Amazing is a very low word to describe your work. This comment is for all the script videos. I keep watching them multiple times and they teach a new point everytime.
Thanks for these videos - they are really clear with great examples. I've just finished my first feature script - but it's weird as the genre pretty much changes half way through from Kitchen Sink drama to balls-to-the-wall action thriller. Is there a reason this doesn't normally happen - and will it detract audiences/funders if I sell it on both genres rather than one?
Wondering if it´s a good idea to insert a non related scene in between a sequence. For instance a guy who´s situation has already been set up, the conflict presented but instead on going directly into the sequence resolution, to insert a subplot scene or something not directly related to the sequence structure ?.
Great Advice, but its super annoying and I find myself pausing the video every few seconds to read the text on the screen which does not carry the same message as the voice ?? is this proper?
ok, is it a good idea to have my first sequence with none of my main characters, but just good guys fighting my main antagonist and the main plot point of my movie?
@@suiito-kun5222 No seems fair as the idea didn't seem to introduce anything. But i want to know if my explaination is wrong. Could you please explain your point of view?
Thanks for these videos. I'm shocked they don't have 1,000s of comments
The Script lab is the space for the Intellectuals, So cherish that we aren't surrounded by unnecessary words of wisdom.
Amazing is a very low word to describe your work. This comment is for all the script videos. I keep watching them multiple times and they teach a new point everytime.
Great videos, you are a great teacher. Blessings 🙌
Thanks a lot team for doing such a commendable work..keep up the good work
Again, thanks for sharing.
Thanks for these videos - they are really clear with great examples.
I've just finished my first feature script - but it's weird as the genre pretty much changes half way through from Kitchen Sink drama to balls-to-the-wall action thriller. Is there a reason this doesn't normally happen - and will it detract audiences/funders if I sell it on both genres rather than one?
Thank you.
Great insight
This is why writing non-linear scripts is the norm now. I think. Take Michael Clayton for example. Or American Sniper.
Wondering if it´s a good idea to insert a non related scene in between a sequence. For instance a guy who´s situation has already been set up, the conflict presented but instead on going directly into the sequence resolution, to insert a subplot scene or something not directly related to the sequence structure ?.
Where is other 6 sequences
Sequence 1
Tone
Genre
Intros
Status Quo
World
Situation
Inciting
Out of Order
Great Advice, but its super annoying and I find myself pausing the video every few seconds to read the text on the screen which does not carry the same message as the voice ?? is this proper?
you have to read faster.
True. I did the same. But where is the fun in not working hard for what we want.
ok, is it a good idea to have my first sequence with none of my main characters, but just good guys fighting my main antagonist and the main plot point of my movie?
no
@@suiito-kun5222 No seems fair as the idea didn't seem to introduce anything. But i want to know if my explaination is wrong. Could you please explain your point of view?
@@suiito-kun5222 please explain your point of view.