Sunday night
Feb. 25th, 2007 09:39 pmYup, working on the Gideon storyline. Scrivener has this neat feature called Corkboard, which looks like index cards tacked to a--wait for it--corkboard. I've used one board for character descriptions, and am using another for the plot outline. It's nice because I always used to do this stuff on paper, and then lose it.
A book by David Mamet was reviewed in today's paper. I confess to knowing little of Mamet except that he is a playwright. What caught my eye was the screenwriting tip of his contained within the review, which works on the three basic questions approach:
"Who wants what from whom?"
"What happens if they don't get it?"
"Why now?"
Works for me, since I tend to think that screenwriting tips are simply plotting tips by another name.
A book by David Mamet was reviewed in today's paper. I confess to knowing little of Mamet except that he is a playwright. What caught my eye was the screenwriting tip of his contained within the review, which works on the three basic questions approach:
"Who wants what from whom?"
"What happens if they don't get it?"
"Why now?"
Works for me, since I tend to think that screenwriting tips are simply plotting tips by another name.
no subject
Date: 2007-02-26 04:01 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-26 04:03 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-26 05:01 am (UTC)I can do things in Scrivener and export to Word. I am guessing that there are similar PC programs out there.
tips
Date: 2007-02-26 06:45 pm (UTC)I've spoken to or read what has been written by both beginners and professional writers as well as playwrights or even screenwriters and I think I've learn that the difference is only the interpretation of what is being presented. okay, I'm babbling so I'll stop now.