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SCRIPTING FUTURES
In
association with Screen WM
This
series of workshops is aimed at writers who would
like to develop their skills and learn the tools
of the trade. With topics ranging from laying
out your screenplay, to writing sitcom, animation,
and feature film genres, the programme offers
a wide variety of opportunities for writers to
hone their skills with input and support from
writers and producers currently working in the
industry.
If
you're a writer just starting out, or a professional
writer looking to expand your portfolio, do get
in touch and find out if there's anything for
you.
FEES:
All workshops are £50 each (£40 concessions).
If
you book any FOUR workshops at the full rate,
you can receive a 15% discount of the total price
(i.e. total cost of four workshops is £170)
ENQUIRIES:
Contact catherine.edwards@scriptonline.net
or 0121 224 7415
BOOKING:
Download a booking
form and send it to Script at 107The Greenhouse,
The Custard Factory, Gibb Street, Birmingham,
B9 4AA
SCREENWRITING
BASICS
Developing
Ideas for the Screen (Lynn Davies)
Saturday
27 th February 2010, 10am-4pm
Venue
tbc
Many
common problems with scripts can be avoided during
the process of working up an idea before starting
work on the screenplay. Through a series of games
and exercises, this one-day workshop explores
the process in order to give students a guide
to the pitfalls and possibilities of script development.
Screenplay
Format (Lynn Davies)
Saturday
6 th March 2010
Venue
tbc
Many
would-be screenwriters find the required format
a stumbling block. Most resort to screenwriting
software to do it for them. This is often a mistake,
as the format of a script is a result of the screenwriter's
thought processes and cannot be artificially imposed.
A thorough grasp of format is essential for the
creation of a professional screenplay. In this
one-day workshop, the intricacies (and simplicities)
of format are explored and examined, proving that
screenwriting software is unnecessary and its
use can be counter-productive.
GENRE
Four
day-long workshops looking at different genres
in feature film.
Delivered
in partnership with:

Claire
Ingham is
a producer and film and television script developer.
She works on projects at all stages of development
- currently ranging from the adaptation treatment
of Eoin Colfer's bestselling novel The Wishlist
to the final draft of Helen Cross' original
feature Stratford Road . Claire has previously
worked for a number of film and television companies
in development roles. She was Head of Drama Development
at Impossible Pictures for four years where she
headed a small team, commissioning and developing
a range of TV and film projects for all the major
broadcasters, including Jed Mercurio's contemporary
retelling of Frankenstein and Michael
Chaplin's family film Pickles .
Rom-Com
Saturday
13 th February 2010
BVSC,
Digbeth
The
Romantic Comedy is one of the most popular genres
at the box office and often appears to be one
of the most effortless – but for writers, this
genre can be one of the most challenging. How
do you persuade an audience to care about two
people falling in love one more time? This 1 day
course will examine how to construct plots and
characters that are sexy, funny, entertaining
and that appeal to large audiences. It will examine
the conventions that define the genre and look
at some of the ways that filmmakers are stretching
and challenging the ‘rules' to create new and
original stories. By the end of the course you
should have acquired a deeper knowledge of the
genre, along with specific tips and techniques
from clips and exercises to move your own romantic
comedy scripts and ideas on. The following films
will be referred to in discussions; it is recommended
that participants view them prior to the workshop:
When
Harry Met Sally
Bridget
Jones' Diary
It's
Complicated (on general
cinematic release)
The
Biopic
Saturday
13 th March 2010
BVSC,
Digbeth
Biopics
are crowd pleasers and regular Oscar winners –
with bankable actors often attracted to the challenge
of playing a real and notable figure. But while
the facts of someone's life might offer elements
of plot, how can writers prevent biopics becoming
episodic documentaries – and how far can or should
a screenwriter ‘stretch the truth'? This 1 day
course will examine how to find the best story
in a ‘life', how to develop gripping character
stories and how to approach those legal and copyright
issues that might arise. It will also examine
the conventions that define the genre and look
at some of the ways that filmmakers are stretching
and challenging the ‘rules' to push the genre
forward. By the end of the course you should have
acquired a deeper knowledge of the biopic, along
with specific tips and techniques to progress
your own scripts and ideas. The following films
will be referred to in discussions; it is recommended
that participants view them prior to the workshop:
Hilary
and Jackie
The
Damned United
Nowhere
Boy
Science
Fiction and Fantasy
Saturday
10 th April 2010
BVSC,
Digbeth
Eight
of the top ten grossing movies of all time are
from the science fiction or fantasy genres. Science
fiction transports audiences to worlds light years
away, to alternate realities, fantastic technologies
and new social orders. Fantasy opens the door
to new possibilities, transforms science with
myth and magic and re-examines the spiritual.
