Alternative Scriptwriting 4E is an insightful and inspiring book on screenwriting concerned with challenging you to take creative risks with genre, tone, character, and structure. Concerned with exploring alternative approaches beyond the traditional...
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Bibliotheks-und Informationssystem der Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg (BIS)
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Bibliotheks-und Informationssystem der Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg (BIS)
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Alternative Scriptwriting 4E is an insightful and inspiring book on screenwriting concerned with challenging you to take creative risks with genre, tone, character, and structure. Concerned with exploring alternative approaches beyond the traditional three-act structure, Alternative Scriptwriting first defines conventional approach, suggests alternatives, then provides case studies. These contemporary examples and case studies demonstrate what works, what doesn't, and why. Because the film industry as well as the public demand greater and greater creativity, one must go beyond the traditional three-act restorative and predictable plot to test your limits and break new creative ground. Rather than teaching writing in a tired formulaic manner, this book elevates the subject and provides inspiration to reach new creative heights. Alternative Scriptwriting 4E covers: * The melodrama and the thriller * Adaptations from contemporary literature * Writing non-fictional narratives for the feature documentary * An in-depth exploration of point-of-view and perspective as expressive of the film writer's voice * Voice-oriented genres--docudrama, the fable and experimental narrative * Non-linear storytelling-the narrative strategies that are necessary to make an open-architecture story work * Considerations for writing for DV that speak to the flexibility and improvisation this medium allows
Electronic reproduction; Mode of access: World Wide Web
Cover; Alternative Scriptwriting: Successfully Breaking the Rules; Copyright; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments for the Fourth Edition; Acknowledgments; 1 Beyond the Rules; 2 Structure; 3 Critique of Restorative Three-Act Form; 4 Counter-Structure; 5 More Thoughts on Three Acts: Fifteen Years Later; 6 Narrative and Anti-Narrative: The Case of the Two Stevens: The Work of Steven Spielberg and Steven Soderbergh; 7 Working with Genre I; 8 Working with Genre II: The Melodrama and the Thriller; 9 Working Against Genre; 10 Genres of Voice; 11 The Non-Linear Film
12 Reframing the Active/Passive Character Distinction13 Stretching the Limits of Character Identification; 14 Main and Secondary Characters; 15 Subtext, Action, and Character; 16 The Primacy of Character Over Action: The Non-American Screenplay; 17 The Subtleties and Implications of Screenplay Form; 18 Agency and the Other; 19 Character, History, and Politics; 20 Tone: The Inescapability of Irony; 21 Dramatic Voice/Narrative Voice; 22 Digital Features; 23 Writing the Narrative Voice; 24 Rewriting; 25 Adaptations from Contemporary Literature; 26 Personal Scriptwriting: The Edge