From All Quiet on the Western Front, the Academy Award-winning
"Best Picture" of 1929-1930, to Dances with Wolves, the 1991
winner, many of Hollywood's most popular and enduring movies have
been screen adaptations of written work, including novels, stories,
and plays. In this practical, hands-on guide, veteran TV and
screenwriter Ben Brady unlocks the secrets of the adaptation
process, showing aspiring writers and writing teachers how to turn
any kind of narrative material into workable, salable screenplays
for film and television.
Step by step, Brady guides novice screenwriters to the
completion of a professional screenplay. He begins with an incisive
discussion of how to evaluate a written work's potential as a
screenplay. Then he discusses each step of the writing process,
showing how to identify the plot and premise of the play, develop
character, treatment, and dialogue, and handle camera language and
format. Brady illustrates each of these points by developing and
writing a complete screenplay of the novel Claire Serrat within the
text.
With these tools, beginning screenwriters can draw on the rich
resources of words in print to create exciting screenplays for film
and television. Written in vivid, entertaining prose, the book will
be equally useful in the classroom or at the kitchen table,
wherever enterprising writers ply their craft.
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