According to BARRY PEARSON, A WRITER/PRODUCER IN THE FILM AND TELEVISION INDUSTRY, in a nutshell:
The NOVEL.
Its CONDUIT is the written word.
Its
DOMINANT STORYTELLING MODE is the printed page.
Its MOST POWERFUL CREATOR is
the author
The STAGE PLAY.Its
CONDUIT is the live theater production.
Its DOMINANT STORYTELLING MODE is the
spoken word.
Its MOST POWERFUL CREATOR is the playwright.
The
SCREENPLAY.Its CONDUIT is the movie
production.
Its DOMINANT STORYTELLING MODE is directions and actor
dialogue.
Its MOST POWERFUL CREATOR (Screenwriter is not the creator of the
finished work. He or she is the creator of the plan for the other
creators).
The
MOVIE.Its CONDUIT is the movie theater
screen.
Its DOMINANT STORYTELLING MODE is the projected image.
Its MOST
POWERFUL CREATOR is the director.
Screenwriting in Context
A screenplay is the script or the blueprint exclusive for producing visual arts as film and television. Screenwriting is the process of writing a screenplay.Screenplays are dominated by images. Screenwriting divides the story into scenes while playwright breaks it down into acts.
Script writing is the process of writing dialogue which can be used in talk shows, news programs, sports broadcasts and infotainment(magazine style) programs. Script writing doesn't involve discussing the visuals of a TV show or a movie. This is a more specific type of script writing which is called screenwriting.
Screenwriting is also a process of writing a script, but this is only used for filmmaking.Screenwriting provides the visuals that complement what the characters are doing and saying.
Writting your Screenplay
Keep in mind that a screenplay is visual and your characters' actions move the story forward from scene to scene. Actions show the audience what it needs to know. Seeing a character do something is far more powerful than having him or her talk about it.A scene is a unit of action. In each scene, define who (character or characters), what (situation), when (time of day), where (place of action), and why (purpose of the action).
Scene Headings: Each time
your characters move to a different setting, a new scene heading is required.
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Scene headings are typed on one line
with some words abbreviated and all words capitalized.
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Example: A scene set inside a hospital emergency room at night would have the following heading:
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INT. HOSPITAL EMERGENCY ROOM - NIGHT
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Interior is always abbreviated INT. and exterior is abbreviated EXT. A small dash (hyphen on your keyboard) separates the location of the scene from the time of day. Leave a two-line space following the scene heading before writing your scene description.
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Here is an example of a complete scene in the screenplay
format:
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INT. HOSPITAL
EMERGENCY ROOM - NIGHT
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A crowded hospital
emergency waiting room.
Clean but cheerless.
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Sick and injured people sit in plastic chairs lined up in rows. A
TV mounted near the ceiling BLARES a sitcom. No one is watching.
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A man moans softly as he presses a bloody gauze pad against his
forehead. A woman cradles a listless infant in her arms.
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CATHY sits at the end of the first row of plastic chairs. Her head
is bent over, and she stares intently at the floor.
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She raises her head slowly, brushes her long, silky hair away from
her face.
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We see fear in her eyes as they focus on a clock that hangs above
the front desk. She twists a tissue between her fingers and is unaware that bits
of it are falling on the floor.
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The door to the emergency treatment room opens, and a
middle-aged DOCTOR dressed in hospital green walks through the door toward
Cathy, who bolts out of the chair and hurries toward him.
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DOCTOR
(apologetically) We did everything possible. |
CATHY
(gasps) What are you saying? |
DOCTOR
I'm sorry… |
CATHY
(screaming) No! |
All eyes in the waiting room are riveted on Cathy and the
Doctor.
Cathy lunges at
the Doctor, beating her fists against his chest.
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CATHY (CONT'D)
(shouting) You killed him! |
Our scene ends here with Cathy's
last words, but it could continue with more dialogue and action. Note that
(CONT'D), the abbreviation for continued, is added in parentheses next to
Cathy's name above. CONT'D is added here because Cathy has just spoken and is
continuing to speak. Her dialogue was interrupted by a description of other
actions, not by another character's dialogue.
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