Foreword; INTRODUCTION; 1. Beyond the Rules; STRUCTURE; 2 Structure; 3 Critique of Restorative Three-Act Form; 4 Counter-Structure; 5 The Three-Act Spectrum; 6 Strategies for Plot and Character: Surprise, Triangulation, and Subtext; 7 Multiple Threaded, Long-Form Episodic Scripts; GENRE; 8 Why Genre?; 9 Working with Genre; 10 Working with Genre II: The Melodrama and the Thriller; 11 Working with Genre III: Billy Wilder and Preston Sturges; 12 Working Against Genre; 13 The Flexibility of Genre; 14 Genres of Voice; 15 The Nonlinear Film; 16 The Fable, a Case Study of Darkness: The Wizard of Oz and Pan’s Labyrinth; CHARACTER; 17 Reframing the Active/Passive Character Distinction; 18 Stretching the Limits of Character Identification; 19 Main and Secondary Characters; 20 Subtext, Action, and Character; 21 Exceptional but Opaque Characters in Flattened Scripts; FORM, TONE, AND THEORY; 22 The Subtleties and Implications of Screenplay Form; 23 Theatricality on Screen; 24 Tone: The Inescapability of Irony; 25 Dramatic Voice/Narrative Voice; 26 Writing the Narrative Voice; 27 Regionalism vs Commercialism: Kelly Reichardt, Eugene Martin, and Kathryn Bigelow; 28 Adaptations from Literature ; 29 Rewriting; CONCLUSION; 30 Personal Scriptwriting: The Edge; 31 Personal Scriptwriting: The Short Film
Ken Dancyger is a Professor of Film and Television at Tisch School of the Arts at New York University as well as the author of numerous books on screenwriting, editing, and production.
Jessie Keyt is a writer and Assistant Arts Professor in the Department of Dramatic Writing at Tisch School of the Arts at New York University as well as a story and script consultant for independent filmmakers and production companies in the US, UK, and Europe.
Jeff Rush is an Associate Professor at Temple University's Department of Film & Media Arts as well as the author of numerous articles on screenwriting and narrative theory.
Praise for the fifth edition:
"Screenwriting is about making choices. What Dancyger and Rush
reveal so effectively in Alternative Screenwriting is just how many
options are possible, how the various available choices work and
how different decisions will impact screen storytelling. This book
substantially broadens every screenwriters' -creative
horizons."
-David Howard, USC screenwriting professor and author of The Tools
of Screenwriting and How to Build a Great Screenplay.""It’s so
refreshing to read a book that helps to develop a creative trade
like scriptwriting that is written by people who encourage you to
differ from the three-act structure and not conform to all the
codes that are drilled into us at college. It outlines to us the
limitations of common film conventions and dissects mainstream
characteristics for structure, dialogue, action, genre, discovery
and turning points in a clear and coherent manner. It then teaches
us how to be resourceful and take inventive risks to create a more
original story that you can call your own and lets you know that
there are endless roads for your story to go down... It is perfect
for those who get that little itch and sense of disagreement when
someone tells you that "you must do scriptwriting this way". With
this new edition featuring new case studies on Pans Labyrinth and
The Wizard of Oz, it really is a great book to read if you want to
keep your story unique, refreshing and rich with memorable
characters and themes that will give it a certain emotional weight
and show that it was not written by a business man, but by a true
story teller."- Raindance.org"Alternative Scriptwriting is
invaluable to anyone interested in screenwriting or in directing
fiction. Using plain language it demystifies storytelling for the
screen, and opens up myriad possibilities for using the cinema with
invention, freshness, and imagination." - Michael Rabiger,
Professor Emeritus, Film/Video Department, Columbia College
Chicago."Just as Aristotle's "Poetics and André Bazin's "What is
Cinema are an inseparable part of a Screenwriting reading list, Ken
Dancyger and Jeff Rush's "Alternative Scriptwriting is an absolute
must read for a deeper understanding of the structure of
Screenwriting. -Dr. John Bernstein, Director, Graduate Program in
Screenwriting, Department of Film and Television, Boston
University"Alternative Scriptwriting," by Ken Dancyger and Jeff
Rush, is one of the few books on the subject that doesn't make you
feel stupid while you're reading it.
Instead of the usual boring list of "tricks of the trade" that
replaces a real table of content in so many "How To Write A
Screenplay And Sell It For A Lot Of Money To An Even Bigger Lot Of
Talentless Hopeful People" Dancyger & Rush offer real insight for
those who take their screenwriting seriously and are not afraid to
venture a little bit "beyond the rules". Both as a filmmaker and as
a teacher I have found this volume very precious because what the
authors do best is mix American craftsmanship with European
sensibility.
An excellent cocktail, if you ask me. And you did."
-Marc Didden - Head Of Screenwriting at St. Lukas Hogeschool,
Brussels , Writer/Director ( "Brussels By Night", "Istanbul",
"Sailors Don't Cry" )Praise for the third edition:
"An insightful alternative to mainstream narrative and character
analysis that presents the reader with a clear dissection of the
mainstream before revealing the alternatives."
-- Script Factory"[Alternative Scriptwriting] aims to challenge its
readers to create writing that is exceptional. While no book can
possibly replace your own creative vision, as a resource it's
thorough and is a good way to help yourself consider alternative
ideas."
-- Plugin Cinema
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