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SimplyScripts Screenwriting Discussion Board    Screenwriting Discussion    Screenwriting Class  ›  How to write a screenplay in 3 weeks. Moderators: George Willson
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  Author    How to write a screenplay in 3 weeks.  (currently 2043 views)
Scar Tissue Films
Posted: October 28th, 2010, 7:25am Report to Moderator
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http://www.raindance.org/site/write-a-screenplay-in-3-weeks


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The answer is simple. You’re going to write it yourself in less than one month. That’s correct: 3 weeks to your first draft with 15-25 minutes per day of typing. In 6 easy-to-follow steps. So let’s start.

First you must understand the two sayings for writers:

The first is, "Writers write and thinkers think."
The point being if you want to be a writer you must actually move your fingers. You can’t write without writing. If you are being paid to think then that’s a really good lifestyle and I think you should continue it. However, your financial situation may dictate that you must write it yourself. But you’re petrified. You have writer’s block.

Now comes the second saying, "Nothing is written, it’s re-written."
Shakespeare didn’t magically pick up a quill and Macbeth flowed out. I’m sure that Will wrote and then re-wrote and re-wrote and re-wrote. But first things first and the first thing is the first draft. Stop worrying that your first draft will be great. IT WON’T. It will stink. The point is that it is now written and, if you truly have talent as a writer, you can now do the re-write and make it great. So stop being overwhelmed by the blank page. Start typing. Three weeks, 6 steps. Your first draft.

STEP 1 (Monday, Week 1):
Write 1-3 words. Type the title. I think you can handle 1-3 words. Now write the title. That’s it. Nothing more.

STEP 2 (Tuesday, Week 1):
Write 5-9 words. This is a 300% increase in writing over yesterday but I know you can handle it. Write the theme. Squeeze it into 5-9 words (AKA: “men are truly evil beings,” or “boys & girls can’t be buddies because of sex,” or “siblings are born to be rivals,” etc.) and type it. Next, cut it out and scotch tape it onto your keyboard or typewriter or screen. Thus, when you go to write your script you will always be reminded to keep it flowing through the 5-9 word theme.

STEP 3 (Wednesday, Week 1):
Write 15-25 words. Another 300% increase in writing. We’re just zipping along. Now type the TV logline. Condense your story into 15-25 words (protagonist, antagonist, or good guy/bad guy, situation, and problem) so that it can fit into TV Guide. If it can’t fit into TV Guide then how is anyone going to know to turn the TV onto your movie some night. Also, if you can’t get the story down to 15-25 words, there can’t be “word of mouth.”

STEP 4 (Thursday, Week 1):
Write the treatment. No one knows how many pages a treatment should be. I have heard as short as 3-5 pages and as long as 30-50 pages. So let’s start with writing a 3-5 page treatment. Guess what, it gets easier. Treatments are typed double space so you’re really only going to write 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 pages. All movies are the same. They have a beginning, a middle, and an end. Haven’t you heard that 20 times by now? So take 3 pieces of blank paper. Call page 1 "The Beginning," page 2 "The Middle," and page 3 "The End."

STEP 4A (Friday, Week 1):
Write one paragraph, 3-4 long, run-on (if needed) sentences. Write the beginning. On the first half of page 1, in double-spaced typing, write the 5 W’s and 1 H. Who. What. Where. When. Why. How. Describing who’s in the story, what’s happening, where it’s happening, when it’s happening, why it’s happening and how it’s happening. Remember, no more than one paragraph covering half of page 1. You have now typed your beginning.

STEP 4B (Saturday, Week 1):
Now go to page 3 and write the ending of your movie. You should, hopefully, know how your movie ends. This should be no more than 1-2 paragraphs and occupy the bottom half of page 3. Now don’t forget the big car chase.

STEP 4C (Sunday, Week 2):
Now let’s write the big middle. The beginning is short (half a page). The ending is also short (half a page). It’s the big middle that is what all storytelling is about. So now you are going to fill in the bottom half of page 1, all of page 2, and the top half of page 3 with your middle. Writing instructors claim that the middle (AKA: Act II) is where most stories fall apart. I agree.

So let’s fill up the middle with interesting events. Writing instructors call these plot points. I call them the "Oh-Shits" and the "Uh-Ohs". There are about 4-6 points in a movie about 15-20 minutes apart, after Act I, where things seem to be advancing and then dramatically fall apart. These are the "Oh-Shits" and the "Uh-Ohs".

