7 Tips From Screenwriters

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 20. 12. 2016
  • bit.ly/VarietySubscribe
    Variety recently sat down with some of our 2016 Writers to Watch, including the scribes behind “Moana” and “Sully,” at the Whistler Film Festival where they gave us a few tips on how to become a successful screenwriter in Hollywood. Check it out!
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 49

  • @zacharykim295
    @zacharykim295 Před 5 lety +40

    "get someone to write for you"??? Yeah very practical, thanks

  • @iluvber247
    @iluvber247 Před 5 lety +62

    Visit the set. Yeah very helpful tip for aspiring screenwriters...

  • @nehemiahsaycsar
    @nehemiahsaycsar Před 5 lety +22

    In regards to the paying someone to write for you, say you're BROKE af, couldn't you just record yourself free thinking and then go back to it later with an editing mindset?

    • @ItqonAskary
      @ItqonAskary Před 5 lety +2

      Nehemiah saycsar Fleurima This is actually gold...

    • @HelloHello-tm7uc
      @HelloHello-tm7uc Před 5 lety

      Makes me think of the movie Adaptation haha

    • @ruly8153
      @ruly8153 Před 3 lety

      That’s if you can stand the sound of you voice.... 😂

  • @kindofachannel7362
    @kindofachannel7362 Před 7 lety +38

    >Next Tip for upcoming screenwriters. Hire someone to type for you
    Lmao why do you think I'm getting screenwriting lessons from CZcams

    • @aliasjon8320
      @aliasjon8320 Před 4 lety

      Out of curiosity what channels were you using for screenwriting lessons ?

    • @Red-pv7kx
      @Red-pv7kx Před 3 lety +1

      Alias jon lessons from the screenplay - delves deeply into writing / visual analysis. Nerdwriter1 does it on a variety of levels, genres, art etc.
      However, read books e.g. Story Robert Mckee, The Anatomy of Story John Trubey and Screenplay cover most areas from what I’ve heard. Have them all but currently reading Screenplay.

    • @ruly8153
      @ruly8153 Před 3 lety

      @@Red-pv7kx
      You ant read a book and learn how to write
      You have to find your own “way of seeing” through story. As pretentious as that sounds...

    • @Red-pv7kx
      @Red-pv7kx Před 3 lety

      @@ruly8153 I know.

  • @raymondnegron8005
    @raymondnegron8005 Před 7 lety +1

    Awesome! Real life TIPs. Touching Intrinsic Power. Thank you for sharing! Now, let's all get to work, and day dream the dreaming of writing that script. Awesome!

  • @ThatJoeGClift
    @ThatJoeGClift Před 7 lety +51

    dude, step 6 - know your place. Yeah, as a writer I already know my place. Writers are the top of the food chain by default. TV gets that. Theatre gets that. Film needs to start getting it too. There is no production without a script. It simply doesn't exist. The characters don't exist. The story doesn't exist. The script is what brings people together when it's a good movie. When people want a pay check, or just want to hang out with someone they always wanted to work with, maybe people bring you into a project, but when people are there for the art everything just works out better. The most important films of the last 60 years have nearly all been made by writer/directors. That's not just in the West, that's all over the world. The attitude that the director is god is fucking absurd and completely without grounds. Why rely on their interpretation of your vision? It's your idea, and if you can't shoot it yourself then it probably shouldn't be shot.

    • @ca916
      @ca916 Před 7 lety +3

      Joe Clift I agree with you in some points, but I think the director's type is more to sell. If you really wanna sell something you wrote you might won't find directors or producers etc who really wanna hear you or something. It will probably be just them buying something and doing whatever they want. I think the type is more for selling than to construct something.

