What goes into writing a great movie script?
Last Updated: 02.07.2025 02:44

A critical function of storytelling is wish fulfillment. This is why video games are so popular. “That protagonist is JUST LIKE ME.”
Learn to tell a story orally and not through writing. Try telling your story to a friend.
Audiences are smarter than you think. Something about turning down the house lights makes their IQs go up.
Write in reverse time. Major characters need to change polarity; minor characters may remain the same at the end.
To develop a unique voice for each character, try interviewing your characters.
Outline everything. Use story beats. Keep character’s mouths taped up, until they absolutely MUST speak. Write the script and the dialogue at the last minute, after you’ve revised the hell out of the outline.
Heavily shorted AI stock is rapidly climbing the Fortune 500 - TheStreet
Only God gets it right the first time. Rewrite everything.
Make sure to pack enough explosives into the rocket.
Use status to help drive conflict. King Lear/fool. Upstairs/downstairs.
People choose what to see based on the high concept. Make sure to deliver an ending consistent with the high concept -- it is what the audience paid for.
The DSM 5 is a wonderful character compendium.
Get up there yourself. Be in a movie. Take some acting (not writing) classes. Learn how a trained actor approaches a text. Learn why actors take roles. They do as much if not more than the writer does.
Who is the greatest light welterweight boxer of all time?
Leave holes. Write and unwrite. Put it in, take it out.
All rules are made to be broken, but you damn well better know WHY you’re breaking them.
Conflict is your power source; without it you have no drama and hence no script.
Primary characters must change polarities. Secondary characters can change less.
Don’t direct from the page. Everyone, from the director on down, wants to be part of the process of making movies. Let them do their work.
What you leave unwritten is as important as what you write. SUBTEXT.
He led George W. Bush's PEPFAR program to stop AIDS. Now he fears for its future - NPR
Your primary job is to create situations. Modern actors will fuck up your dialogue, despite whatever your contract says.
Research the facts and then throw away the research.
Maintain a slush pile/idea file. When you are ready to write, choose the best seeds to plant.
A scene should change valence from beginning to end. Up to down, down to up.
Actors give better feedback than writers do.
Cut everything that is not a payoff, or a setup for a specific payoff. “Omit needless words.” Think about the sparseness of joke telling, or Grimm Brothers.
Older Americans are happiest living in these 5 US states, study says — is yours one of them? - Yahoo