Come up with 4-6 of these. Make each a small paragraph, in chronological order, and fill in the bottom half of page 1, all of page 2, and the top half of page 3. Re-write it into 3-5 pages. Put on a title sheet. Take it, along with $20, to the Writer’s Guild of America and register it. You have now written your first treatment.

STEP 5 (Monday, Week 2):
Now let’s get organized for your first draft. Create a structured outline. Great writers say there are 40-60 scenes in a movie. No one really knows how many there are. I advise renting a couple of movies you really enjoy and counting the scenes. Whatever number you come up with, that is the rhythm you seem to enjoy. Let’s say you came up with 40 or 50 scenes. Then on a large piece of paper, write down the numbers 1-40 or 1-50. Then fill in each scene (chronological order) with 7-10 descriptive words. Start with Scene 1 and a problem. Scene 2 introduces a protagonist. Scene 3 introduces the antagonist, etc. Don’t go exactly down the page. Skip around. Go to scene 40 or 50 and write the ending. Scene 39 and write the great car chase. Scene 38 and write why the car chase is about to happen. Then go to your 4-6 "Uh-Ohs" and "Oh-Shits" and write them in Scenes 10, 20, 30, 35, etc. Now fill in the other scene numbers with what are called B stories.

Voila!! In 1-3 days you have filled in an open ended jigsaw puzzle and created a story with 40-60 scenes, that has a beginning, a middle, and an end, with 4-6 major crises and several back stories. Your idea is now a fully fleshed out story.

STEP 6 (Tuesday, Week 2):
Now you’re structured with a 40-60 scene story based on the idea that was in your head 2 weeks ago and is now a registered treatment. It is now time to write your first draft. It is no longer as intimidating as having an idea and facing 90-120 blank pages.

Start on Tuesday with writing only Scene 1. Spend 15-20 minutes per day. No more. If scene 1 types into 1/2 page or 3 pages it doesn’t matter. Just write Scene 1 and stop. Wednesday write Scene 2. Thursday write Scene 3. I bet that come Friday, now that you’re structured, you are no longer scared of the blank page and actually enjoy writing scene-by-scene. I further bet that you call in sick from work on Friday and stay home and write 10-15 scenes of 20-30 pages. Saturday the same. Sunday, go to church and pray for the ability to have good dialogue and believable characters. Then on Monday (Week 3) you will have your first draft finished in the next 3-4 days.

A first draft is written, step-by-step in 3 weeks, with 6 easy-to-follow steps. Now remember, "Nothing is written; it’s re-written." All that you have is a first draft. Send this, like your treatment, with $20 and have it registered at the Writer’s guild, and start your re-write.

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Sandra Elstree.
Posted: October 28th, 2010, 6:09pm Report to Moderator
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I wanted to bump this so that it will be of use to some if they want it.

Most important element in all of this is:

Writing is rewriting. The thing is, it's a lot more than that. How much more?

That's up to you.

Sandra



A known mistake is better than an unknown truth.
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rendevous
Posted: October 28th, 2010, 7:37pm Report to Moderator
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" How to write a screenplay in 3 weeks"

PCP with 25 bottles of whiskey and a stack of skunk?

Erm, maybe not.

R xo


Out Of Character - updated


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dogglebe
Posted: October 28th, 2010, 8:18pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from rendevous
PCP with 25 bottles of whiskey and a stack of skunk?

Erm, maybe not.


You forgot hookers!


Phil

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mcornetto
Posted: October 28th, 2010, 8:35pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from rendevous
" How to write a screenplay in 3 weeks"

PCP with 25 bottles of whiskey and a stack of skunk?

Erm, maybe not.

R xo


You forgot time-travelling.
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dogglebe
Posted: October 28th, 2010, 8:57pm Report to Moderator
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If you travel back in time, the hookers are cheaper!

Keep in mind that, if you know the story you want to write, all you have to do is write three or four pages a day.  After a month, you'll have 90-120 pages written.

Wait until next month for the rewrite.



Phil
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James McClung
Posted: October 29th, 2010, 5:58am Report to Moderator
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Writing a screenplay in three weeks from the moment of conception isn't really advisable, I would say. How much could you have possibly thought about the story within that time?

Writing a screenplay in three weeks in general is easy. Like Phil said, it's just three or four pages a day. I think the majority of the months so many writers spend working on a first draft is lost on laziness and life just getting in the way... but mostly laziness.


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Baltis.
Posted: October 29th, 2010, 9:18am Report to Moderator
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Basic Instinct was written in 13 days... Top that!     

