Category: Other Musings

  • The Touch of Love
    By
    Donald L. Vasicek

    The breath of lavender sweeps me
    into microcosms of you. I touch
    it’s delicate blossoms and feel your
    smooth face. I smell it’s majestic
    columns and see your strong
    eyes. I feel it’s soft sharpness and
    tumble in your hair. I see it waving
    in the wind and hear you whispering
    your magic in my ear. I am gone.
    I am gone. I will not return to what
    I knew life to be before our lips
    touched and we exploded into love.
    DLV:IPAD

  • j0178537
    “Listen…”

    If you listen to people, they will tell you stories that can effect the way you think. If you watch people talk and listen to yourself, you will hear stories that cause your consciousness to go to a higher level. Which would you rather do, listen to others or listen to yourself?

    -Donald L. Vasicek

  • Screenwriting – An Odyssey

    The Beginning…

    I became interested in screenwriting when a friend told me Disney
    was launching a satellite for a cable channel. At the time, I was
    an aspiring writer. I told him I didn’t know anything about
    screenwriting. He said, “Well, teach yourself how to write
    screenplays.”

    So, I went to a bookstore and bought every screenwriting book
    on the shelf. There were 7, at the time. I studied the books. I
    wrote a screenplay in two weeks. In two weeks after that I had
    found an agent. And he took the script to Disney.

    First Introduction to Film

    I’ve always been interested in film. When we were boys, my twin brother
    and I always went to a double feature at the local theater on
    Saturday afternoons. Then, we come home and recreated one
    of the movies by playing it out. If it were a western, we’d filch Mom’s
    brooms, and pretend they were horses.

    Screenwriting Skill Set

    The skill set for screenwriting is to have, or to develop the ability
    to write visually. Film is a visual medium, so one has to write
    with that in mind. Next, one must be emotionally strong.
    Screenwriting is competitive. One can possess the best
    screenwriting talent of anyone, but that doesn’t guarantee them
    succes because there are so many variables that go along with
    screenwriting. Timing. Genre. Networking. Marketing. Mental
    strength. Competition. The uncertainty of executives being able
    to make up their minds whether your screenplay will work for
    them or not. Unless, one is born into wealth, the willingness to
    sit with dead bodies at mortuaries, or being a chauffeur, or
    working as a brewery worker, or working as a liquor store clerk, etc.
    usually comes with screenwriting until you sell their first
    screenplay for a reasonable sum of money.

    Dancing and Screenwriting

    Also, someone once said that if you can’t dance, you can’t write
    screenplays. So, what that person meant was that screenwriting
    requires a certain kind rhythm. And each screenplay requires a
    different or varying kind of rhythm. That rhythm comes from inside
    the screenwriter. It cannot be developed. When one begins
    writing a screenplay is when the rhythm for the screenplay should
    be nailed down on the first page of the screenplay. Showing a
    metaphor for the movie, introducing the main character, and
    establishing the location, amongst other things, all should be
    written on the first page of most screenplays. As the screenwriter
    sorts their way through this jungle of screenwriting, a rhythm for
    the entire screenplay should be developing. If it is not, then
    it could be a signal that this kind of story needs more of the
    screenwriter’s “mentalness”to make it work.

    Vital Screenwriting Tools

    Material that is vital to the screenwriter is a screenwriting
    program like Final Draft, Movie Magic, or a host of others.
    The screenwriter should also have “Standard Script Formats –
    Part I – Screenplay” by Cole/Haag. This book is the industry
    standard. It not only helps with formatting, but also gives out
    a host of other information. Viki King’s “How to Write a Movie
    in 21 Days” is an excellent book to have at your fingertips
    as well, and anything written by Linda Seeger. Anything
    by John Truby should be on your desk. And Robert McKee’s
    “Story” is vital to any screenwriter who is intent on succeeding
    in Hollywood. Story is everything in Hollywood, while
    character-driven pieces are usually produced by independent
    producers and Mr. McKee knows story.

    This odyssey of mine has resulted in having written, directed and
    produced an award-winning film that won 3 best film festival
    awards, being cataloged into the Smithsonian, being cataloged
    into 42 Tribal College Libraries, several colleges and
    universities and museums. I have also acted as a writer/consultant
    for MGM and a host of independent production companies, writers,
    producers and directors. I have also written and published
    over 500 screenwriting articles and a couple of e-books. I also
    have this blog here. I am presently directing and managing a t. v.
    animation series. I am also editing a screenplay for a Russian
    screenwriter.

    Conclusion

    The fine point of this piece is to show how perseverance, study,
    practice, a love for screenwriting, belief in oneself, patience
    and plain hard work has led me to screenwriting success. You can
    do it as well. Hang your hat on this: Above all else in my
    screenwriting odyssey, perseverance played the biggest role
    in leading me through screenwriting jungle to screenwriting
    success. Now, what is next?

    So, a brief journey into a “life” of screenwriting.

    Donald L. Vasicek
    Olympus Films+, LLC
    The Zen of Writing & Screenwriting
    http://michaelc.nextmp.net/wordpress
    dvasicek@earthlink.net

    Donald L. Vasicek - Alfrech "Heap of Birds", Cheyenne on location in Clinton, Oklahoma during interview for the award-winning documentary film, "The Sand Creek Massacre"
    Donald L. Vasicek – Alfrech “Heap of Birds”, Cheyenne on location in Clinton, Oklahoma during interview for the award-winning documentary film, “The Sand Creek Massacre”