Coffee Break Screenwriter Pdf Editor
The Coffee Break Screenwriter TestimonialsFor many, writing a screenplay can be like waging a war. The blank page. Pilar’s book is like a strategic field guide about the art of war, so read it and keep it handy the next time you type FADE IN.Jeff PortnoyLiterary Manager – Bellevue ProductionsFormer Head of Story Resolution talent agency and Staff Reader at Creative Artists AgencyI’m loving your book!
Packed with ten-minute writing tools, The Coffee Break Screenwriter keeps it focused and simple. Writers — from novice to professional — benefit at every stage of the writing process with a relaxed, “ten minutes at a time” method.“Ten-Minute Lectures” and “Take Ten” writing templates distill and demystify old-school theory, helping writers unblock, outline, finish pages, and move forward. The Coffee Break Screenwriter Breaks the Rules: A Guide for the Rebel Writer December 15, 2017.
I am using the character section as we speak. And I’m filming my feature directorial debut in April from a script I wrote!Meredith Berg, writer/directorI never write a story—screenplay or prose—without my dog-eared copy of Pilar’s The Coffee Break Screenwriter by my side. It’s the craft book I recommend to my peers and students. The Coffee Break Screenwriter is not another cookie-cutter craft book with rules about what happens on pages 10, 25, 60, etc. Rather, it offers an organic approach to crafting a fresh, original story with well-developed characters and a compelling plot. It’s the only screenwriting book a writer needs.Devi Snively, writer/director “TRIPPIN’ (Best Screenplay Award, Bram Stoker Film Festival) Film/Writing instructor – University of Notre DameI ran across your book by accident and bought it on a lark.
The Coffee Break Screenwriter Breaks the Rules: A Guide for the Rebel Writer December 15, 2017.
It was wonderful! I had the outline of my story done within just a few days. I completed two thirds of my screenplay in just a few weeks. The middle third took some retooling, but your book helped me stay focused and gave me the encouragement that I could complete my work without going to an expensive film school.Robert Ehrlich DietrichI’m a London-based 9-to-5er and new Dad who has found your Coffee Break Screenwriter method very useful in maintaining my productivity throughout my recent lifestyle changes.Nick BoocockThis is an exciting discovery! I’m reading The Coffee Break Screenwriter right now, and I’m enjoying both the author’s perspective and problem-solving techniques. I’m going through the Take-Ten’s to help pinpoint some problem areas in a script I wrote a few years ago.
I look forward to hearing the podcasts!Shari FlemingOf all the books I have read recently on screen-writing yours was the best investment I made.Andy BurrowsThank you for the book and the podcast. Both have been very useful to me as a theatre writer in the UK.
In fact I have used the Coffee Break screenwriter to help me structure a play I am writing for York Theatre Royal.Paul BirchLove your book! I actually feel like I can write a winning story now.Robert EddyI was really struggling getting started on my first screenplay. I had all these great ideas in my head, I just didn’t know how to put them on paper.
The Coffee Break Screenwriter was a huge help. The step by step process detailed in the book makes it so simple. Using these guidelines I was able to finish my first screenplay in four months, while working my 55 hour a week day job. Three production companies are already reading my script. Thanks Pilar!Robert ChesneyMy copy of The Coffee Break Screenwriter arrived in the mail today.
I’m barely 9 pages into the book and it’s already helped me immensely. I have been frustrated and struggling to break the story on a horror/comedy feature I want to write.
For over a year I’ve been spinning my wheels on it without going anywhere. When I read the section “Secondary Characters Tell The Story” the answer hit me like a ton of bricks. I had the wrong protagonist!If the rest of this book is as insightful as the first 9 pages (and I imagine it is), then I fully expect to be hit by a lot more bricks in the near future. I should probably invest in a helmet.Jamie Parker, Santa Cruz, CAThe Coffee Break Screenwriter celebrates the time-tested adage that any large job can be made easier by breaking it down into manageable chunks. Everyone has 10 minutes to spare, and this book maximizes that time with a treasure trove of clever tips and exercises guaranteed to improve your script. There are so many great lessons for writers of all skill levels — from beginner concepts like story beats, to more advanced rewriting and pitching techniques, to practical advice from working screenwriters. It’s quite possibly the most complete step-by-step system for taking a screenplay from rough concept to polished final draft that I’ve ever seen.Trevor Mayes, scriptwrecked.comThe genius of Pilar’s book isn’t that she tells you how t o write quickly — it’s that she provides invaluable exercises and questions to help you focus on each individual element of your script: act breaks, character motivations, emotional arcs, individual scenes, lines of dialogue, etc.
She breaks the entire process into short, digestible bits designed to push you forward swiftly and determinedly, whether you have 10 minutes or 10 months.”Chad Gervich, writer/producer – Wipeout, Reality Binge, Speeders, Foody Call; author, Small Screen, Big Picture: A Writer’s Guide to the TV BusinessI wish I could have read this book years ago. It would have saved me months of false starts, writer’s block, flat characters and just plain bad writing.
