The Film Novelist: Writing a Screenplay and Short Novel in 15 Weeks

The Film Novelist: Writing a Screenplay and Short Novel in 15 Weeks

by Dennis J. Packard
The Film Novelist: Writing a Screenplay and Short Novel in 15 Weeks

The Film Novelist: Writing a Screenplay and Short Novel in 15 Weeks

by Dennis J. Packard

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Overview

The Film Novelist is the first primer on writing film novels- whether you are a beginning novelist, a seasoned writer wanting to cross over into script/novel writing, or a creative writing teacher looking for proven ways to launch new writers.

So, what is the difference between a screenplay and a film novel? Screenplays indicate solely what the audience is to see or hear on screen. Film novels are short, and take about as long to read as a feature film takes to watch. The description, dialogue, and narration of a film novel can simply be lifted out and used as the description, dialogue, and voice-over narration for a script.

The author has devised a fifteen week program starting from a one-sentence pitch to the novel itself, which includes filming a scene from your script/novel. He grounds the discussion of early film novels, like The Maltese Falcon, Of Mice and Men, and The Misfits, to provide historical and theoretical background while detailing the practical, sequential approach for completing a short novel and script.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781441103178
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 09/08/2011
Pages: 232
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Dennis J. Packard is a professor at Brigham Young University. He holds a PhD in Philosophy (Stanford) and in Theater and Film (BYU). Packard has produced two films (Firecreek, Hottieboombalottie), and is currently involved with two in pre-production.

Table of Contents

Introduction Stage One: Warming Up Chapter l: Sentences—Week OneChapter 2: Scenes—Week Two Chapter 3: Subtext—Week ThreeStage Two: SummarizingChapter 4: Pitch—Week Four Chapter 5: Synopsis—Week FiveChapter 6: Scenario—Weeks Six and SevenStage Three: ExpandingChapter 7: Script—Weeks Eight to TenChapter 8: Novel—Weeks Eleven to ThirteenChapter 9: Film—Weeks Fourteen to FifteenConclusionAppendix Suggested ReadingsThe Possibility of Film NovelsAcknowledgementsBibliographyEndnotes

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