“Kick Ass Screenwriting”

by
Donald L. Vasicek

Award-Winning Writer/Filmmaker Donald L. Vasicek

Want to kick ass with your screenwriting? Do you know what I mean? For those of you who might have questions about it, then, let me explain.

Having acted as a writer/consultant for a studio movie (I will not mention the movie to protect myself from pissing someone off), I was in a room with 8 other writers, and three producers. The producers posed questions to all of us about how the script should be written. I offered the idea about having a beginning, a middle, and an end with a main theme, main character, and villain (The protagonist in fiction can represent anything, but pure evil. Pure evil is reserved for the villain.).

I also suggested that a transformational arc should take place with the main character, and with at least one periphery character.

And I suggested that, since the producers wanted this movie to be an action flick, then, the pace of the film must be accelerated, and that could only happen through swift and short writing, and particularly, with action scenes, the sentences must be short and choppy, punctuated by action verbs.

So, the producers assigned each one of us the job of writing the first ten pages of the script. We accomplished that in one day because that is what they wanted us to do (and the pay was very good). So, we did it.

Then, enough copies were made of each writer’s first ten pages so that all of the other writers and producers could read each writer’s pages. The goal was to find a consensus of the best ten pages, and go with that writer for the script.

As it turned out, the consensus was for my ten pages. As it turned out, we got into a discussion about that because two of the producers liked another draft better than mine.
That draft was written by a team of two writers.

The producers who liked their ten pages better than mine cited the depth of the writing as opposed to my more cut-to-the-chase version. Their descriptions were long paragraphs utilizing a host of passive verbs and flowery adjectives. My descriptions were short, choppy paragraphs that utilized active verbs with sparse adjectives.

Which ten pages would you have chosen for an action thriller, the two writers, or mine? Read on to see if your answer matches the ultimate choice of the producers.

In the end, the team of two writers’ were chosen to write the script. About 9 months later, the producers called me. They wanted a meeting. I met with them. They wanted me to rewrite the script the team of two writers wrote. They said, “The script just doesn’t feel right.” They gave me two weeks to accomplish this.

After reading the script, I knew exactly what to do. Actually, I begin the rewrite on each page as I read it. I managed to rewrite the script in two weeks. I took the flowery, adjective-heavy, long and boring paragraphs where passive verbs were utilized and cut it up into a fast-moving action thriller utilizing action verbs.

After meetings with the producers, the two who opposed my ten page draft, opposed my rewrite. The other producer loved my rewrite. There were heated arguments amongst all of us. Finally, it was decided that the final vote would be left up to the man who was forking over the most money for the $156 million film. He voted for the script with the
flowery, long paragraphed, adjective-heavy script with passive verbs.

The movie was a family-oriented action thriller. It was aimed directly at kids for its core audience. Guess what, the movie flopped at the box office. Do you know why? It’s the
same reason I argued all along. Although their script of choice was written beautifully, translating it to the screen, would translate into a film for adults with a kid theme, and would result in being boring for kids because of the exaggerated sets, the lengthy dialogue scenes, and the one-dimensionality of the characters.

So, if you still want to know how to kick ass with your screenwriting, know your core audience. Know your genre. Know that flowery writing in scripts will always lead to disaster, always, because it will bore the audience to death, even if you aren’t writing an action thriller. The use of adjectives, in any kind of writing, let alone screenwriting, must be used judiciously.

Film is a visual medium. It exists to tell stories in pictures. It exists to entertain. The only way this can be successfully accomplished is to write visually. And the only way to write visually, is to utilize action verbs. If you do this, mark my word, your writing will take you to the level you want to be with it.

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

25 Tribal Libraries to Catlog Award-Winning Sand Creek Massacre Film

For Immediate Release

Donald L. Vasicek
Olympus Films+, LLC
303-903-2103

dvasicek@earthlink.net
http://www.sandcreekmassacre.net

“42 U. S. Tribal Libraries To Catalog Award-Winning Donald L. Vasicek’s Sand Creek Massacre Film”

Centennial, CO – June 27, 2011 – “The Sand Creek Massacre”, an award-winning documentary film written, directed and produced by award-winning writer/filmmaker Donald L. Vasicek, is being catalogued into 25 U. S. Tribal Libraries.

