Advice
Capturing the Reel Racist - A Debate
Posted by Howard Gluss on
A Reader Asks: I have read your book REEL PEOPLE on developing psychologically sound characters. I am working on a character who has to transition from being somewhat of a racist into being a full-blown racist with murderous intentions. Can you give me any insight into what personality type would act this way and what may cause this violent outburst? Can you recommend any films that I can look at? Joshua, New York City Writer/Director/Producer Dr. Howard Gluss Responds: A film that I have seen recently that you should study that depicts bigotry and specifically Anti-Semitism in a fascinating manner...
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Richard Walter's Greatest Hits Or The Reader's Backflip
Posted by Richard Walter on
When I speak to screenwriters they remind me of rules I wrote in my first screenwriting book. The following rules - principles, actually - come from my 27 years chairing the graduate Screenwriting program in the film school at UCLA: 1. It's quite possible to succeed in what is in fact a thoroughly democratic enterprise; from my perch in Westwood I see it happen all the time. 2. You must be willing to give it the time. 3. When you give your script to a producer or an agent he or she is actually going to give it to a...
- Tags: advice, expert series, richard walter
Why Story Structure is the Key to Success
Posted by John Truby on
There is a system of thought known as the As-If Philosophy. In a nutshell, the As-If Philosophy says: We know we will die, but we act "as if" we will live forever. The ironic result is that our lives are not nearly as fulfilling as they could be. The entertainment industry is a perfect example of the As-If Philosophy. We all know it is set up so that most people will fail. But we act as if we will be part of the small percentage of people who will succeed. Why? Because we've studied the barriers and we know how...
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Hero is a Four-Letter Word
Posted by Melanie Ann Phillips on
Part Three: Hero and Villian Mix It Up We've seen how both Hero and Villain are actually composed of several different qualities. And, we've seen that for every quality the Hero possesses, the Villain has a counterpart. When these qualities are combined in this classic manner, Hero and Villain become stereotypes. When these traits are expressed to the extreme, they become melodramatic. We have also indicated that the elements of Hero and Villain might be distributed among other characters to break out of the stereotypical mold. One of the most powerful examples of this is to simply swap traits between...
- Tags: advice, expert series, melanie ann phillips
Structure and Character - Excerpted with Permission from the Book "Story" - Part Two
Posted by Robert McKee on
Character Arc Taking the principle further yet: The finest writing not only reveals true character, but arcs or changes that inner nature, for better or worse, over the course of the telling. In The Verdict, protagonist Frank Galvin first appears as a Boston attorney, dressed in a three-piece suit and looking like Paul Newman... unfairly handsome. David Mamet's screenplay then peels back this characterization to reveal a corrupt, bankrupt, self-destructive, irretrievable drunk who hasn't won a case for years. Divorce and disgrace have broken his spirit. We see him searching obituaries for people who have died in automobile or industrial...
- Tags: advice, expert series, robert mckee