despite that "mistake" and she goes on and on about that very kind of setup saying its wrong. the two aren't even protagonists and their dialogue is essentially disconnected from the basis of the story more or less. its intriguing and controversial even humorous and organic but outside of them talking about committing a crime there isn't much of a connection to the rest of the film and yet its an amazing screenplay.

  • @1983jcheat
    @1983jcheat Před 4 lety +3

    Great advice. I'm working on selling my pilot after 12 years of development. Episode one needs to grab the reader quickly. Lotta these new shows don't generally start to entertain till Mid season.

  • @162835show
    @162835show Před 4 lety +2

    What she say is really helpful.
    The first page part and her class sounds good!
    Thank you :D

  • @mikemcardle7466
    @mikemcardle7466 Před 2 lety

    Another perfect video with Shannan Johnson, the Boss! Awesome teacher!

  • @clintonlewis2547
    @clintonlewis2547 Před 4 lety +1

    Love this channel. Thanks for da work you do!

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před 4 lety

      Thanks Clinton, appreciate you spending some time with us. Hope you are staying creative during these challenging times.

  • @askrhonnie6356
    @askrhonnie6356 Před 3 lety

    She’s awesome. I’m fine tuning my 1st 10 pages right now. Great interview!

  • @Wulfenburg
    @Wulfenburg Před 4 lety +3

    Really insightful stuff. :) Shannan sounds like she was a really good teacher.

  • @Iwasonceanonionwithnolayers

    I love her. She is so insightful!

  • @markg5986
    @markg5986 Před 3 lety

    Wow, she's fantastic! Great insights that are very clearly explained.

  • @jassmimis7150
    @jassmimis7150 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for this advice, trying to keep this words in mind while writing

  • @rileyrayburn
    @rileyrayburn Před rokem +1

    very insightful woman, she hit every nail on its head.

  • @tammygreen5649
    @tammygreen5649 Před rokem

    Great insights. Very helpful

  • @poppers7317
    @poppers7317 Před rokem +1

    "The pilot is what sells the series."
    Every Star Trek show begins sweating.

  • @LoniLoni11
    @LoniLoni11 Před 4 lety

    Oh my gosh! So true! Hard to put what you're thinking unto paper

  • @filmtorres
    @filmtorres Před 4 lety +3

    Very valuable advice.

  • @jayanthsinhaofficial
    @jayanthsinhaofficial Před 4 lety +7

    The structure of screenplay is hidden within your story. Every story has a different structure. Opening image is your first impression, so if writer misses it, it immediately gets recognized by the experts.

  • @ajaishajafar5037
    @ajaishajafar5037 Před 4 lety

    I’m going to look up if there is a longer video with her. She’s a fantastic teacher! This whole course is great

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před 4 lety

      Check out the two playlists in our info section for all of our videos with Shannan.

  • @JasonBTV
    @JasonBTV Před 3 lety

    So interesting to hear. I am a studio exec and I personally give something at least 30 minutes, usually thru act 1. If I only read 10 pages I’m always nervous I won’t be able to say I did my due diligence haha

  • @joevillarreal192
    @joevillarreal192 Před 2 lety

    Wow, got a college course in just the first two minutes 👏🏼 👏🏼👏🏼 Thanks so much for this interview

  • @aquariumlife2929
    @aquariumlife2929 Před 2 měsíci

    I really appreciate the such a big and important channel like this that post videos such still find the time to answer the subscribers. Taking advantage of that ( in a good way ) i'll ask: you guys have a video showing step to step how to write a script, i mean pro formatation, like how the market will be more likely accept reading it ? Like a video visually showing the structures, like titles, subtitles, paragraphs, pages ? I know you guys do this amazingly all the time by giving important people advices , but in a practical sense, are any videos showing how to format a 'Hollywood template' scripts ? Thanks so much

  • @filmcourage
    @filmcourage  Před 4 lety +12

    How was this video helpful to you?

