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SimplyScripts Screenwriting Discussion Board    Screenwriting Discussion    Screenwriting Class  ›  Writing rituals/plotting Moderators: George Willson
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The Dark Horse
Posted: March 16th, 2019, 9:57am Report to Moderator
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Writing rituals

Wasn’t sure where to post this. Out of curiosity, what is everyone’s post-writing ritual? When you finish a script - what’s the first thing you do?

I always print it off - I like to look at it in paper form. I know I’m done with it when I’ve printed it off. After that - I wait 6 months then get a red pen and scribble notes on it and revise it. But I always know I’m ready to work on something new after printing off a script. Good or bad, I'm proud that it's done and in front of me.

I might celebrate with a glass of wine - but that’s roughly about it. I’m saving champagne for if I sell anything ha.

Plotting

Also - does anyone know some really great books on plot?

I think plotting is my great weakness and I’d very much like to work on that. Thus far - I have a tendency to rush through an outline (basically my foundation is never that strong before getting to the screenplay stage). I’ve tried yellow legal pads, scene cards, etc.

What I’m trying out now is outlining as much as possible in a moleskin notebook (200 pages) and then I’ll write it up into an expanded outline/treatment. So basically - write as much as possible and investigate it from every angle and then cut it down to a cool 100 pages.

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eldave1
Posted: March 16th, 2019, 10:41am Report to Moderator
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Quoted from The Dark Horse
Writing rituals

Wasn’t sure where to post this. Out of curiosity, what is everyone’s post-writing ritual? When you finish a script - what’s the first thing you do?

I always print it off - I like to look at it in paper form. I know I’m done with it when I’ve printed it off. After that - I wait 6 months then get a red pen and scribble notes on it and revise it. But I always know I’m ready to work on something new after printing off a script. Good or bad, I'm proud that it's done and in front of me.

I might celebrate with a glass of wine - but that’s roughly about it. I’m saving champagne for if I sell anything ha.

Plotting

Also - does anyone know some really great books on plot?

I think plotting is my great weakness and I’d very much like to work on that. Thus far - I have a tendency to rush through an outline (basically my foundation is never that strong before getting to the screenplay stage). I’ve tried yellow legal pads, scene cards, etc.

What I’m trying out now is outlining as much as possible in a moleskin notebook (200 pages) and then I’ll write it up into an expanded outline/treatment. So basically - write as much as possible and investigate it from every angle and then cut it down to a cool 100 pages.



We may have a different definition of "finish". Anyway - these are the things I do after typing FADE OUT.

First - Take a breather for a few days - week.

Then do what I refer to as my mechanicsNote - I write using Final Draft so these tools may not be available to all).

1. Copy and paste the script ten pages at a time into a Word File and run "Grammerly"  A nice tool for finding typos and grammatical errors.

2. Run the script in audio (i.e., FD will read it to you) - many errors are discovered by listening to the script (note - this was a tip I got from Warren and it is a good one).

3. Run a word search on a list of pedestrian verbs (e.g., walks, enters, stops, goes, etc. etc.) to see if they can't be replaced with a more descriptive verb.

4. Generate a scene header report to make sure that I described a single scene in a consistent manner throughout the script (amazing how many errors I can make in this regard).

5. Revisit all named character descriptions when intro'd to see if I can do better.

6. Finalize an outline for the entire script. When I write the first draft I use a very rough outline if one at all. I create a detailed outline (I use Excel or the FD  index cards for this) of a completed draft.  Each outline entry has these elements:

Scene number
Scene Location
Scene Purpose
Character's in scene
Did I enter scene to early - yes or no
Did I exit scene too late - yes or no
Comments:

Example:

Scene number: 1

Scene Location: Medical Office

Character's in scene: LOWELL and DR FERGUSON

Scene Purpose: First intro of LOWELL and DR FERGUSON. Establish something medically wrong with Lowell and establish his friendship with Doctor.

Did I enter scene to early?: Consider eliminating having  Lowell in the room by himself. Start scene with Doctor Ferguson still there.

Did I exit scene too late? No.

Comments: It's seven pages - needs to be trimmed more.  Some dialogue could be deleted/replaces with action/reaction.

Then I print the outline and use that to start the next draft. It's a tedious exercise for sure, but for me it moves me from staring at script pages to doing something active and somehow that gets the creative juices flowing.

Anyway - that's what works for me.


