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How I Write a Script, Part 1: Story Concept

“How do you write a script?” I get asked that question a lot.

So here it is, a 10-part series, “How I Write A Script.”

PART 1: STORY CONCEPT

It all starts with the concept. And every day, I task myself to come up with strong, marketable story concepts.

How? The usual suspects: newspaper articles, radio news and talk shows, books, the Internet. At one point, I had 25 magazine subscriptions. Advice columns, obituaries, Weekly World News, anywhere I could think of to look for some unusual item which I could spin into a movie idea.

The not so usual suspects: Halliwell’s Film Guide which presents 1-line story synopses of 25,000 movies. I’ve gone through it at least a half-dozen times, searching its pages for interesting ideas or movies that had been made overseas, but not in the U.S.. I take an idea and genre-bend it, that is, make a drama into a comedy, or a thriller into comedy. I also do gender-bending, change the key characters from a man to a woman or vice versa. Another thing I do is read through the Yellow Pages and compile a list of jobs – septic tank disposal guy, guitar builder, driving instructor – hoping a character or a story would pop to life. I even generate movie titles trying to inspire a story: Two of them come to mind – FUTURE KILL and KISSING EMPTY.

I’d collect all this stuff and put it into files, either actual articles, which I stuffed into a set of bulging manila folders or input thoughts/ideas into my computer.

Before my last relocation, I threw away all the articles, but I still remember some of them. Like the obituary about the British soldier who was stuck in Germany after WWII. He felt sorry for the local civilians, who were destitute and starving. Noticing this big factory in the middle of the city, he toured it with some of the men who had worked there. They explained that during the war, the facility had been converted into a jeep production unit. But before the war, they had built cars – what Hitler called “the people’s car”. Turns out this Brit helped to resurrect that factory and he came to be known as the “Savior of the Volkswagen.”

In fact, I featured the story on Day 18 of the recent “A Story Idea Each Day for a Month” series.

The thing is I know that a majority of the ideas I generate are not worthy of being made into a movie. But that doesn’t slow me down, instead it fuels my story concept process because I figure I have to come up with a lot of ideas to find some great ones.

The two most important words in the story concept process are What if? I remember reading an article about screenwriter Jim Hart, who was sitting at the breakfast table with his family, when one of his kids suddenly asked, “What if Peter Pan grew up?” That was the genesis of the movie Hook.

In Part 2 of this series, we’ll look at brainstorming, a hugely important aspect of the screenwriting process.

Note: As I have stated in this blog many times before, “There is no right way to write.” Each writer is different. Each story is different. And frankly, my views have evolved since I first wrote this series for a screenwriting class nearly a decade ago. As you read these 10 posts, please bear in mind that at the end of the series, I will post something of a counterbalancing ‘argument’ to what is proposed here.

One thought on “How I Write a Script, Part 1: Story Concept

  1. Ooh, I love your methodology for concept. I guess everyone has their own method. Usually, concept hits me randomly like say, when I'm driving or something.

    The other day my boyfriend and I were on a small two-lane road in the Irish countryside and a car came flying around a blind corner and just missed pancaking a mother and her baby in a stroller. Immediately, I thought: oh my god, if he hit them, my boyfriend would go over and beat the living hell out of that driver. Then I thought, what if he did and the driver turned out to be part of a notoriously vicious gang in Limerick who tried to exact his revenge on my boyfriend by trying to kill me…

    Ok, so that's not a great concept, but it's the creative process that counts! And I actually did think of some relatively good concepts that stemmed from that. Anyway, I'm looking forward to reading the rest of the series. Thanks for the post. Cheers.

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