    • @renatapastuszak6590
      @renatapastuszak6590 Před 4 lety +3

      the first few pages are about setup: character, world, intentional details for the story. action films open with action: to teach the audience what they need to know about the main charachter's skills. so when the inciting incident does happen, you know that they can or cannot do it.
      don't open on meaningless conversations or "cool" scenes that have nothing to do with story.
      we all grew up with movies, so we think of and refer to what we've already seen. don't try to replicate what you've seen just because it was cool or powerful.
      capture the audience in those first 5 pages. like tv should get to the good stuff on episode 1, your script should do the same.
      pitch the same thing that you're writing.
      being able to take what you have in your imagination and putting it onto paper is a skill. its hard to do.

    • @rogersjgregory
      @rogersjgregory Před 4 lety +2

      It made me think about the other departments and budget. Wasting budget and time on something that doesn’t help the story, yeah good point.

    • @mmlewis1030
      @mmlewis1030 Před 4 lety +2

      I just quick edited my first page. I had this funny introduction to the character but it didn’t serve the purpose of letting us know a key dynamic that is central to the show. Changed it out for something that is not as funny but serves the story a lot better.

    • @moniquejohnson59
      @moniquejohnson59 Před 4 lety +1

      The pilot sells the series.

    • @savvivixen8490
      @savvivixen8490 Před 4 lety

      Her advice helped give focus and methodology for properly pruning my little sprouts to grow stronger for the pitch. Thanks a bunch!

  • @VividVator
    @VividVator Před 4 lety +3

    We need more of her asap!!

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před 4 lety +1

      Have you seen all of these - bit.ly/32pCWAF and these - bit.ly/2MxiQx2

    • @VividVator
      @VividVator Před 4 lety

      Film Courage about to check them out now. Thanks.

  • @user-zd1jh5zz9n
    @user-zd1jh5zz9n Před 10 měsíci

    Yes she's very good. I just subscribed to her link. Thanks Film Courage.

  • @RHStevens1986
    @RHStevens1986 Před 3 lety

    Shannan is consistently on the mark, and has a very at-ease on-camera presence. She must be a great teacher in the classroom if she's this good on CZcams.

  • @mcjwonder
    @mcjwonder Před 3 lety +2

    “I put an explosion in so I caught them wa ha ha” ...👁👄👁”Explosion for what?”😂

  • @assianeu197
    @assianeu197 Před 4 lety

    She’s sooo cool! omg I’d love her to come teach a workshop in my school but Im in Paris

  • @routeterror1236
    @routeterror1236 Před 2 lety

    I sometimes… not all the time, but in a few of my screenplays, like to open with the main antagonist or villain doing something intense or gruesome before we meet the protagonist(s). Not only does it give it that exciting hook right off the bat that’s necessary for the story, but i like the idea of seeing how tough and scary the bad guy is right away and then meeting your protagonist and thinking “how is THIS person gonna overcome or take down that other person?”

    • @deteon1418
      @deteon1418 Před rokem

      Yeah. Antagonists are interesting and essential.

  • @raulruizdevelasco6215
    @raulruizdevelasco6215 Před 3 lety +4

    Breaking Bad really kicks into next gear in the late stages of season three. I mean, I agree with her, especially when you’re reading dozens of other scripts. You want to be hooked from the get-go. However, sometimes patience can be rewarding. A lot of movies and books can appear average or even dull until you get this amazing payoff that makes everything worthwhile. I guess it all depends on whether or not you trust the writer to take you on their journey, and how skilled they are at planting seeds.

    • @nbucwa6621
      @nbucwa6621 Před 2 lety +1

      An argument could be made that the fact that Breaking Bad got to season three at is proof that the screenplay probably had something in the beginning that hooked the directors and made them willing to put their faith in the writer.

    • @bangeranginretroman3064
      @bangeranginretroman3064 Před 2 lety

      Breaking bad still ia interesting S1E1 tho, sets up the premise and story and has drama and conflict and exitement. While the story may go full blast later, its still got a good hook early on

    • @harlee886
      @harlee886 Před rokem

      The first scene in breaking bad has pants floating from the sky and a high speed RV chase while Walt is in his undies and bodies banging about.

    • @nikkinewbie6014
      @nikkinewbie6014 Před rokem

      I think if you have already proven yourself with other projects as a professional you will get a little more leeway to get to the good stuff. But as someone just trying to break in, you’d better prove that you know how to craft a story and do it quickly.

