How Do I Start My Thesis Film
How Do I Start My Thesis Film
How Do I Start My Thesis Film
How do I start?
Sarmed Cheema
Why is your thesis film important?
■ You can have great scenes with little dialogues or none at all. Less dialogue means
more room for visual story-telling.
What do we get out of the frame?
■ It is information.
■ Clearly some parts of the information are more important than others, and we want
this information to be perceived by the viewer in a certain order — we want the
information organized in a particular way.
How is this accomplished?
■ Through composition.
■ We are telling the audience where to look, what to look at and in what order to look
at it.
LEARN TO THINK IN TERMS OF FRAMES
Filmmaker’s Superpower
■ VFX
IDEA
■ Before there is a movie, before there is a screenplay, before there is anything, there
must be an idea.
■ Finding the initial idea can be the most daunting part of the process but, fortunately,
there is no shortage of places to search.
First get the idea, then worry about how
to tell it.
■ One is to get an idea, then create your characters to fit that idea.
■ Another way to approach is by creating a character, then letting a need, an action,
and, ultimately, a story emerge out of that character.
Major Dramatic Question
■ Protagonist
■ Goal
■ Conflict
The starting point
■ Universe is where and when the story takes place. It includes the following:
■ The “where” can be very general—a small farming community, for example—or very
specific— Cheema Farm in Narowal.
■ The time of day such as morning, afternoon, or night.
■ The weather such as cloudy, sunny, windy, snow, or rain, etc.
■ The time of year, particularly the seasons: fall, winter, summer, spring.
■ The historical period such as what century or decade the story takes place.
■ The geographical location including the city, state, country, and possibly even the
universe, if the writer is writing science fiction.
■ Writers write about places they are familiar with. If they aren’t familiar with the place,
then they need to research it in order to be accurate about the place.
Protagonist
■ Static means the character stays the same throughout the story. They do not
change.
■ Developing, also called dynamic, means the character changes. The change may
impact the character’s beliefs, attitudes, or actions. The change may be small or
large. This change occurs because the character experiences an epiphany, an
insight about life.
Conflict
Conflict is the struggle between two entities. In story writing the main character, also
known as the protagonist, encounters a conflict with the antagonist, which is an
adversary. The conflict may be one of six kinds:
■ Character vs. character
■ Character vs. nature or natural forces
■ Character vs. society or culture
■ Character vs. machine or technology
■ Character vs. God
■ Character vs himself or herself
Two types of conflict
■ External conflict could be man against nature (people in a small lifeboat on a rough
ocean) or man against man.
■ While internal conflict might not seem as exciting as external, remember that real
life has far more internal than external conflict.
Theme
■ Mithay Chowl
What is three act structure?
■ All stories are told in three acts, whether it’s a joke, a campfire tale, a novel or
Shakespeare.
■ In simple words it is a narrative model that divides a plot up into three sections.
1- Set up
2- Confrontation
3- Resolution
ACT 1
HOOK
NORMAL WORLD
INCITING INCIDENT
PLOT POINT 1
Normal World
■ Universe
■ Protagonist
■ Other Characters
■ Backstory
■ Problem
■ Information
■ Preparation Stage
■ The baggage you need to carry
Example of a house
■ The inciting incident is the original spark that lights his fire!
■ Push the protagonist
■ Leaving the comfort zone
Plot point 1
MIDPOINT
PLOT POINT 2
The Midpoint
CLIMAX
RESOLUTION
Climax
■ The climax becomes the most exciting part of the show—emotional and dramatic in
every way possible—and becomes the final, greatest challenge for the hero to
overcome
■ Hero's journey is about to end
■ Last important sequence in the story
Resolution
■ A beat sheet is simply a list of all the events (beats) in a story, placed in the order in
which they will appear.
■ Events may unfold in a single scene or sequence.
■ Many writers create a beat sheet before writing a first draft to give them a specific
sense of what goes where.
ACT 1 – Thelma and Louise
■ You should be spellbound, riveted every minute, totally inside the movie, even
though you hadn't yet seen it on the screen.
Screenplay is a plan
■ It is a blueprint for a movie, something that is chiefly read by the people in the business
or those who aspire to be in the business.
■ The best screenplay writer makes sure that you see the movie on the page.
■ When you read a beautifully written screenplay, you fly through it, flipping pages,
experiencing a story.
■ They are not just the bunch of words lying there on the white paper. Those words move.
A software is a must
■ Final Draft
■ Celtx
Titles
■ Your title set up an expectation on the cover page, before we even open the script.
■ A great title will whet your reader’s appetite.
■ Imagine yourself calling a friend on a Friday night: “Hey, you want to go see _____?
(How does your title sound when it fills that blank)
■ There is no rule about titles, except they should feel right for the movie.
■ Seek out title that is catchy and easy to remember.
Only sight and sound
■ Show, don’t tell. That’s the byword for movies. And screenplays. When we
experience a movie, the only kind of information we absorb is what we see and what
we hear. That’s it. Everything springs from those two sensations – sight and sound.
Since your screenplay is supposed to replicate the experience of a movie, it follows
that your script should convey only what is seen and heard.
Look at this scene description from THE
SHAESHANK REDEMPTION
■ The buzzer sounds, the cells slams open. Cons step from their cells. Andy catches
Red’s eye, nods his thanks. As the men shuffle down to breakfast, red glances into
Andy’s cell – and sees Rita in her new place of honor on Andy’s wall. Sunlight casts
a harsh barred shadow across her lovely face.
■ Don’t use the words we see or we hear to indicate what is being seen or heard,
unless it is unavoidable. For example its better to write darkness than we see
darkness. Its more direct.
Effective Description
■ When actors on the screen speak, audience pay close attention to what they say.
■ Dialogue is one of the most crucial elements of any screenplay.
■ Great dialogue can help your screenplay and your entire story.
The illusion of reality
■ First off, you want your characters to sound like real people.
■ Good dialogue has a natural feel and flow.
■ Don’t worry about perfect grammar. People don’t always speak grammatically.
■ You should not go more than three or four lines each time a character speaks unless
there is very good reason.
■ A good way to ensure that your dialogue is natural is to read it aloud.
■ Dialogue is not real-life speech, but it should give the illusion of being so.
Subtext
■ It’s a little peculiarity of human nature that we very rarely say exactly what we mean.
We avoid saying exactly what we mean because we are too polite or too afraid or
perhaps we don’t even know the truth themselves.
■ Text is what a character says
■ Subtext is what is truly meant
Subtext achieve three crucial things
■ To bridge time
■ To lend a literary or poetic touch
■ To reveal interior thought
■ Some other interesting reason
Done with the first draft, now what?
Process
■ Once you are done with the first draft. Take a break.
■ For short films I recommend 2-3 days
■ When you feel refreshed and ready, sit down with the hard copy of your script. Allow
yourself enough time so that you can read the whole thing from beginning to end
without interruption.
■ Revising can be daunting.
■ Later is now.
Screening
■ Unfolding
How to work with your supervisor
■ Interesting characters
■ Intense Conflict
■ Visual opportunity
■ Emotional Power
The problem with BNU students
To make a great film you need three things – the script, the script and the script.”
CHEERS!