Sort By Alphabet

all - 0 - 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 -
A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z -

Are You Not Entertained?




"The desire to be free as an artist is one of the most suicidal notions you can have." - Robert McKee

But free from what exactly? Answer: Your audience.

Audience is everything, and if you're completely "free", you most likely are not making decisions with the audience in mind. The triangle (writer, subject, audience) is key in all writing because all three parts are intimately connected.

I am constantly amazed how often screenwriters fail to recognize that the primary goal of movie making is to entertain an audience. Sure, we have all kinds of film awards. But most movies are not made with The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Oscars), The Hollywood Foreign Press Association (Golden Globes), or The Writers Guild of America in mind. To be brutally honest, it doesn't even matter if you like your own movie as long as your audience does.

You must know your audience - plain and simple. This is the hardest part, and if you're out of sync with them, you're bad. Remember, the goal is not necessarily to make great movies. The goal is to make entertaining movies.

A "bad" B Horror movie, for example, is not coming home with any prizes. And the film itself is most likely not a "good" movie, but if it entertains it's targeted audience, it is a success.

A case in point: The 36th People's Choice Awards vs. The 82nd Academy Awards.

There were ten Academy Award nominees for Best Picture (Avatar, The Blind Side, District 9, An Education, The Hurt Locker, Inglourious Bastards, Precious, A Serious Man, Up, Up in the Air), yet none of them were People's Choice Award nominees for Favorite Movie (The Hangover, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, The Proposal, Star Trek, Twilight).

Now let's do the numbers: The Academy Award winner The Hurt Locker, with an estimated budget of $11 million, brought in $19.2 million worldwide box office gross. Profit: $8 million. Yet Twilight, The People's Choice Award winner, racked in $351 million at the box office off an estimated budget of $37 million. Profit: $314 million. 

The Hurt Locker was the critically acclaimed award winner, but according to the audienceTwilight clearly wears the crown.

Plot Points: Watch the Clock

Screenwriting Script Tips
I love DVD’s. Home theater, surround-sound, waking up the neighbors. And the special features, how did we live without those? But honestly, the best thing about putting in a DVD is watching the clock. I’ve always been a student of film; I live it, breathe it, teach it. Three Act Structure, Sequences, and Plot points are second nature to me, but I still love the validation that the clock delivers. You’re watching a Rom-Com, and you call out the inciting Incident. Take a look at the clock; I bet you’re 12 minutes in. It’s a drama, and you spot the Lock-In. The clock…

Paul (2011)

Screenplay Five Plot Point Breakdowns
Screenplay Genre: Adventure / Comedy / Sci-Fi Movie Time: 104 minutes 1. INCITING INCIDENT UFO enthusiasts Graeme Willy (Simon Pegg) and Clive Gollings (Nick Frost) are on a Winnebago road trip across the U.S., visiting famous UFO sites. They pull over to help after witnessing a car accident, and it turns out that the driver Paul (Seth Rogen) is an alien. He begs for help, and Graeme takes the initiative and agrees since Clive has fainted from shock. (00:17:30)
Copyright © 2012 The Script Lab LLC - Help  |  PR Media Kit  |  Advertise  |   Site Map  |  Jobs at The Script Lab
Terms of Service and Privacy Policy / Safety Information / California Privacy Rights are applicable to you. All rights reserved.