  • @PastorCrackpot
    @PastorCrackpot Před 2 lety +1

    If someone optioned my screenplay I'd be the happiest clam in the ocean. They can use to start a fire. I'll write another. Winter is cold and summer is for toasting marshmallows.

  • @theoutcaste
    @theoutcaste Před 3 lety +1

    So much great writing advice out there, its amazing Netflix turns out so many steaming piles. Yet, here we are.
    -nobody knows anything.
    -W.G.

  • @shad6644
    @shad6644 Před 4 lety +1

    ‘Movie moments’
    Only 3:00 in but had to comment. That’s brilliant insight. Okay, back to the video...😏

  • @jag5798
    @jag5798 Před 4 lety

    I enjoy where the beginning is the end. You judge without understanding why they did what they “had” to do or how they got where they were at.

  • @LaCoraStephens
    @LaCoraStephens Před 3 lety

    Love this woman; she's pretty brilliant!

  • @chrisnoelruiz8986
    @chrisnoelruiz8986 Před 2 lety

    God i just heard her first words and I'm hooked.

  • @nh8444
    @nh8444 Před 2 lety

    Omg this was fantastic.

  • @theburk8265
    @theburk8265 Před 2 lety

    Interesting point about the "wait until episode 5" with tv shows. I recently started watching Schitt's Creek, which is now an acclaimed & loved show. I absolutely hated the first 4 episodes and every character, evidently a lot of people did. The consensus seems to be to wait until season 2 and then it gets good. How does a show like that get picked up after a terrible and seemingly hated pilot & first season and not just cancelled outright? I can't fathom how any executive would read the first 10 pages of that pilot script and greenlight it.

  • @sailorbychoice1
    @sailorbychoice1 Před 4 lety

    10:00 I was a late bloomer when it came to learning. As a 22 year old I found a teacher in math(s) I was in the navy and I was taking the course during off times while the ship was underway.
    He only gave one of two grades 0 or 100, because if you're doing your taxes you can't turn in a tax return that's 85% correct, a ballistic had best be figured better than 92% or if you're trying to figure out the safe working load of a machine, you can't afford to do C+ work, it's A+ or don't bother.
    He would return each test, we would fix whatever was wrong, figure out what we had done wrong in the first place so not to repeat the problem until we achieved the 100% consistently; then he would go to the next thing to learn.

  • @CoD4Disturbed
    @CoD4Disturbed Před 3 lety +2

    Here's a question for film students/teachers, filmmakers, and those in the industry, that's been frustrating me - What IS "good"?
    Perhaps it comes down to different philosophies from one person to another, but -
    Is a script/film being "good" or "bad" not an extremely SUBJECTIVE thing? That's what I have heard over and over - that there is no scientifically correct way to do it - it is art. So who gets to decide the quality of your script? Isn't it up to whatever given individual is reading it or watching your film based on it? Isn't there simply no "correct" answer in terms of a film or script's quality (characters, plot, etc.)? Sure, there are conventional things like structure, but I'd argue you can bend some of those "rules" as many successful filmmakers do. So what is the deal?

    • @sandralee3091
      @sandralee3091 Před 2 lety

      I agree completely. The "rules" suck. Remember when i first read that a series for TV has to be either a procedural, a sitcom, sci-fi, fantasy or drama. What I was writing was sort of "Midnight Run" merged with "The A-Team" - comedy, acton, drama, relationship, witty dialogue. So - none of the categories fit. No wonder TV is taking a dive in ratings. What we all don't want is yet another "dead body at the start of every episode"-show, or "Four ugly women being the Ghostbusters". They dont make fresh original stuff, because they dont WANT IT. They just want to keep paying their cousins and lovers big money to write remakes and carbon copies.
      I say - write whatever first page that fits your script, never mind the "rules" - the ones that make those never read any scripts anyway. Write for the art, for the perfection.

