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Lights! Camera! Fiction!

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How many times have you watched a popular movie and thought, "I'd like to write something like that," or "Even I can write better dialogue!" Here's your chance to learn how to write a novel...by watching movies like "Speed," "The Sixth Sense," "Clueless," "Die Hard," "While You Were Sleeping," and more! For the first time, a professional writing instructor and movie buff will take you through the steps necessary to craft your own commercial novel using techniques found in your favorite films. What can Hollywood's biggest features teach you about writing? How to watch movies with a writer's eye. Infusing character traits into scenes and plots. Using material goals to show internal motivation. Techniques for making scenes do double duty, including foreshadowing and flashback. What is a credibility gap, and how you should bridge it.
Plus: Three 'tricks' for fixing holes in your plot, characters or anything else in your story. Thompson guides you frame by frame through the ins and outs of writing a hit, in a text that is packed with "Quick Tips" and "Quick Fixes." This is an indispensable reference work that will have you polishing your prose--and preparing it for publication--in no time!

256 pages, Paperback

First published June 12, 2006

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About the author

Alfie Thompson

13 books9 followers
Also known as Val Daniels

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Haley.
324 reviews
May 23, 2013
First of all, you're asked to watch a certain movie before reading each chapter of this book. I'm going to be completely honest and say that I didn't watch any of them (although I'd seen one of them before) because I didn't have access to them. I'm definitely going to try and watch them at some point though, and come back to this book. Even without having watched a lot of the movies the author referenced to help make points, I still greatly enjoyed this book.

Movies really do provide really good examples of how to tell stories, and I think any writer could benefit from this book. I know I learned a lot. It's written in a very entertaining way. Without having even seen a lot of the movies I could still follow along with everything, and there were quite a few things that really caused me to think in this book. I highly recommend this to any writer out there. It really is an amazing book.

http://hmweasley-blog.blogspot.com/20...
Profile Image for John Bond.
Author 7 books12 followers
April 8, 2020
Two different books here. One is if you do the work and go through each film and see they application of the author's advice. The other is cheating and just reading the advice. Both work. Applies more to mainstream fiction.
Profile Image for Jennifer Worrell.
Author 16 books119 followers
December 30, 2015
Not quite what I was thinking it was, but interesting how the writer shows examples of themes from movies. For example, Sixth Sense's use of conflict, While You Were Sleeping's use of characterization. However, much of the writing was a little black-and-white.

Note: there are so many grammatical/spelling/typographic errors it's sad. It was clear no one used a spell check.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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