“The Sand Creek Massacre” won Best Native American Film at The American Indian Film Festival in Houston and the Trail Dance Film Festival in Duncan, Oklahoma along with the prestigious Golden Drover Award and best short film in Cleveland at The Indie Gathering Film Festival. The story of the Sand Creek Massacre is told on camera by Cheyenne and Arapaho people whose ancestors were at Sand Creek during the massacre, which resulted in the murder, rapes, and mutilations of over 400 Cheyenne and Arapaho people by the 1st and 3rd Colorado Cavalries on November 29, 1864.

Donald L. Vasicek, award-winning writer/filmmaker, who wrote, directed and produced the film via his film company, Olympus Films+, LLC, said, “This film is vital to inform, to educate, and to create awareness, for not only the Cheyenne and Arapaho people, but for all of the indigenous people in America. By archiving it into tribal libraries, it will expand a badly needed accessibility to all American Indian Tribes in order to neutralize racism and give American youth, at the least, an opportunity to interact with other cultures with open minds. Without that, certain American cultures will continue to erode and eventually die.”

The film has been screened at colleges and universities throughout the United States in addition to various Native American organizations and groups. It has also been aired in Philadelphia, Houston, Dallas, Los Angeles, and Phoenix and screened in over 100 venues in the United States, Europe, Thailand, and Sweden. It is being distributed in North America and Asia by Films Media Group.

Olympus Films+, LLC was founded by Donald L. Vasicek in 1993. It has produced such films as “Faces”, a documentary film about who gays and lesbians really are, and “Oh, The Places You Can Go…”, a documentary film about kids in transition with special needs.

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Donald L. Vasicek
Olympus Films+, LLC
The Zen of Writing
http://michaelc.nextmp.net/wordpress
dvasicek@earthlink.net
303-903-2103

Writing/Screenwriting Scenes

by
Donald L. Vasicek

Award-Winning Writer Donald L. Vasicek - Jenny's Lake - Grand Teton Park

When writing scripts, always think of movies and how
they transition from scene-to-scene. This is imperative.
This approach gives you more of a director’s
“eye.” In turn, the visual dynamics of writing visually
become more prominent the more you do it.
This gives a rhythm and movement to the entire script
that binds it more tightly together. It also helps you
avoid writer’s block. “Stepping” back and
looking at a scene that you’ve written with the idea of
looking at it like it is already a movie, when your mind
is blocking out, will improve your visual writing dynamics
and the scene. Step into the scene and become your
character.

For example, you have a character coming into a room.
How should you write that? Step back and look at it
as though you’re watching a movie? Think of a movie,
or movies that you have seen with this kind of action
with respect to the genre and kind of character you’re
writing. How is the character coming into the room done?

You will find that most good movies always cut-to-the-chase
with each scene. They do not mess around with details
that hinder the movement of the movie. If a character has
to be thrown into the room because she is a prisoner of
terrorists, then, throw her into the room. If a character simply
has to walk into the room, then, cut-to-the-chase. Get her
into the room as quickly as possible. Just make sure that
it is consistent with the rhythm and movement of the entire
story/script/movie/character.

For example, a character in your story is mild-mannered.
She loves daisies and brandy. She reads James Joyce.
She is a certified public accountant for a large accounting
firm. Everything she does has a place. How would you write
her entering a room? She would enter the room with
grace. She would smoothly take in everything in the
room. She would then proceed with the reason she is
entering the room.

Making scenes sparkle like this enhances the screenwriter’s
ability to excel in their craft.

Donald L. Vasicek
The Zen of Writing
http://michaelc.nextmp.net/wordpress
dvasicek@earthlink.net
303-903-2103