My Scripts can all be seen here:

http://dlambertson.wix.com/scripts
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Dreamscale
Posted: March 16th, 2019, 10:42am Report to Moderator
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My ritual involves several vestal virgins, a hot tub time machine, lots of alcohol, cigs, weed, and a Tomahawk style bone-in Ribeye steak.
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eldave1
Posted: March 16th, 2019, 10:48am Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Dreamscale
My ritual involves several vestal virgins, a hot tub time machine, lots of alcohol, cigs, weed, and a Tomahawk style bone-in Ribeye steak.


Well, yeah - I didn't want to post all the obvious ones


My Scripts can all be seen here:

http://dlambertson.wix.com/scripts
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Grandma Bear
Posted: March 16th, 2019, 11:54am Report to Moderator
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Quoted from The Dark Horse
Writing rituals
Also - does anyone know some really great books on plot?

I think plotting is my great weakness and I’d very much like to work on that. Thus far - I have a tendency to rush through an outline (basically my foundation is never that strong before getting to the screenplay stage). I’ve tried yellow legal pads, scene cards, etc.

What I’m trying out now is outlining as much as possible in a moleskin notebook (200 pages) and then I’ll write it up into an expanded outline/treatment. So basically - write as much as possible and investigate it from every angle and then cut it down to a cool 100 pages.



I didn't really start to get a hang on plotting until I started studying movies. I would start a movie and I would write down every scene in a note book. How long the scene was. The purpose of it and what happened in it. After having done that with maybe fifty films, I started better see how they were all put together. The only drawback was that it took me quite some time afterwards to not feel a need to take notes while watching a movie. Anyway, this helped a LOT. No need to read books on the subject. Just watch movies.  

Now when I set out to write a feature, I always write down a list from 1 - 45. Scenes usually average around two pages of script, so 45 will be roughly the amount of scenes you will have. Then I fill these points 1- 45 with my scenes and/or plot points. When I have most of them filled out, I know where the script is heading and I won't get lost on the way.

I'm currently working on a feature that a director is waiting for, I'll probably disappoint, and this time around I'm trying out the sequence approach. Since I'm pretty decent at writing shorts, I figured this might work for me because this means I only need to write eight 12 - 15 page shorts. We'll see how that goes.  


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Dreamscale
Posted: March 16th, 2019, 7:14pm Report to Moderator
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Dave, your notes are GOLD.  Seriously, very impressive.

For me, when I was done, I knew it, but that was probably 10-20 rereads and adding/subtracting editing after the "rough draft" was finished and FADE OUT was typed...BUT...that rough draft had already been completely edited at least 10 times.

From there, it was straight to the virgins, hot tub, and everything else that one would need or want in such a setting.



And, yeah, it made me very proud and was always a great feeling to know the project had been completed.
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FrankM
Posted: March 16th, 2019, 7:22pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Dreamscale
And, yeah, it made me very proud and was always a great feeling to know the project had been completed.


Completed? What is this word, “completed?”


Feature-length scripts:
Who Wants to Be a Princess? (Family)
Glass House (Horror anthology)

TV pilots:
"Kord" (Fantasy)
"Mal Suerte" (Superhero)

Additional scripts are listed here.
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eldave1
Posted: March 16th, 2019, 7:38pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Dreamscale
Dave, your notes are GOLD.  Seriously, very impressive.

For me, when I was done, I knew it, but that was probably 10-20 rereads and adding/subtracting editing after the "rough draft" was finished and FADE OUT was typed...BUT...that rough draft had already been completely edited at least 10 times.

From there, it was straight to the virgins, hot tub, and everything else that one would need or want in such a setting.



And, yeah, it made me very proud and was always a great feeling to know the project had been completed.


thanks


My Scripts can all be seen here:

http://dlambertson.wix.com/scripts
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stevie
Posted: March 16th, 2019, 10:21pm Report to Moderator
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I write all my stuff by hand in a notebook. I may do a scene outline with slugs and a few lines about the scene. I don’t outline the whole script. Sometimes the ending will come to me early.

When I have most of it handwritten and the rest in my head I start to copy it into the laptop software. This can take awhile - my current feature I began writing by hand back in early November. I set myself the discipline of 1 page min daily. By just before Xmas I had three qtrs of it written but stopped as family stuff was about to happen lol. All good as I had it all worked out and knew how the script would end.

Fast forward to now and I’m only half way thru copying to computer lol as I get distracted by other stuff like work, life, gaming, reading etc.  But the best bit is that my method means I don’t have to do numerous drafts as I revise and create new stuff as I copy to the software! This keeps the material from getting stale. Anyway am gonna do some copying nowbut it’s a  slog as I’m tired from a 9 hour shift last night



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Pleb
Posted: March 17th, 2019, 6:42am Report to Moderator
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"Also - does anyone know some really great books on plot?"

