No stage directions, no descriptions of the characters beyond whats needed. Brevity is your friend, you’ve only got between 90 and 120 pages to get your story on paper. Every page is a minute of screen time.
To start, read some screenplays and learn proper format:
Once you’ve written your masterpiece, register it with the Writers Guild of America. Most professional screenwriters register their work rather than copyright it, as they’re selling the work to someone else (and that ‘someone else’ is the one that will copyright the work). You can register your work here:
Then get a copy of the Hollywood Representation Directory and find an agent or manager to represent you.
Write a query letter, and send it to the agents/managers that you think would be a good fit with you. Interview the agents/managers that respond and pick the best one.
The agent or manager will be the person who shops your screenplay for you.
Right now the market for original TV series is hurting, and therefore the BEST market to be writing for as an amateur screenwriter. But writing a TV series is much more complex than writing a feature screenplay.
The above are your starter sites for television. They include screenplays written for television, production bibles, and treatments.
You don’t NEED special software, but it certainly is less time consuming if you acquire screenwriting software. The most popular are Final Draft and Movie Magic Screenwriter, and of course the free software of choice is Celtx.
What you NEED to do before anything else is pick up the following books from your library or bookstore before you even begin writing.
The Screenwriter’s Bible by David Trottier.
The Writer’s Journey by Chris Voegler
Story by Robert McKee
The Bible will answer all of your formatting questions, as well as help you develop your story, and give you an idea of what happens next after you finish your script and prepare to sell it.
The Writer’s Journey helps you understand the necessary character arcs needed in every story, and gives you modern day examples from modern day film.
Story is the premier text you will need, as it explains how to tell a story in a screenplay. Most writers have no clue how to tell a story in a screenplay, and therefore fail when they try to sell it.
every page is one minute on screen dont write camera or character descriptions like micheal landon the cast just walked in and if thats who he though would be good for the part they got that part he very rarely wrote character descriptions and for format you can go on to many different websites and they will explain it yes you can buy software but you dont have to and if you dont format it right companies will throw it away
~~~Daddy’s Baby Girl~~~
By meat on Aug 22, 2010 | Reply
No stage directions, no descriptions of the characters beyond whats needed. Brevity is your friend, you’ve only got between 90 and 120 pages to get your story on paper. Every page is a minute of screen time.
To start, read some screenplays and learn proper format:
http://www.script-o-rama.com
http://www.simplyscripts.com
http://www.imsdb.com
You can get a copy of celtx – a formatting program that will help you put your screenplay in the proper format. You can get it here:
http://celtx.com/
Once you’ve written your masterpiece, register it with the Writers Guild of America. Most professional screenwriters register their work rather than copyright it, as they’re selling the work to someone else (and that ‘someone else’ is the one that will copyright the work). You can register your work here:
http://www.wgawregistry.org
Then get a copy of the Hollywood Representation Directory and find an agent or manager to represent you.
Write a query letter, and send it to the agents/managers that you think would be a good fit with you. Interview the agents/managers that respond and pick the best one.
The agent or manager will be the person who shops your screenplay for you.
By The King IS Back on Aug 22, 2010 | Reply
Right now the market for original TV series is hurting, and therefore the BEST market to be writing for as an amateur screenwriter. But writing a TV series is much more complex than writing a feature screenplay.
http://johnaugust.com/library
http://tvwriting.googlepages.com/
http://www.simplyscripts.com/tv.html
The above are your starter sites for television. They include screenplays written for television, production bibles, and treatments.
You don’t NEED special software, but it certainly is less time consuming if you acquire screenwriting software. The most popular are Final Draft and Movie Magic Screenwriter, and of course the free software of choice is Celtx.
What you NEED to do before anything else is pick up the following books from your library or bookstore before you even begin writing.
The Screenwriter’s Bible by David Trottier.
The Writer’s Journey by Chris Voegler
Story by Robert McKee
The Bible will answer all of your formatting questions, as well as help you develop your story, and give you an idea of what happens next after you finish your script and prepare to sell it.
The Writer’s Journey helps you understand the necessary character arcs needed in every story, and gives you modern day examples from modern day film.
Story is the premier text you will need, as it explains how to tell a story in a screenplay. Most writers have no clue how to tell a story in a screenplay, and therefore fail when they try to sell it.
Hope this helps.
By Daddy's Baby Girl on Aug 22, 2010 | Reply
every page is one minute on screen dont write camera or character descriptions like micheal landon the cast just walked in and if thats who he though would be good for the part they got that part he very rarely wrote character descriptions and for format you can go on to many different websites and they will explain it yes you can buy software but you dont have to and if you dont format it right companies will throw it away
~~~Daddy’s Baby Girl~~~