    • @ThatJoeGClift
      @ThatJoeGClift Před 7 lety +2

      blabla bla but don't you see how absurd that is? Can you imagine Shakespeare being turned down by a team of Hollywood execs by virtue of the fact that he was a writer first and foremost? The idea should be what's being sold. It's not about who could star in it or who should direct it. It's a matter of placing a creation above currency. It isn't a commodity to be sold, it's a creation to be bought and nurtured so that it can be valued by an audience. And since writers create the work, naturally they should receive the lion's share of the credit.
      I know saying something can be bought without being sold sounds oxymoronic, but I hope you get what I mean.
      The problem in film is that producers have sold movies based on actors and directors from the ground upwards, but that's not how it should be. The perception of the public needs to be changed to focus on the people who actually form the foundations of the film you love because without them there isn't a film for you to love at all. Once the perception is changed, writers can take their rightful place as the selling points of their medium. The easy way to combat this is for writer directors to start publicly emphasising the writing part of their process. Tarantino puts effort into this at points as does PT Anderson and a few others, but still, more can be done and it should be.

    • @ca916
      @ca916 Před 7 lety

      Joe Clif Yes, I really see the absurd about it. Yes, I get your points and agree but we are really far to see people really recognising everybody's work since there is, as you said and we've seen this hierarchy that choose the "importante one". And no, I cannot picture Shakespeare passing through it.

    • @evyatarsegal1198
      @evyatarsegal1198 Před 7 lety +1

      Joe Clift hey did you know that Iron man (1 or 2 I can't remember) was shot without a script? they just made it up as they went (I mean I guess they had a general idea of the story but no real script.)
      and although it is definitely NOT a master piece it IS a blockbaster which is good enough for me....
      the art of words is writing, and it is dominant in books, when the artists use only words.
      in a movie there are WAY MORE THEN WORDS. (music, lighting, sound, actors, editing, locations and there are 4 guys operating the camera unless your'e indie).
      the director sets the vibe and can disagree with whatever he wants. he is the boss of the artistic side of the movie, and even if that's not fair it would be less fair that writers would be the kings because they have no place in the in the production nor the post-production... so how about we'll agree the writers are the kings of the pre-production?
      BTW if you think that your movies were made/good mostly or only because of you then your'e delusional.

    • @ThatJoeGClift
      @ThatJoeGClift Před 7 lety +8

      you're looking far too simplistically at this. Words aren't only able to be an artistic outlet in books, surely anything that is written can be artistic, therefore as long as one is writing, there can be a place for art. Writers as artists dominate plays and theater, and television along with teleplays too. Every other creative medium seems to understand what i'm saying apart from film, and that's solely because directors like the limelight, they like to reap the rewards of writing without the ability to write themselves. The notion that the director is in charge of the artistic side of film is astoundingly short sighted, and categorically wrong. A writer can easily note down music, mis en scene, casting choices, editing decisions - cuts, use of split screen/slow mo ect ect - location and camera movement/shot composition. I know, i'm a writer and i do it all the time as i aim to direct my work, and i'm far from alone. Tarantino, Anderson, fucking John Hughes, people like Bruce Robinson and Peter Greenaway and Lynne Ramsey, or basically ANY playwright (Miller's direction and notes to the set designers are what come to mind in the Crucible at present) worth their salt can do this. It's not hard. You don't just write a piece of dialogue, or an action, you give the words a speaker, the speaker a face, a body, a head, a heart and a world to speak within, and a wardrobe to wear, and a shot to exist in. You flesh it out because it's your idea and it's your duty as a creator to nurture your idea. At least i and a fair few others more successful than me at present do, but i believe with some encouragement there are more.
      I'm not saying every writer is made to direct, but as Danny Devito put it when he saw Tarantino's writing at a Cannes workshop, if you can write well, you can direct what you've written just as well as you've written it. I'm sorry, but writers do have an innate understanding of their own work because it was theirs first. Directors really only adopt, they never bare the creation themselves.
      The only reason that writers are often left out of production and post production is because they aren't allowed in. Tarantino, again, finds a work around, as do people like Kevin Smith (not a fan of anything post Chasing Amy but he was on fire up to and especially including that film) and the Coen Brothers. And if you're calling me delusional for thinking that a script isn't what can make a movie great, watch Clerks, watch Withnail and I, and read their scripts (not the shitty PDF paraphrases, i mean buy a copy of the script - i've got both on my shelves), and come back to me. Neither of these films are exceptional to look at really, but the energy, the wit, the pathos, every bit of poetry found on screen can be found in their scripts.

