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Looking for a writer's group?
The Studio City Writers' Group is looking for new members! This
writer's group is the longest running group in Hollywood! 15 years!
With the
same format as lab 26, it is much bigger and more
accommodating to all forms of writing.
If you would like to join, dues are
only 15 a month, and the group dynamic is always warm and inviting.
For more
information, please email:
our premise
The Writers' Lab, LA is a
group of professional writers focused on developing
compelling stories for the big screen.
Based in Los Angeles, our group of talented
writers and actors meet once a week to exchange development
ideas and constructive criticism surrounding new work.
During a typical evening, four of our members
will present new or revised material in front of the
group. Our large roster of professional actors bring
this material to life. After each presentation, the
group holds an open forum discussion centered on improving
the writers work.
This simple method has helped hundreds
of writers at all aptitudes sharpen their skills and
achieve their cinematic goals. If you are a screenwriter,
actor, producer, or director interested in attending
our group, we encourage you to contact
us now.
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The
Office of Letters and Light Announces:
SCRIPT FRENZY 2008
The
100-page challenge designed to inspire everyone who’s
ever aspired to write a script
February 1, 2008
Oakland, California
www.ScriptFrenzy.org
Oakland-based non-profit
the Office of Letters and Light today announced
the second annual Script Frenzy challenge, set
to take place in April. Script Frenzy is
an international writing event in which participants
attempt the creatively daring feat of writing
100 pages of original material for a script or
scripts in a single month. Screenplays, stage
plays, TV shows, short films, comic book scripts,
and adaptations of novels are all welcome.
The
Office of Letters and Light charges no fee to
participate in Script Frenzy; no valuable prizes
are awarded or best scripts singled out. In
order to “win” at Script Frenzy, you
need only sign up and complete the goal of writing
100 pages in 30 days. In return for their efforts,
Script Frenzy winners are granted a Script Frenzy
Winner's Certificate, web icon, and eternal bragging
rights.
Last year over 8,000 participants took part
in the challenge, and this year 10,000 are expected,
making it the largest scriptwriting contest in
the world. Many Script Frenzy participants will
be right in your backyard, gathering together in
local cafes and libraries for official Script Frenzy
write-ins.
Kids and teens can also get in on the
act through Script Frenzy's Young Writers Program.
The Young Writers Program is a separate online
and offline challenge for budding scriptwriters,
with special resources for students and teachers.
Sign-ups are taking place now. Please contact Jennifer
Arzt if you’re interested in hearing more about
Script Frenzy, or visit the event website at www.ScriptFrenzy.org. |
David
Milch's Lecture, 10/16/01
Without getting too highfalutin, that sequence
of scenes is about mortality. The ways that, by
our conduct in our past -- having failed to respect
the moral imperatives of our mortality -- our lives
sort of vector off into immorality or amorality
or inconsequence, and then the kind of free-floating
dread that we carry around with us -- which, if
it were ever articulated, would be "I haven't lived the right life, and
somehow, someday I'm going to be held accountable
for that," and what a detective does is try
to feed into that free-floating dread, try and
put a name on it, and paint the guy into a corner
so that he can manipulate him based on that. The
detective then himself becomes culpable for a failure
of respect of humanity, and in the turn in the
scene, actually has induced the condition that
he was simply trying to achieve for technical purpose;
that is, he views the man simply as adjunctive
to his purpose in the case.
When we write those scenes, we don't think about
'em that way. As we were talking about the last
couple of weeks, our brains, as a species, are
built in a particular fashion. That doubleness,
which I've described as the sort of characteristic
state of art of -- being both inside and outside
a moment -- which we suggested is not only the
characteristic of art but may be what defines our
species as distinguished say from other species
of hominids, which is the ability to signify, that
is to detach the literal experience from -- (lights
dim momentarily) that's good. I like that. I like
that. It doesn't distract me. It's part of it.
I'm allowed to wonder if I'm epileptic while I'm
simultaneously … (audience
laughter.)
Isn't that really the doubleness we're trying to
describe? What I was saying that, to the extent
that, as distinguished from Neanderthal or the
others, is the species which can abstract and form
signals for an experience rather than simply responding
to a series of experiences. And to the extent that
the artistic brain, the storytelling brain, the
ability to be both inside and outside, facilitates
that kind of signifying process. What I would suggest
is … and
to carry it one step further … in that the
state of being that we enter into when we're telling
that story gives us a a kind of feeling of exultation
that is certainly atypical --- it is different
from the usual way that we feel ourselves as human
as we move through life.
And that to the extent that that state, that exulted
state of being, makes us a little uneasy, makes
it difficult for us to reconcile that feeling with
our usual feeling about the way we life -- that
doubleness is resolved in its healthiest resolution
by a sense of the presence of the divine. That
is, we renounced responsibility or really ownership
of that feeling as being our own, and say, "Geez, I don't know
what got into me. I don't know how that happened.
It just comes to me." Now that's the secular
version of it. And the other version of it is quite
literally, "I took the sacrament." There's
a third version, of course, which is the addictive
version, which is, "Good dope today." Those
are three different ways of reacting to that state
of felt doubleness which I think is characteristic
of how our brains work, our capacity to abstract
from lived experience and to develop signals, signs,
myths, symbols, or in an extreme form, say algebraic
expressions of states of being.
The reason that
I'm digressing to remind you of those previous
discussions is that for me, as a writer, when I'm
writing, I'm simply trying to get the voices right
and to stay with the felt dramatic tension in the
scene. But afterward, I get very anxious. I have
tried to come to some sort of articulate understanding
of how the process works as a way of accommodating
my anxiety. To the extent then that there's a sort
of second dimension of creativity in trying to
pass that knowledge on, that's what I'm trying
to do here. While I've tried to point out in earlier
discussions it is absolutely unnecessary to understand
intellectually how a scene works; in fact, it's
counterproductive when you're actually creating. |
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