But how can screenwriters take the world and twist
it so convincingly that audiences come back to
escape again and again? This 1 day course
will examine the conventions that define the science
fiction and fantasy genres and look at some of
the ways that filmmakers are breaking the ‘rules'
and splicing genres together to create new and
original stories. By the end of the course you
should have acquired a deeper knowledge of the
science fiction and fantasy genres along with
specific tips and techniques to progress your
own scripts and ideas.
Crime
and Detective Thriller
Saturday
24 th April 2010, 10am-5pm
BVSC,
Digbeth
Crime
is a massively popular and commercially successful
genre – and our fascination with it has deep cultural
and psychological roots. Crime stories play on
our fears, allow us into the dark places of the
criminal mind – and permit us to test ourselves
against those that hunt and investigate. But within
‘Crime' there are several subgenres each with
their own set of principles and conventions. This
one day ‘Crime Thrillers' course will look particularly
at those stories that combine Detective or criminal
protagonists with the action and suspense of the
thriller, assess how these films are structured
– and look at some of the ways that writers are
moving the crime thriller genre on. By the end
of the course you should have acquired a deeper
knowledge of crime and detective stories, along
with specific tips and techniques to further your
own thriller scripts and ideas. The following
films will be referred to in discussions; it is
recommended that participants view them prior
to the workshop: Seven, Silence of the Lambs,
The Departed
SITUATION
COMEDY AND OTHER C WORDS
Beginners'
Workshop (Keith R Lindsay)
Saturday
20 th March 2010
Woodward Room, Birmingham & Midland Institute
In
this hands-on workshop, participants will engage
in the process of creating a situation comedy
from the initial concept all the way to writing
the first and most important page of the script.
The conclusion of the workshop will offer instructions
on the technical side of putting together a script
and suggestions for a professional approach to
finding a market for the participants' own work.
By the end of the session those attending should
have a set of guidelines to help them avoid many
of the pitfalls of the newer writer setting out
on his or her sit com script.
Advanced
Workshop (Keith R Lindsay)
Saturday
27 th March 2010
Woodward Room, Birmingham & Midland Institute
The Advanced Workshop offers the same hands on
approach as the beginners' workshop and covers
topics in greater detail, with extended reference
to the participants' own efforts at situation
comedy. The conclusion of the workshop will include
advice on markets for those already armed with
scripts and the best type of scripts to write
for the current market.
ANIM@TE
Four
day-long workshops on devising and developing
scripts for animated films.
Delivered
in partnership with:
 
Presented
by Professor Paul Wells
Professor
Paul Wells, Director of the Animation Academy
at Loughborough University, and author of ‘Understanding
Animation', ‘Fundamentals of Animation', ‘Re-Imagining
Animation' and ‘Scriptwriting', presents four
workshops on aspects of writing for the animated
form.
Wells
has toured Europe and United States conducting
these workshops, and contributing to script development
on a range of animated film and television projects.
Combining his experience in writing for theatre,
radio, TV and animation, Wells explores approaches
and techniques particular to working in animation,
but pertinent to many aspects of moving image
practice in general, and the re-thinking of the
‘screen-play'.
Devising
Animated Narratives
Wednesday
17 th February 2010, 10am-5pm
The
Bond, Fazeley Street
This
workshop has been postponed. It will now
be held on Wednesday 14th April 2010
Using
a range of devising exercises and development
strategies this workshop will seek to create the
conditions for the preparation of structuring
and pre-visualising an animated narrative.
Visual
Storytelling in Animation
Wednesday
3 rd March 2010, 10am-5pm
The
Bond, Fazeley Street
This
workshop will explore and experiment with the
purely visual characteristics which enable the
development of animated narratives. This will
take into account approaches to storyboarding
and the construction of pictorial storytelling
elements.
Writing
Animated Narratives for Children
Wednesday
17 th March 2010, 10am-5pm
The
Bond, Fazeley Street
Looking
at a range of animated material directly produced
for children, this workshop will seek to engage
with approaches to creating narratives in animation
dedicated to a children's audiences. Using various
devising exercises, the workshop will look at
character building and child-centred storylines.
Creating
Animated Documentary
Wednesday
31 st March 2010, 10am-5pm
The
Bond, Fazeley Street
Using
a variety of ‘real world' materials and ‘live'
issues, and deploying a range of devising strategies,
this workshop will look at the relationship between
animation and documentary, creating a visual treatment
for a proposed animated documentary.
LEAP OFF THE PAGE
ARCHIVE
For
full details about the Leap off the page!
programme, click
here to view the archive.
Script
teamed up with Light House to produce 3 short
films as part of this writer development programme.
WORKSHOPS
We are
now in the planning stages for more screen
writing workshops around the West Midlands. If
you have ideas for workshops you would like to
attend, then let us know.
SCRIPT
READING SERVICE
You can now send your script to us
and receive a feedback report from one of our
expert readers. For more information about this
service please go to the Resource
section.
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