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Schedule
7:30 - 8:30 Registration and Continental Breakfast
8:30 - 9:00 Classic Aristotlean Storytelling or
An Engaging Character Overcomes Tremendous Obstacles to Reach a
Desirable Goal!
9:00 - 11:00 Screenwriting 101: Everything They
Teach You at USC Film School in 120 Minutes or less! The Golden Rules of
Screenwriting: The basics of storytelling, conflict,
establishing a sympathetic character who wants something badly,
three-act structure (beginning, middle, end), inciting incident, active
pursuit, legitimate manipulation of audience response, overcoming
obstacles, THE SILVER RULE - show don't tell, tension, exposition,
genres, books vs. films, characterization, character arc, raising
stakes, planting (foreshadowing) and pay-off, and involvement. (All
illustrated with filmic examples. Time permitting.)
11:00 - 11:15 Break and Networking
Opportunity
11:15- 12:00 Final Draft: Creating a Unified
Format
There is a standard format used by all of the Hollywood studios for
screenplays. This format is called the master scene format and it is the
clearest, cleanest way to tell a visual story. It prioritizes only two
things - what the characters do and what they say! Feelings, thoughts,
and backstory are the verboten. Show us the story and we must glean
everything from what the characters say and do, with the emphasis on the
visual over the verbal.
12:00 - 1:00 Lunch With Faculty (Provided)
1:00 - 2:00 What Agents Are Looking For in a
New Writer/Client Questions and Answers
2:00 - 3:00 You Don't Say or The Essence of
Good Dialogue!
The basics of good dialogue. This will be illustrated with excerpts from
famous Hollywood films
� Why it should be used sparingly
� What makes it credible
� Why it should add texture to the action not just underline or
repeat it
� The essence of subtle, artful dialogue that adds to the image
system instead of taking the place of the visual
3:00 - 3:15 Break and Networking Opportunity
3:15 - 5:00 Friday Afternoon at the Movies or
Structure, Structure, Structure!
The key to writing is structure. So, we all will watch excerpts from
a classically structured Hollywood film and analyze the heck out of it,
including identifying the Act 1, 2, and 3, turning points, unifying
filmic devices, climax, etc. Then we will look at the scene-o-gram and
how it applies. Further, we will look at causal relationships in stories
and the intricate dynamic of sequences, scenes, and beats - taking us to
the essence of non-dialogical storytelling.
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