Learning How To Write Screenplays

Dec 20
11:27

2007

Zinn Jeremiah

Zinn Jeremiah

  • Share this article on Facebook
  • Share this article on Twitter
  • Share this article on Linkedin

Considering training for screenwriters.

mediaimage

Among the general public,Learning How To Write Screenplays Articles not much thought is given to the screenwriting profession. The typical person watching a television show or feature film isn't going to give much consideration to how actors come to say what it is that they say. From the average person's perspective, actors may just make things up to say as they go along. The reality however is that actors don't make up what they say: they recite lines of dialogue, which is written by a person typically referred to as a screenwriter.

The rare person who does have some form of interest in screenwriting often hopes to be a screenwriter him or herself, presuming they aren't one already. The fact of the matter is, there are a variety of ways for one to become a paid screenwriter. Notice the usage of paid here. Virtually anyone has the capacity to write a screenplay. A small number of people have the ability to write a legitimately good screenplay. And some few literally earn money by writing screenplays.

All things considered, the number of people who are paid to write screenplays or television scripts is small. Screenwriting is a competitive industry in the sense that more people would like to get in than are needed, and that it's often difficult to connect with people who pay for scripts: the path to established entertainment industry professionals who regularly pay for some form of screenwriting is blocked by any number of gatekeepers. This isn't to infer that becoming a paid screenwriter is an impossibility as it's clearly not, but there are challenges involved.

One of the forms people take to establishing screenwriting careers is to get screenwriting training at a university. Various university screenplay writing programs exist, with the programs that have close connections to the entertainment industry being the most competitive to gain entry into. The southern California schools UCLA and USC both have established and competitive screenwriting programs. Since these schools are located in what is essentially the capital of the entertainment industry, the immediate area around Los Angeles, they have an inside access schools located elsewhere don't have. This geographic advantage adds greatly to the prestige of these schools' screenwriting programs.

It is absolutely not mandatory to attend university screenwriting training. There are and have been many screenwriters who've had careers, sometimes very successful careers, without getting any formal training in screenplay writing at all. At the end of the day, all that's required to become a professional screenwriter is to have a screenplay that the industry wants to buy. No one in the entertainment industry cares much if at all about how a screenwriter learned their trade. The only bother at all is for the final output, the screenplay, the thing that matters most of all in screenwriting.