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Traveling from Fiction Writing to Film Writing

Understanding the Differences

By Jacob Malewitz, published Oct 08, 2008
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Fiction writing is the perfect way to learn screenwriting. Fiction taught me the basics of story; screenwriting told me I could be amply rewarded for a story. More, I could develop my own dreams of characters and places with the moving image. And the moving image is so ... so great that screenwriting is more than a challenge or a career in writing-it's also a way of life. Some books propose it offers the hero to be the writer slaving away, working on the 5th draft. The best proposal is that you create heroes.

I say all that and I toy with novels and short stories more than everything. Yet fiction is the tool to be used when creating stories: it came before films. Stories were told, in a sense, with fiction far before moving images took hold of the world. But static images? Comics, which means static images in a sense, came together not as jokes or tales of super heroes fighting crime, but artists expressing themselves in different ways, often in ancient society, like via the Roman Trajan's Column.

We all love great films; some love great fiction; some love great comics like Alan Moore's "Watchmen" or the oddly brutal classics of Steve Niles, creator of "30 Days of Night." Comic writing is a somewhat lower stepbrother to film writing, but they are similar in many ways. Images are used-we know that. But heroes and villains are often pronounced similarly as well.

Comics and films are in many ways interchangeable, which is proved by the fact so many super heroes like Batman and Iron Man get made into films, and also why so many movies or television shows are worked into comic series.

Traveling from Fiction Writing to Film Writing

All storytelling secrets can be learned by consistently writing, reading, and repeating.

Credit: Courtesy Stock.Xchng

Copyright: Stock.Xchng

Takeaways
  • The modern comic owes much to the modern film.
  • The modern film owes much to the novel
  • Go North simply means considering storytelling a journey.
Did You Know?
There are a plethora of books on each of these subjects, perhaps the fewest on comic writing. Learning story mechanics from a screenwriting book can, and will, lead to a better storytelling sense in fiction.
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