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Paperback Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting Book

ISBN: 0385339038

ISBN13: 9780385339032

Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting

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Book Overview

Hollywood's script guru teaches you how to write a screenplay in "the 'bible' of screenwriting" (The New York Times)--now celebrating forty years of screenwriting success

Syd Field's books on the essential structure of emotionally satisfying screenplays have ignited lucrative careers in film and television since 1979. In this revised edition of his premiere guide, the underpinnings of successful onscreen narratives are revealed...

Customer Reviews

7 ratings

Finally reading this. Wish I had sooner.

This book is a fabulous little guide to everything you might want in a screenwriting guide. Not only that, but it works for other styles of writing, too. Especially novels.

Great introduction to screenwriting.

I’m still reading because I’m practicing step by step with reading a chapter and doing the exercise while trying to finish my screenplay. I LOVE the exercises and the film suggestions and examples to watch and study. I’ve study the movie Annie Hall and Dog Day Afternoon as suggested in the book. I cant wait to finish the book as well as my screenplay

This is it for structure

This a great book for any writer. I picked it off a bookstore shelf back in 1980 and it changed my life. Suddenly I knew about structure. It told me what I needed to know. It was the key that opened the door to understanding, not just movies, but books, stories, essays and now I write my speeches based on the same structural moments. I look at movies and follow the structure and I know a good from a bad speaker depending on how his speech is formed and written. This book is the best little friend a writer can have and I would recommend it to anyone who needs to find the right way to grab an audience. As a matter of fact, I have given it to many friends who talk about writing. The screenwriters workbook is the companion volume to this book and together, they teach a writer how to find the basic structure. Yes, there are more advanced books and more comprehensive books. And there are so many books on writing that you can buy, but when it comes to the basics and the most important elements of writing, this is it. Thank you Syd Field.

A most worthy contribution to the craft

Reading reader reviews of books on writing for the screen is about like reading reviews of movies: There's a lot of disagreement between the eyes of beholders. I sometimes think I should ask the reviewers at Mr. Showbiz what I should get high on before going to see what they consider a masterpiece."Screenplay" was sent to me by a movie producer who asked me to write a screenplay for a book I wrote. When I lamented that I knew nothing about writing screenplays, he said the book he'd just read proved to him I could write; all I needed was to understand some important aspects of the screenplay vs. the book.I've learned a lot from Syd Field. "Screenplay" clearly showed me the visual aspects of film, "It's all about pictures," Field stresses over and over. If I learned nothing else from him, how to put a screenplay into professional format would make "Screenplay" worth the trip.Sure, I had to study the book, go back over it several times before I got this, or that. But gosh, diving into writing screenplays isn't like a lesson in Microsoft Windows -- click here, drag that over there.There's a lot to learn, and Syd Field offers a lot of guidance for the serious student. I don't care if he's never written a screenplay. Some of the very best book editors wrote nothing except editorial marks on others' works. The fabled Scribner's editor of old, Max Perkins, who brought some of their best out of Scott Fitzgerald, Hemingway, James Jones, Marjorie Kennan Rawlings, etc. etc., never wrote a book.I'll say this: If you want to read a book on screenplays and put it down with the feeling you're ready to roll, don't bother with anybody's book on the subject. But if you really want to learn, if you have the requisite creativity -- AND gritty energy -- you'll get your money's worth from Syd Field's "Screenplay."Also, his "Four Screenplays" has been very helpful to me. Field has a way of reinforcing things by saying them a different way, in a different setting. I really didn't get his advice to "get into a scene late and get out early" until I read this book. And didn't he pick some dandies? "Thelma and Louise" and "The Silence of the Lambs" are the two I studied most diligently, and what a ride it's been. Two great, great movies, to my mind, both demonstrating what Syd Field repeatedy shows us are important elements of fine screenplays.One other thing, Field's coaching has put a tiny new edge on my writing skills as regards books, too, a benefit he probably didn't expect a writer would obtain.

No wonder this book is considered the classic

No wonder the New York Times calls this book "the classic," and why it's referred to as the "Bible" of the film industry. I read this book many years ago, and I thought it was very good, then I put it away. When somebody asked to borrow it, I loaned it to them, and never got it back. When I started thinking about writing a screenplay, the first thing I did was look for this book. I didn't remember who I loaned it to, so I had to go out and buy another one. Am I glad I did. The way Field writes, the conceptual presentation of his ideas, is truly masterful. The films used are broken down in a clear and concise way. I had truly forgoten what a great book this is. I have a much greater appreciation of what makes a good screenplay now. You begin with structure, then begin to unfold the elements of plot and character within that form. And, form is everything. Once you know the structure you can write it anyway you want. This is a book I'll never loan out anymore. I will always keep it by my bedside for many years to come and refer to it often.

A CLASSIC!

Many of the previous reviews have concentrated on the fact that Syd Field has given seminars on screenwriting, as if this fact makes him less worthy to write a book. They couldn't be more wrong. While Field has given seminars, he IS quite qualified. It is true that he has no "official" screenwriting credit, but he has done many, many years of re-writing, something Linda Seger has NEVER done, to my knowledge, although she does purport to be a "script doctor." As a former re-writer myself and the daughter of famed French director, Jean Renoir, I've seen many beginner's scripts and quite frankly, most of them are less than fifth-rate. ANYONE could learn all they need to know about screenplay structure from Field. I did. Previous reviewers have criticized him for making it seem too simple. Well, once you know the formula it IS simple. Just as Field says, screenwriting is formula writing and once you know the formula, you're limited only by your imagination. The previous reviewer says Field has gotten rich off seminars encouraging people to write screenplays that will never be made into movies. First, I doubt that Field has gotten rich off seminars. No one gets rich from seminars. I don't even know if Field IS rich and I don't think the status of his bank account should be a factor in evaluating his book. Second, Field makes it clear that very few screenplays will ever be made into movies, be they good OR bad. He doesn't give false hope, he doesn't suger-coat the difficulty of breaking into this area of writing. What he does do is help those determined to "make it" in the tough world of Hollywood screenwriting. I worked in Hollywood. I didn't care for it, so I left. I wouldn't encourage anyone to be a screenwriter--Hollywood is too much of a "closed society." But closed or not, there are those who "Screenplay" is a classic. It is simply the best book, written by the most qualified man, on the subject of screenwriting. If you really want to learn to write a first-class screenplay then go with experience. Field's the best. As for who remembers Witness. I do. It's a classic, just like this book. END

THIS BOOK IS THE INDUSTRY BIBLE!

There are some serious distinctions to be made about books on screenwriting. Some of them are very good, very theoretical, very serious works. Some of them are throw-away one time reads.A very few of them are "working books", books that you will never throw away - books that you will use as a reference over and over again."Screenplay" is one of those rare books. All of Field's books are excellent for this reason - they not only tell you how to write screenplays, they tell you why screenplays are structured in a unique way.It is understanding structure that is the key to writing movies. All the ideas about character development, the representation of myth, and the history of cinema are necessary to writing good screenplays. But only one thing is really essential and that is a clear understanding of a form that appears simple but is actually very complex.I still have many of the screenwriting books I have read over the years, but Field's books are the only ones I actually USE. I know many other screenwriters in the business who say the same thing.Fashion in screenplay writing and thinking about movies comes and goes - and every new writer thinks they either have to read the latest theory or re-invent the wheel - but when you actually write you only want a book that you can USE. Syd Field never goes out of style because he writes from a serious understanding of structure, and its the structure that you constantly return to in order to make the writing work.Buy this book and keep it - you will need it.
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