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A Poetics for Screenwriters
 
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A Poetics for Screenwriters [Paperback]

Lance Lee (Author)
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Book Description

March 2001

Writing successful screenplays that capture the public imagination and richly reward the screenwriter requires more than simply following the formulas prescribed by the dozens of screenwriting manuals currently in print. Learning the "how-tos" is important, but understanding the dramatic elements that make up a good screenplay is equally crucial for writing a memorable movie. In A Poetics for Screenwriters, veteran writer and teacher Lance Lee offers aspiring and professional screenwriters a thorough overview of all the dramatic elements of screenplays, unbiased toward any particular screenwriting method.

Lee explores each aspect of screenwriting in detail. He covers primary plot elements, dramatic reality, storytelling stance and plot types, character, mind in drama, spectacle and other elements, and developing and filming the story. Relevant examples from dozens of American and foreign films, including Rear Window, Blue, Witness, The Usual Suspects, Virgin Spring, Fanny and Alexander, The Godfather, and On the Waterfront, as well as from dramas ranging from the Greek tragedies to the plays of Shakespeare and Ibsen, illustrate all of his points.

This new overview of the dramatic art provides a highly useful update for all students and professionals who have tried to adapt the principles of Aristotle's Poetics to the needs of modern screenwriting. By explaining "why" good screenplays work, this book is the indispensable companion for all the "how-to" guides.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

This is a brilliant, all-encompassing work. I cannot recall a book on screenwriting which delves so deeply into the art and antecedents of screenwriting. Aristotle himself would, no doubt, congratulate Lance Lee. However, without waiting for the great Greek's response, put me down as 'Bravo!' (William Froug, author of Screenwriting Tricks of the Trade and Zen and the Art of Screenwriting )

About the Author

Lance Lee is the coauthor of The Understructure of Writing for Film and Television. He has taught screenwriting at California State University, Northridge, since 1981. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 160 pages
  • Publisher: University of Texas Press (March 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0292747195
  • ISBN-13: 978-0292747197
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.8 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,647,753 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Lance Lee's poems, stories and articles have been accepted in both American and English journals such as Antioch Review, Cross Currents, Agenda, Outposts, Stand, Orbis, Ambit, Acumen, Nimrod, Iron, POEM and Poetry Northwest. Books include Wrestling With The Angel, Becoming Human, Human/Nature and Seasons of Defiance (2010). He is a recipient of a Creative Writing Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, and various other scholarships.

Essays appear variously, including the "The American Voice" online for the US Poets Issue for Agenda, and "Script Analysis Conventional and Unconventional" in On The Waterfront from Cambridge University Press...

A number of his plays have been produced and published. Rasputin and Gambits were produced at the Eugene O'Neill National Playwrights Conference. Time's Up and Fox, Hound, & Huntress were premiered in Los Angeles, the latter with help from the Rockefeller Foundation via the Office for Advanced Drama Research. Publications include Time's Up; Fox, Hound, & Huntress; and Time's Up and Other Plays.

He founded an MFA program in playwrighting at the University of Southern California, and helped found the graduate screenwriting program at California State University, Northridge. He has published several works on screenwriting and drama: The Understructure of Writing for Film & Television, A Poetics for Screenwriters, and The Death and Life of Drama: reflections on writing and human nature (2005) for a wider professional audience.

His works also include a novel, Second Chances.

His family is split between Los Angeles, where he helped establish the California State Park System in the Santa Monica Mountains, and London, where a married daughter lives by chance in the family seat for generations on his wife's side. He has developed an English readership and publication record as a result, and often gives poetry readings when in London.

He was born in the then Doctors Hospital near Gracie Mansion in 1942 in Manhattan in New York City: his mother, as Lucile Wilds, was a famous model of the time, with her legs insured for $100,000, and her smile everywhere.

Visit: lanceleeauthor.com for a full listing of books, reviews, and events.

 

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4.0 out of 5 stars An incredibly thorough, coherent, sometimes dense book. A fantastic read for the aspiring screenwriter., July 8, 2009
This review is from: A Poetics for Screenwriters (Paperback)
First of all, understand going into it that this book is an attempt at updating Aristotle for a modern, cinema-savvy audience of serious screenwriters. That being the case, the first third of the book is a bit dense, sometimes distractingly so. But it is necessary to introduce the reader to the themes it is going to explore in more detail, and in a more easily consumed manner, beyond. This initial density is the only thing that keeps me from giving it a 5-star rating, and the only thing that could potentially stop someone from picking the thing up and reading it straight through in a couple hours.

In contrast to the common "bibles" of screenplay manuals - Syd Field's "Screenplay" and Robert McKee's "Story" - this book does not attempt to teach one how to write a screenplay. It does not have a single mention of formatting or suggestion for outlining save for a very brief, seemingly requisite blurb at the end. Instead, this book attempts to modernize Aristotle's timeless theories on the nature of drama and use them to help screenplay authors understand how to write better movies. Structure, sub-structure, sub-sub-structure, character development, thematic exploration - all of these are emphasized, their relative importances weighed. Countless examples from popular film are used alongside Shakespeare, Euripides, Izben, and more. It is very effective and very thought provoking. I read Aristotle in college just like everyone else who ever took a writing course, or any other type of course for that matter. I got far more out of this book than I did out of the original because it was targeted directly at the form I was writing.

For me, the book's greatest value came not in helping me write my first screenplay, but in revising my first screenplay. I read this book in the lull between completing the initial draft of my first script and embarking on my first major revision. To be able to read through the various structures, the pros and cons of using certain devices, etc. and to be able to directly relate my own script to what was being described helped me form a very solid idea of what my movie was about and how/why it was structured the way it was. Anyone who has ever attempted a substantial literary endeavor knows how invaluable this "bird's eye" view of their work can be when going back to perfect it.

If you want to learn how to write a movie, buy "Screenplay." If you want to learn how to write an effective, professional, powerful, relatable, GREAT movie, buy "Screenplay" and "A Poetics for Screenwriters."
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