I'm struggling with books nowadays. They too often take too long to say too little, and there's so many decent podcasts and channels on YouTube that cover the same thing, but in a more succinct manner.

Triad any of those?


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Sam
Posted: March 17th, 2019, 10:06am Report to Moderator
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The trouble with screenwriting books is that they tend to cover a lot of basic information that most people who pick up the book already know.
They are still really good for having and referencing sometimes.

Having said that, I'm reading "into the woods" by John Yorke. It's really good I would highly recommend. It's a fun, insightful and inspiring read.


Email - samuellees@yahoo.co.uk
My script The Reachable Moon - http://www.simplyscripts.net/cgi-bin/Blah/Blah.pl?b-family/m-1517759624/

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The Dark Horse
Posted: March 18th, 2019, 6:10am Report to Moderator
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ELDAVE -
I started using grammarly too. I thought my grammar was fine with word then I used grammarly and discovered how atrocious I’ve been.

Some other things people do (during the proof read stage): reading it backwards word by word and reading it word by word with your finger underneath. I also look at the PDF and search if I’ve used certain words more than once. I keep an eye on the amount of times I use: then, silence, beat, moment. I’m definitely a “then” guy.

All great tips here though.

DREAMSCALE -
Ha I expected at least one person to say “cocaine and hookers” or along those lines.

ANGRY BEAR -
Apparently that’s what Kirsten Smith and Karen McCullah do. They watch movies with a yellow legal pad and make notes of the structure while they do it. But yeah - at the end of the day, watching movies and reading screenplays is probably the best way to learn. As if by osmosis.

Admittedly, I have tried your technique before and I don’t think it’s for me. Though at the same time, I recently got feedback where the main criticisms were the inciting incident didn’t happen where it should’ve - which really annoyed me. I always feel like it inhibits you to have it land on a certain page but at the same time you do need it to flow a certain way.

I know Eric Roth rewrites and rewrites until the structure is just natural/organic. I’d love to get to the point of it being second nature.

Thank you for your input.

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The Dark Horse
Posted: March 18th, 2019, 6:15am Report to Moderator
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STEVIE -
I’m trying out something similar to what you’re doing - with the notebook anyways. Admittedly, I can’t help but think my process is different every time. I’d love to have a more streamlined process. Something that works every time.

MAX RUDDOCK -
Yeah in times of trouble I go to Brian Koppelman and Creative Spark. But I dunno, I know most screenwriting books are bullshit but at the same time - I like to fill myself up with different perspectives on it all. See what works for me.

SAM -
“Into the Woods” is a good read. I recommend Billy Mernit’s “Writing the Romantic Comedy” (regardless of if you like the genre, it’s a great screenplay book) and “101 Habits of Highly Successful Screenwriters” (for when times are tough).

Okay, thank you for the input everyone. I hope something really good happens to everyone today.

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eldave1
Posted: March 18th, 2019, 12:02pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from The Dark Horse
ELDAVE -
I started using grammarly too. I thought my grammar was fine with word then I used grammarly and discovered how atrocious I’ve been.

Some other things people do (during the proof read stage): reading it backwards word by word and reading it word by word with your finger underneath. I also look at the PDF and search if I’ve used certain words more than once. I keep an eye on the amount of times I use: then, silence, beat, moment. I’m definitely a “then” guy.

All great tips here though.

DREAMSCALE -
Ha I expected at least one person to say “cocaine and hookers” or along those lines.

ANGRY BEAR -
Apparently that’s what Kirsten Smith and Karen McCullah do. They watch movies with a yellow legal pad and make notes of the structure while they do it. But yeah - at the end of the day, watching movies and reading screenplays is probably the best way to learn. As if by osmosis.

Admittedly, I have tried your technique before and I don’t think it’s for me. Though at the same time, I recently got feedback where the main criticisms were the inciting incident didn’t happen where it should’ve - which really annoyed me. I always feel like it inhibits you to have it land on a certain page but at the same time you do need it to flow a certain way.

I know Eric Roth rewrites and rewrites until the structure is just natural/organic. I’d love to get to the point of it being second nature.

Thank you for your input.



Yeah, Grammerly is very useful for me.


My Scripts can all be seen here:

http://dlambertson.wix.com/scripts
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Grandma Bear
Posted: March 18th, 2019, 12:17pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from eldave1


Yeah, Grammerly is very useful for me.

Grammarly...  


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