|  | Author: Denny Martin Flinn Publisher: Lone Eagle
List Price: $16.95 Buy Used: $7.12 as of 11/23/2009 11:37 CST details You Save: $9.83 (58%)
New (32) Used (32) from $7.12
Seller: textbooksnow- Rating: 73 reviews Sales Rank: 40700
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Paperback Pages: 240 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 0.6
ISBN: 1580650155 Dewey Decimal Number: 808.23 EAN: 9781580650151 ASIN: 1580650155
Publication Date: August 25, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Inventory subject to prior sale. Used items have varying degrees of wear, highlighting, etc. and may not include supplements such as infotrac or other web access codes. Expedited orders cannot be sent to PO Box. Sorry, not able to ship to APO, FPO, Alaska, and Hawaii.
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Showing reviews 11-15 of 73
A good read! April 11, 2008 Michael N. Burns (Wisconsin USA) This guy is funny. I burned through this book in short order. A little heavy on the inclusion of other writers work, but it does illustrate his points. That is the only reason I didn't give it five stars.
He claims that the screenplays he faults are actual screenplays. It's not hard to imagine somebody who bought this book recognized their work. Not good.
Less negative than I hoped, but very effective. March 24, 2008 Michael D. Kenny (Atwater Village, CA United States) The writing examples used in this book were mostly from quality scripts, when I expected the book to focused on tearing apart bad scripts. I believe the jacket's assertion that there's much to be learned this way, and it sounds like a lot of fun. This probably has a lot more bad examples than any typical guide, and regardless of what I anticipated, it was very effective.
An absolute must read for aspiring screenwriters. February 20, 2008 D. Lennon (South Florida) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This book is a MUST READ for those of you out there that want to write a screenplay. It is not a book on how to write a good movie, it's a book on how not to write a bad movie (big difference). There is not a single page about outlining or prewriting of any kind. There is no preaching about how any story with X plotline won't work so you should make a new story. He doesn't not talk about good or bad plots, JUST GOOD OR BAD SCRIPTS.
This book motivates one to write efficiently. It successfully helped me weed out overwriting from my work. If you've read other screenwriting books before this is still a must read. He talks little about the art of screenwriting and relies almost exclusively on the science of it. It made me aware of flaws in my writing no proofreader or editor could spot and that is completely invaluable. Best eleven bucks and change I ever spent.
A How To Guide January 29, 2008 John A. Machuga (Warren, Michigan) How Not to Write a Screenplay is a terrific reminder for both the expereinced and beginning screenwriter of all those importnat details that we sometimes leave out of our scripts because we assume "Everyone Knows That". Denny Marting Flinn has a fresh and humourus way of reminding us that the screenplay is a visual medium.
Great Advice December 24, 2007 Frederic Woodbridge (ID, USA) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
In reading about screenwriting, I have come to understand that a screenplay is a highly technical document. A blueprint, if you will, for making a movie. And like all technical documents, it should be succinct and clear; above all else, clarity.
Yet it seems many pre-professional screenwriters like me are frustrated novelists who like to pack their work with overly descriptive prose. Flinn's book is a wonderful antidote to this creeping verbosity.
He divides the book into three parts--there is a very short third part that deals with development--but the first two are the major sections and deal with Form and Content, reasoning that screenplays are the same way. In Form, he dissects bad screenwriting and shows why it is bad then contrasts those examples with good ones from 43 screenplays.
Along the way, the author gives you certain guidelines about writing screenplays well. Like, "Do not write ideas and metaphors." I love the specificity of his advice, it's clear and straight to the point. This entire part is filled with such good advice, but the really wonderful thing about it is how easy the writing is; far from pedantic, it's jovial, funny and easily digestible. I read this section in one sitting. I know I will have to return for a more studious reading.
Part 1 or Form takes the lion share of the book. The second part, Content, gives some more examples from produced films to illustrate the author's ideas about what should go into a good movie. In the section on Structure, for example, Flinn discusses the different gurus (Syd Field's three act paradigm, Robert McKee's five part narrative, Truby's seven major steps, Seger's eight sections, and Campbell's Monomyth) and shows how their versions of structure all hardly matter in a practical sense.
What does matter, he writes, is that the writer have structure to a screenplay, pointing out that "in a linear art form (as opposed to painting and sculpture) there is always a start and a finish. You have to begin when the audience is in place, and you have to--eventually-let them go home. How you travel from the former to the latter is your structure."
He also discusses, briefly, such important topics as theme (Don't preach!), suspense, and character, among others. All the while using excerpts from screenplays to illustrate his ideas.
The third part is very short and deals with development. Some basic advice on how to deal with the Hollywood system.
I have given this book five stars because it covers the mechanics of good screenwriting that I haven't seen others do in any adequate manner (with the possible exception of The Screenwriter's Bible: A Complete Guide to Writing, Formatting, and Selling Your Script). "How Not to Write a Screenplay" should be on the desk of every aspiring screenwriter.
Showing reviews 11-15 of 73
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