  • @Stoney-Jacksman
    @Stoney-Jacksman Před 6 lety +18

    'I have had 7 men in this scene.' Thats what she said.

  • @emilywong8111
    @emilywong8111 Před 6 lety +4

    tip #3 is gold lol

  • @danieljoseph1996
    @danieljoseph1996 Před 6 lety +3

    Here is my tip: know your beginning, middle and an end. An extremely important tip for the tip. When you watch the whole film, you can see what is going on in every scene for an hour or 2-3 hours defining the sequences.

  • @BrandonNinja
    @BrandonNinja Před 6 lety +7

    Hiring someone to type lol I wish I could do that.

  • @clairogray4977
    @clairogray4977 Před 3 lety

    keep calm and just write. WOW

  • @ScriptSleuth
    @ScriptSleuth Před 4 lety

    It really does boil down to #7: just write. And keep on writing. We have to wash away the sand to find the gold.

    • @ruly8153
      @ruly8153 Před 3 lety

      Hi there
      Big fan of your channel
      You’ve replied to me a few times
      👋

  • @OwenTuson02
    @OwenTuson02 Před 7 lety +15

    Hiring someone to write for you? Fuck. That.

    • @thetramp123
      @thetramp123 Před 7 lety +1

      I think a good alternative for his suggestion would be to get a digital recorder or something where you can dictate to it. I would be surprised if many struggling screenwriters have the means to hire people to dictate to.

    • @OwenTuson02
      @OwenTuson02 Před 7 lety +1

      thetramp123 here here! I mean to each their own, but it's just not practical for beginners. It's also not that technically taxing to actually type or write down words on a page, seems lazy

    • @aegresen
      @aegresen Před 7 lety +2

      I've started using this dictation software called Dragon. It's quite good; as you dictate more and more, it adapts to your accent and becomes surprisingly accurate. You can even use your computer just by speaking!

  • @jamesentertainment9030
    @jamesentertainment9030 Před 4 lety +6

    These tips were awful. Hire someone to write for you, keep calm, respect the director ?? Um I was looking for WRITING tips

  • @silviomp
    @silviomp Před 7 lety

    like it

  • @ufomechanic11
    @ufomechanic11 Před 4 lety +2

    Great video, would have appreciated some faces of color though.

  • @AuntieMessy
    @AuntieMessy Před 6 lety +2

    Creative people change the world with their stories. When they turn into movies, millions of people have the chance to see their genius. Authors, play-wrights, screenplays all need a third party to review their work and the reason is simple. Often creators have a challenge seeing the forest for the trees and it is absolutely essential to have a “third party” review and adjudicate the process. Plus, when you have a group of professionals who have the experience, is a wise decision. Try the FILMMAKER’S ROUNDTABLE. We want to know your story! Connect for your quote today.
    www.books2film.net/contact-us.html

  • @KimTownsel
    @KimTownsel Před 4 lety

    Fresh and interesting info. 😎

  • @ianschulze1461
    @ianschulze1461 Před 6 lety +3

    I hate when someone offers the following advice "Don't do it."

    • @michaeljohn1462
      @michaeljohn1462 Před 6 lety

      Ian Schulze Same here. I job-shadowed as a vet, and they all said that because it's hard work I should try something else.

    • @bradebronson8835
      @bradebronson8835 Před 5 lety

      They're trying to squeeze the weak ones from the ones who really want it.

  • @juanvilchez965
    @juanvilchez965 Před 4 lety +5

    This is mostly horrible advice

  • @supercruiser4925
    @supercruiser4925 Před 4 lety

    First interviewee passes off a subliminal feminist message...geez.

  • @tatianahadjisava-kaufman

    THE MEG (2018) SCREENWRITER: "IT'S A BLOODBATH!" watch here: czcams.com/video/YpNXjMaN4lw/video.html

  • @akramsaidi2849
    @akramsaidi2849 Před 5 lety

    BAD SOUND

  • @ruly8153
    @ruly8153 Před 3 lety

    If you need to look at the fucking ceiling to write you probably shouldn’t do it. That’s just lazy

  • @TheMichaelCardoza
    @TheMichaelCardoza Před 4 lety +1

    Starts off with feminists ideology. Yeah that was helpful.