The Coffee Break Screenwriter is a collection of lessons that will hone your craft and turn you from a hobbyist into an authority. It’s a definitive and deceptively simple book that has boiled out all of the irrelevant minutia and pretense and bites deep into the bone of what makes a screen play work.Paul Linsley, writer – Pangea, Bobby Stellar: Space KidI loved The Coffee Break Screenwriter! For many writers, facing the prospect of writing a feature-length screenplay is formidable and sometimes unnerving. Pilar Alessandra breaks the task into short, sensible bites, and before you know it you’ve conceptualized and written the entire draft — with or without coffee!Mary J.
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Schirmer, screenwriter, instructor, screenplayers.netAn entertaining and practical manual for getting it done! Leads you step-by- step through the process, with worksheets and examples to get your juices flowing. Even if you have only 10-minute chunks of time in which to write, this book will help you on your way to a finished script in record time!”John Dart, storypros.comWith The Coffee Break Screenwriter, Pilar Alessandra has demolished a writer’s most cherished excuse — now you can never say you don’t have time to write! Get the book and get to work!Ellen Sandler, co-executive producer – Everybody Loves Raymond; author, The TV Writer’s WorkbookThis is the book I needed when I first moved out to Hollywood -— a nuts and bolts approach to scriptwriting and the world around it, told in a matter-of-fact, no-nonsense style. It will take you from talking about writing a screenplay to actually doing it.Garrett Donovan, writer/executive producer – Community, ScrubsThe Coffee Break Screenwriter is an asset for both producers and screen- writers.
It provides clarity on story and structure, works for developing characters, and is a great help on any project.Beau St. Clair, producer – The Thomas Crown Affair (1999), Laws of Attraction, The MatadorAwesomely inspiring! Through her book, Pilar is your mentor, your muse, and your time keeper. She takes you right into your story every time, making the most of all those precious writing moments of yours, and proves that you can — or rather, must — balance organization with creativity to really succeed as a writer.Deborah S. Patz, filmmaker; author, Film Production Management 101This is a unique and highly useful guidebook that provides valuable practi- cal advice for both the aspiring and working screenwriter. While it’s true that ‘writing is easy but thinking is hard,’ Pilar has made the ‘thinking’ part that much easier.Herschel Weingrod, writer – Trading Places; producer – Falling DownOpen this book to any page right now and read one of the lessons. Then come back and finish reading this quote.
If you tell me you didn’t have at least a minor epiphany about how to make your script better, you’re lyingCarl Ellsworth, writer of Red Eye, Disturbia and Red DawnIn the already crowded field of ‘how to’ books promising to help neophyte writer’s create the next eleven figure screenplay sale, Pilar Alessandra’s – The Coffee Break Screenwriter – is a refreshingly honest and insightful standout. Moving past bland recycling of familiar screen craft truisms, Ms. Alessandra offers her readers a shrewd insider’s view of what makes a good screenplay sing.
Those who wish to follow her book in a step by step fashion will be rewarded with an easy to grasp, elegantly organized progression of sections designed to steer the writer toward a rich, sparkling, character driven screenplay. More experienced writers are free to pick and choose from a broad palette of techniques Pilar has designed to attack specific writing challenges. Most helpful of all, however, is Ms. Alessandra’s overall approach– she encourages writers to take brief pauses from their busy lives, work in quick, efficient bursts, until the seemingly unvanquishable Goliath of a finished script has been felled by a hundred surgically hurled stones.Scott Marshall Smith, Writer of Men of Honor, Upcoming installment of The Thomas Crown Affair, sequel to The Score and remake of The Star Chamber.Anyone who’s listened to her podcast or taken her class will tell you — Pilar knows screenwriting. At last here’s the book we’ve been waiting for! If you don’t live in L.A., it’s the next best thing to having Pilar give you notes while you write.Robert Grant, Sci-Fi-LondonAs close as you can get to taking a screenwriting class. Unlike any other screenwriting how-to book, The Coffee Break Screenwriter is structured around Pilar’s ‘10 Minutes at a Time’ approach, and concisely breaks down the development process used at studios to create scripts.
This book will help the screenwriter accomplish more in less time — an especially critical skill today when we would like to pack more into one minute of time than ever before. For busy people juggling career and a home life and putting off writing a script — you have no more excuses. This is the help you’ve been waiting for!Andrea McCall, head of story, DreamWorks SKGPilar brings amazing passion and technical skill to prepare writers for a pro- fessional career. I have been bringing her in to work with our writers in the Disney ABC Writing Program for years and have seen her methods in action. With Pilar’s help, writers brainstorm on the spot, prepare outlines efficiently, and learn to deliver pages under tight deadlines. Now through this important book, she brings her unique writing tools and techniques to everyone.Frank Bennett Gonzalez, program director, Disney ABC Writing ProgramThe Coffee Break Screenwriter reads like a workbook on how to actually get that script you started writing, finished.