Of course Joe Eszterhas is one of the best in the business... Showgirls withstanding.  Oh, and Nowhere To run.  And Jade... Alright, and Basic Instinct 2.  But he did write Jagged Edge, which is super cool.  And Flash Dance.  And he's worth over 200 million.  Dude's a pimp.  Writes his scripts in days and then gets paid...  

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Baltis.  -  October 29th, 2010, 8:40pm
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rendevous
Posted: October 29th, 2010, 9:29am Report to Moderator
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I wrote a screenplay in three hours once.

Mind you, it was a stack of shit.

R xo


Out Of Character - updated


New Used Car

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Colkurtz8
Posted: October 29th, 2010, 10:34am Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Baltis.
Basic Instinct was written in 13 days... Top that!     


Paul Thomas Anderson wrote Magnolia over two weeks in a log cabin. That darn Eszterhas still beats him by a day...unless P.T took the weekends off.

Either way, Anderson's two weeks were much better spent then Eszterhas's 13 days, in my opinion.

Of course, Eszterhas's 13 days were infinitely better spent then any period in my life so...



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rendevous
Posted: October 29th, 2010, 11:03am Report to Moderator
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As you all know, I currently live on a building site in a field up a mountain.

Today it rained so much I was thinking of buidling a water wheel. Of course, I'd have build a boat first.

If it carries on I fully expect the house next door about a mile away to come sailing past mine sometime in the morning.

Anybabies, not yet. Er, any way, I spent two weeks trying to write something as good as Magnolia.

Alas. I didn't succeed. And it sucked balls, as certain Americans say.

However, I did spend two days writing Tomorrow III.

You can judge for yourself when it appears on a monitor or a print out near you soon.

Hugh's back. And he's not blue.

R ox


Out Of Character - updated


New Used Car

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Grandma Bear
Posted: October 29th, 2010, 1:08pm Report to Moderator
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most of my features are written in 2-4 weeks. The first drafts always suck big time, but it's definitely not hard to write one in that amount of time.

A local filmmaker and his promoter friend contacted me this week and asked me what the hell happened to the script I promised last spring. So the film is a go again and we're meeting in a couple of weeks. I'm supposed to have the script ready by then. I feel stressed about it, but I think I write better under stress anyway. We'll see how it goes.  


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Baltis.
Posted: October 29th, 2010, 8:39pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Colkurtz8


Paul Thomas Anderson wrote Magnolia over two weeks in a log cabin. That darn Eszterhas still beats him by a day...unless P.T took the weekends off.

Either way, Anderson's two weeks were much better spent then Eszterhas's 13 days, in my opinion.

Of course, Eszterhas's 13 days were infinitely better spent then any period in my life so...



Big time fan of Joe Eszterhas, but I think Magnolia is one of the best movies I've ever seen.  I love it.  Anderson hasn't ever really captivated me since, though.  Joe's work, be it devilishly bad for good reasons or good for bad reasons, has always managed to entertain me.  He's also got some incredible insight into the business and anyone who hasn't read or owns a copy of "Devil's Guide To Hollywood" and wants to be a screenwriter needs to do so.
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Colkurtz8
Posted: October 30th, 2010, 4:37am Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Baltis.
Anderson hasn't ever really captivated me since, though.


Did Punch drunk Love or There Will Be Blood not do anything for you? I mean, c'mon! He even managed to make Adam Sandler an interesting and complex screen presence, that's a feat in itself.

I would still consider Magnolia to be his best film too but he's one of the few filmmakers out there who has hit the mark every time for me so far. If you haven't already, check out his first feature called Sydney (a.k.a Hard Eight) great little film, all the more impressive for a debut feature.

Regardless of what I think of his scripts or the films made from his work, Eszterhas does seem quite the man from what I read about him, very outspoken and takes zero sh?t. I love how he stuck it to McKee basically saying ""who the fu?k are you" in being so all knowledgeable when you haven't got sh?t produced. I can get behind that viewpoint. Same applies to Syd Field an Blake Snyder, their CVs are laughable in terms of writing credits.



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CindyLKeller
Posted: October 30th, 2010, 8:13am Report to Moderator
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This thread has made me excited about writing another feature.

A big congrats to you, too, Pia.  

Cindy



Award winning screenwriter
Available screenplays
TINA DARLING - 114 page Comedy
ONLY OSCAR KNOWS - 99 page Horror
A SONG IN MY HEART - 94 page Drama
HALLOWEEN GAMES - 105 page Drama
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