  • @davemattia
    @davemattia Před 3 lety +2

    She's very good at explaining but the truth behind the truth is that the only way anyone's screenplay gets made is: A) You are connected at the highest level to a major studio through your Uncle Morty or your Aunt Millie. B) You submit a screenplay that falls into the hands of an honest reader who likes it and is involved in production -- which is virtually impossible. It's like hitting the Power Ball lottery. Advice: 1) NEVER enter a screenplay contest. It's a scam cottage industry that preys on your hopes. 2) The only rule that is real is formatting your script. You must format it properly. Always use Final Draft and shut off all the MORES and CONTINUED. 3) Face the fact that the odds of YOU being talented are about one in a thousand, and even then, the odds that anyone will want to film your talent is infinitesimally small. 4) Do not ask people to read your screenplay - like friends or family. Screenplays are ALWAYS boring, so they won't read them and you might ruin a friendship or relationship when the person you gave it to doesn't read it and is afraid to face you. 5) Things that you think are interesting -- like the history of your life - are probably not. 6) There is nothing wrong with YOU, but there is a whole lot wrong with the people in the film-making industry. Most of them are tragically untalented and they got where they are through nepotism or sex. 7)Keep in mind that READERS are usually failed writers. Do you think that if your screenplay is really good - and they know it - they will pass it along and keep doing their $15 an hour job? ----------- Okay - I just saved you a lot of trouble. You can IMDB me - David-Damien Mattia. If you have the Pro version you will see that I have a lot of stuff going on and I won a lot of awards - but I am never quitting my day job. Happy writing -- and don't think of me as a downer. I am kind of an angel actually.

  • @VintageAfro91
    @VintageAfro91 Před 4 lety

    Shannan is spot on! The first page of a script is very crucial because the writer has to establish the basics of who this character is in that particular world very early on.

    • @sandralee3091
      @sandralee3091 Před 2 lety

      You can't establish ANYTHING on page one of a script, and if you try you will just mess the whole thing up. A film is artwork - sure you need to meet your hero and get into the main story quickly, but "first page"? Most of the best movies and series have scripts where you don't even know the main characters name on the first page, or he/she ain't there at all! A film needs to work well as a whole. The first page needs to work to that goal.

  • @dustyhills8911
    @dustyhills8911 Před 4 lety +1

    Shannan is brilliant!

  • @sassytroy8282
    @sassytroy8282 Před 4 lety +2

    My college teacher did the zero thing as well. It works.

  • @eddyjuillerat835
    @eddyjuillerat835 Před 4 lety

    Lovely.

  • @lvvry1855
    @lvvry1855 Před 3 lety

    S-o-o-o informative and useful. Thanks. I love her accent. Where''s she from?

  • @davedsilva
    @davedsilva Před 4 lety

    This woman is amazing.

  • @GerolamoUrsidYulin
    @GerolamoUrsidYulin Před 3 lety +3

    What I admire Shannan for is her lack of arogance. That's rare.

  • @JagHiroshi
    @JagHiroshi Před rokem

    2:22 Laughed loud at this point.

  • @robertburks2126
    @robertburks2126 Před 3 lety

    Exactly how I go to a movie, always have.

  • @deadmessengers
    @deadmessengers Před 3 lety

    I could listen to her talk about screenwriting all day.

  • @anhleroy
    @anhleroy Před 3 lety

    It's funny she mentions two people talking in a cafe since that's how pulp fiction starts but of course you get introduced to a lot of characters pretty quickly in that scene.

  • @dariusmorgan5343
    @dariusmorgan5343 Před 4 lety +1

    This is potent

  • @everettclark6632
    @everettclark6632 Před 4 lety

    not everyone spike about mood, costume and lighting that help move the story along

  • @Maazzzo
    @Maazzzo Před 3 lety

    Question for Shannan - what do you do when you hit the Act II slump and the wheels get stuck in the mud?

  • @hamuArt
    @hamuArt Před 2 lety

    Most of the best heroes don't know how to fight or how to win at the beginning. That's the main key to how to overcome obstacles in the story arc. If the protagonist can solve everything from the beginning, there's nothing interesting about that, and what would be an interesting story for him/her?

  • @DJSethieSeth22
    @DJSethieSeth22 Před 3 lety

    I write but I've never heard of citing work for a story one u created. how do u cite for a creative story?