Most of us are very busy in our days. We want to write, but when to find the time? Here’s your answer. You only need to find 10 minutes. Organized with quick 10 minute exercises, Pilar Alessandra’s book will help you to stay on track, not get overwhelmed, and most importantly finish what you started. With 11 chapters, from developing story to creating opportunities to get your work read, this is a must read book for aspiring screenwriters.
The lessons here don’t have to stop with screenwriters though – any writer will find some of these tips useful to strengthen their stories.I know you’re busy, but don’t let it’s 262 pages deter you. Because of it’s format, this book has (to use a term scriptreaders often apply to scripts) a lot of ‘white space.’ The paragraphs are short and concise, getting the point across without making it hard to sit down and read for any length of time. As a writer, I would definitely recommend getting this book. It is one of the clearest scriptwriting books out there.Erin Corrado, Independent Film DistributionIf you’ve been dying to write a screenplay, but are intimidated and overwhelmed at the “HOW” of it all, then this truly is the book for you.
The genius of Pilar’s approach is how she demystifies the writing process and breaks it down into easily digestible ten-minute chunks. You’ll be inspired by her brilliant insights, and encouraged by her straightforward guidance – and if you keep with it you’ll find yourself staring at your finished screenplay, wondering why you were ever intimidated in the first place.Johanna Stein, Emmy nominated writer & author (“How Not to Calm a Child on a Plane”)“Pilar’s exercises may only take ten minutes, but each one gives you a lot more than ten minutes worth of value. They keep the ideas percolating in your brain long after you’ve moved on to some other task.”Doug Chamberlin, writer, Toy Story II.
Pilar Alessandra is one of my favourite film lecturers: bright, engaging, great at audience participation. I recently bought her book The Coffee Break Screenwriter: Writing Your Script Ten Minutes A Time, and it’s full of useful exercises to give you a deeper understanding of character and plot. At the London Screenwriters’ Festival recently she held a seminar on Beyond The Chick Flick: Writing The Female-Driven Screenplay.
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Here are the best bits:1. Films with women as leads sell. At long last. There’s Bridesmaids, The Heat, Hunger Games, Gravity. And TV, Pilar points out, is even better at giving meaty parts for women.2. Embrace the difference.
Famously, the part of Ripley in Alien was written for a man, but changed at the last minute to a woman. That created one of the most enduring and strongest heroines in modern cinema. But, says, Pilar, to adopt that strategy wholesale means missing out on gender differences and expectations that can add depth to a screenplay. In Aliens, knowing now that the protagonist was a woman, the writers used that fact to create an instant bond with the young girl Newt, which might have been less convincing in a male protagonist.Another example Pilar used was Kill Bill, in the in her home: they use frying pans and kitchen knives as impromptu weapons; then, when a schoolbus pulls up and Copperhead’s child enters the living room, they both stop fighting and pretend nothing’s wrong.
“So have a fight scene, but don’t forget they are women, as that can bring something extra to the scene.”3. Use gender stereotypes – but flip them. Pilar asked the audience to shout out some negative stereotypes associated with women.
Most men in the audience kept very quiet at this point! The women, however, had no problem shouting things out. Then Pilar flipped showed how negatives could be re-read as positives.
Emotional could be read as caring; bitchy as forthright; indecisive as cautious; gossipy as well informed.She then used the example of Juno, which was aware of the stereotypes but inverted them all to make a more interesting and surprising film. You expect pregnant teens to be uneducated; Juno was super-articulate. Cheerleaders are usually shallow; in Juno she is supportive. The boyfriend of a pregnant teen is usually a womaniser; here it’s him who was seduced by Juno, and he’s willing to help. Parents of pregnant teens are meant to be ashamed; here they are resigned and amused. “Flipping the stereotypes on their head was enough to make a popular movie.”4. Ask yourself: “What would a guy do?” Pilar encourages the writer to look at “masculine activity” and see if it works better.
So: a female protagonist might be expected to make a careful plan and manipulate a key character into giving her information. A man might simply break into the office and steal the computer. Confounding expectations is always interesting to the audience. By the same token, when writing a male character, ask yourself sometimes what a woman might do.5. Spin the male-driven template. Million-Dollar Baby could be pitched as “ Rocky – with a female lead”.
How about trying that with The Godfather? Or Star Wars?6. Spin the female-driven template. Cinderella saves the world; Pocahontas leads a movement.7. Don’t be flowery.
When writing a female-driven screenplay, be especially careful not to be flowery in the descriptions: make the scene directions “macho”, a bold, sharp read.8. Don’t be frightened of flaw. “Flaw is interesting. Don’t make your women too perfect.”Read, from last year’s London Screenwriters’ Festival.@ I recall you writing a terrific column about the Scientology personality test in Time Out way back in 19.Shocked to hear of the untimely death of @, tireless advocate for the @ now proposed by.@ Lost iPhone in back seat or floor of Toyota Auris, picked up 5.10am from WC2H 0DA, and dropped at S.I thought @ was meant to be fast food? 19 mins from ordering to receiving.
Can’t even give up because pa.@ No, what? You were hands-down the columnist I most looked forward to reading every week.