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Screenplays by Paula DiSante
Story notes for feature screenplays. That's what I write. No script coverage
(I did that for years and frankly don't want to do it anymore), no labyrinthine
breakdowns of your characters and plot. If you don't already know who your
characters are and what your plot is, then who does? I simply write clear,
specific notes on your screenplay, page by page, and then sum up the areas
where your story needs work--what's wrong and how to fix it. A sample of
my notes may be seen below.
My MFA is in Film Production from USC's School of Cinematic Arts. I've
been a story analyst and script consultant for nearly twenty years, and
have consulted on a myriad of screenplays. I've been a senior story analyst
and script consultant for such companies as Republic Pictures, Spring Creek
Productions, Warner Bros., and for producers at Paramount Pictures, as well
as for independent producers, filmmakers, and screenwriters like you.
You may contact me at info@betterscreenplays.com.
Please visit my website for
information on how to submit a screenplay.
For individual screenwriters, my rate is $600 per script. Add $3.00 per
page beyond 125 pages. Please visit www.betterscreenplays.com
for additional pricing information on phone consultations and for additional
reads and notes for your rewrites. For industry professionals, please see
my website for more information, especially if you need an adaptation, a
rewrite or a polish.
For aspiring screenwriters, I highly recommend Paul Lucey's Story Sense:
A Screenwriter's Guide for Film and Television, and anything by Linda
Seger, especially Making a Good Script Great.
Here's an excerpted sample of how I write specific notes. These are from
the screenplay The Angel Gabriel by Carolyn Haywood:
p. 67 I think there should be more of a commotion when Cade shoots Robbie.
Some of the other men should at least try to lay hands on Cade. If you want
Hoffman to still be the one to take the gun away, then he can wave off the
men, and proceed to deal with Cade.
I suggest this because your action here needs a little more energy.
Also, make it very, very clear that this shooting is an accident. Otherwise,
your reader is going to wonder why Cade is not in jail. Make sure this point
is unambiguous.
p. 68 I like this scene, but it's a little oblique. If Gabriel is going
to destroy Sally's means of protection (the rifle), then we have to know
for certain that Gabriel's destroying it because he doesn't trust himself
not to use it. Otherwise, Gabriel knows he'd probably seek out Cade and
shoot him, if he doesn't smash the rifle.
p. 75 I was wondering what happened to Buck. Make sure to make at least
one more reference to him in dialogue before this point in the story that
he's gone off to the war.
p. 82 Before Buck says "I got a plan," he needs to say something
like "You want your land back?" to Peter. Then when Peter nods,
Buck says "I got a plan."
p. 86 Gabriel finds out off screen that Peter is alive? This cannot happen!
Don't play your big emotional moments off screen. The audience will feel
cheated!
More sample notes:
--We need to see Gabriel's handiwork at Abel's and Martha's home, and not
be simply told he's a great carpenter. We need to see evidence. Something
like this gives the audience an appreciation for the character, even before
we know much about him. His skill makes him special, and we're going to
be curious as to what he's going to do with his talents in the course of
the story.
--Gabriel can read and write, and yet when he's at Sally's he makes no
effort whatsoever to contact Abel and Martha, or even William Battle, the
man who is waiting for him in Eden. This is a story problem that needs to
be addressed. I kept thinking to myself "Why doesn't he try to contact
someone?" Even if Buck steals Gabriel's freedman's papers, Abel and
Martha would be able to vouch for him. So why hasn't Gabriel made any attempt
to get a hold of them or William Battle?
-- After Buck decides to use Gabriel to his advantage (and when you cut
back to Sally's farm, with her at the door with the shotgun), continue to
play the "horse trading" on screen, as you've done. But make it
more specifically about her horse being given over in trade. Show the transaction.
It's cold, calculating, a product of its times--and an indelible image to
leave in the audience's mind. It also gives you a "starting place"
for Sally. Here's the kind of character she is at the beginning: A young
woman trapped in a hardscrabble life, bargaining and haggling for a slave
to serve her purposes--completely unsentimental and practical.
That's why we have to see this on screen, because it's a character-establishing
moment. We need to start here with Sally, so that we can see her fully and
successfully arc from dirt-poor "property holder" to a young woman
who falls in love with, marries, and has children with this mysterious man.
She reaches the point where she will do anything to protect him. That's
quite an arc! But it has to be examined even more closely than you do right
now.
We need to see Buck give Sally the bogus bill of sale, so that the audience
will know that she can't read, and that Buck, knowing that fact, is even
viler than he's already shown himself to be.
--Gabriel's internal conflict needs to build throughout the second act.
He wants to get away and go on with his life, and yet he finds he's beginning
to have feelings for this young woman. This has to be a genuine struggle
for him. When he finally makes the decision to leave, it should be then
that Sally tells him she's pregnant.
--Learning he's going to be a father must happen on screen. It's a big
moment in the story that you've got happening out of our view. We can't
just hear about it later. Show it!
--Does Gabriel ever have a yearning to find his mother and sisters? After
his childhood, they are never mentioned! I think word about them and their
fates, whatever has happened to them, needs to be known by the audience.
Gabriel wasn't an infant when he was taken away. He remembers them. As a
grown man, he'd want to know where they are, and what happened to them--and
so will we.
--You have room to expand, so don't be reluctant to do so. For instance,
I mentioned the scene after Sally's leg is broken in the plowing accident.
Play this bone-setting scene on screen. Yes, it will be disturbing because
of Sally's agonized screams, and the visuals of the actual procedure. But
it will be so darned dramatic, you cannot possibly pass this up!
Despite some structural problems in your story, many scenes in your script,
especially in the second act, are excellent. There's nothing out of kilter
here that you can't fix, because the world of your story is so rich and
full of possibilities.
A quick reminder: Do not play the following scenes off screen. We need
to see them, because they are absolutely loaded with drama:
--The "horse-trading" scene (show the complete transaction)
--The bone setting scene
--Sally tells Gabriel she's pregnant
--Sally tells Gabriel that her husband Peter is alive
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