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Jay888 covered pretty much all the bases. Stories truly are all around you. Remember, with shorts, its good to keep them simple at first. Try writting very short, one dimensional stories, then move from there. Try taking a random inanimate object, and write about it. A clock, a car, a can of shaving cream. There is a very old short film, that is about a man trying to sit in a chair, but the chair has a mind of its own. Be creative. This is the world of movies, none of the rules of our reality apply. Another starting point is to take a scenario weve seen a hundred times before, and give it a twist. Have a guy who really needs to mail a package, head to the post office. Boring right? but what happens on the way to the post offfice? I just finished writting a short script about a serial killer, loading a body into the trunk of a car, and dumping it in the woods. That is the beginning, and end of the short. Again, boring right? Its usually a scene from a larger story about a serial killer, that is used only as information. But I take an ordinary situation (as ordinary as dumping a body is for a serial killer, that is) and give it extrordinary circumstances. On the way to dump the body, he gets in a fender bender. The guy in the other car (despite no damage) wants to call the cops, and file a report. Another scenario that seems boring enough.... unless you have a body in the trunk! Just look around. Stories are everywhere, just waiting to be told. I promise, once you open the flood gates of creativity, you will have no end of stories to tell. R. Michael McWhorter www.tizzyentertainment.8m.comwww.tizzystoryboardartist.8m.comAnd you shall know us by the trail of dead.
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| Posts: 1534 | Location: WPB, Florida | Registered: November 22, 2002 |    |
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