Reading contemporary screenplays and story treatments, we will discuss the structure and scene work that goes into writing a successful screenplay. Almost without fail, all screenplays utilize a familiar and easy to learn three-act structure, but the very best screenwriters manipulate this structure nimbly via character development, excellent dialogue, and strong storytelling techniques. Students will learn how to write coverage and script analysis, how to spot the three-act structure and how it can be subtly tweaked and broken to best serve the story’s interests. Students will write treatments and scenes for their own original feature film ideas, and in the process will learn the formal constraints of a screenplay, formatting, scene development, and how to write effective and compelling dialogue. Most of the semester will focus on reading and discussing screenplays but the class will screen a select number of films over the course of the semester in order to see how moments on the page translate to the screen.
Screenwriting: Scene and Structure (LIT2354.01)
Manuel Gonzales
Prerequisites: None.
Credits: 4
W 10:00-11:50 & W 2:10-4:00
Maximum Enrollment: 40
Course Frequency:
This course is categorized as All courses, Literature.
Credits: 4
W 10:00-11:50 & W 2:10-4:00
Maximum Enrollment: 40
Course Frequency:
This course is categorized as All courses, Literature.