I’m working on a psychological thriller where the person everyone thinks is fragile is actually orchestrating the hunt.
The challenge: building suspense, fear, and audience empathy while keeping the hero’s true intentions hidden, until the very last moment.
Producers, writers, and fellow screenwriters...
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João Pimentel Thank you João
I really like your example of “Atomic Refuge.” That kind of perspective shift is exactly the type of structural tension I’m exploring: keeping the audience aligned with the...
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Yaman Najm, I'm glad you liked my idea.
If done right, this is a great trope to play with and lends itself to natural tension and a great payoff. As a reader or producer, I’d want to see micro-leaks in their persona—tiny, almost indiscernib...
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Producer here - making the character vulnerable and finding an agenda to root for will emotionally twist us when we find out we were connected to the wrong character!
Yaman Najm Was thinking about another film that might be even closer to what you're envisioning. EX MACHINA. Something Lisa Zambri just mentioned which is so key. Vulnerability. The whole time you're...
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A great way to break into TV writing is through “late night” television. Daily Show, SNL, Fallon, Bill Maher, etc are regularly adding writers to their staffs. They usually do this though submission packets where writers who want those jobs have to submit a unique sample based on the prompts they se...
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Hey Spencer Robinson great post - how important is social media in getting staffed on one of these network late night shows? do you have to have pages flooded with bits and sketches or stand up clips...
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Pat Alexander From my experience, not important at all.
Spencer Robinson Thanks for the pulling back the curtain. Interesting.
This is really valuable—especially the idea of preparing before the opportunity shows up. What stands out to me is how different this skill set is from long-form storytelling—being sharp, concise, and...
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Hey everyone,
I’ve been working on developing my voice in the action-thriller space and recently started putting together full projects instead of just ideas. One thing I’ve been focusing on lately is making sure the story feels strong structurally before worrying about anything else.
I’m curious—when...
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I never start with the ending, because during the long journey of writing many unexpected things happens - so possible finales evolve along the way.
Having developed hundreds of scripts and writing my own, I'll advise - if you do not know the ending, you don't know the beginning. But sometimes in order to find the ending, you need to write to disc...
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To parrot Lisa Zambri this is very true. Which is why it's great to outline before writing. You have to have some sense of how the characters are going to evolve and change over the course of the stor...
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Appreciate all of this—seriously valuable insights.
I think what I’m starting to understand is that it’s not really one or the other. Having a sense of the ending gives direction, but staying open duri...
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Hi!
Personally, my project started forming in my head about four years ago. I probably restarted it around twenty-seven times, and got stuck just as many times. At some point I stopped, because even as...
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Hey everyone, I'm Huneyn. I am a 25-year-old first-time creator. I have been working on some projects (Eight and counting), and you know it's quite ridiculous how ideas just come to you, and afterwards your eyes widen, realizing what you wrote.
So, just like that, I wrote a 3-season-long epic about a...
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Hey Huneyn, welcome!
Honestly, the ideas themselves are less important than the perspective you bring to them. AI-human love, religion, even psychological killers—these have all been explored before, b...
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Abhijeet Aade Hey, thanks for commenting! I think the angel story? It's the most personal one to me. But, I don't know, people say I talk about things through my works. They say I ask questions throug...
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Huneyn Ja'afri Hey, I actually think that’s a strength.
The stories that stay with people are often the ones that make them a little uncomfortable or force them to think differently. If your work is as...
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Abhijeet Aade Hey, yeah I wasn't conciously writing what I was doing. But I was in a bad mental space, and I just expressed it all out in that story. The story starts off with a lovely romance moment...
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Hello Stage 32 community,
I’m Catherine James, an entertainment and business attorney and the founder of Catherine James Esquire, a boutique law firm dedicated to creatives, influences, models, gamers, and entertainment businesses.
Formerly known as Cre8ors Power Legal Services, my practice has evolv...
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Hi, Catherine James. Great to meet you. Welcome to the Stage 32 community. Stage 32 has a blog and video that'll help you navigate the platform and make connections:
www.stage32.com/blog/how-to-success...
Expand commentIt is a tough market to get a movie green lighted.
Found this great video from Reedsy that chimes in - BUT I also know that TONS of Stage 32 authors have been self-published, too. So, I'd love to hear from y'all - how much did it cost YOU to self-publish? LET'S TALK NUMBERS & ROI!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jieZ3K6VY6E...
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Effectively, nothing. I created my covers through Canva and uploaded the files to Amazon/Draft2Digital for distribution myself. Only time I've ever had a cost attributed to a work is when I've licence...
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Before I self-publish, I register the copyright, and I obtain my own ISBN. After those costs, self-publishing is free through Draft-2-Digital and through Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing. The true URL...
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Hi filmmakers,
With the industry leaning more and more into world‑expanding storytelling, I’m curious about your take on prequels. We’re seeing big examples like House of the Dragon, a prequel to Game of Thrones, and the various Lord of the Rings expansions, where creators return to earlier timelines...
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Back 20 years ago most of the studios where looking for prequels to their properties. Not a lot happened. A good prequel will make it. Don't know if the studios are open to prequels as much anymore.
Think there's something interesting to them, if done right. The creator of the Netflix series Ratched famously launched his career that way - just by really liking One Flew Over the Cuckoo's nest and...
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prequels keeps the story going and encourages for more. Unless the prequel is easy to predict the plot
I think prequels require extra care. They need to match the same level and potential of the original, because the usual reaction is, “Nah, it’s not as good as the first one.”
The trick with prequels is making the background/origin story feel like a new discovery of the material and world rather than just repeating the original story with a different angle. It's no secret s...
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I saw this casting announcement for Netflix’s upcoming Scooby-Doo series and it got me thinking about how animation IP continues to evolve:
This version isn’t just another iteration; it’s an origin story. We’re going back to h...
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I can't wait for Netflix’s live-action Scooby-Doo series, Ashley Renée Smith! I love the origin story angle! I think you should keep the key characters, tone, and sense of mystery and humor while addi...
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I still have fond memories of the “Pup Named Scooby-Doo” Saturday morning show, which had fun animation and a subversive sense of humor. The characters were all kids, so it served as an origin story....
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Here‘s a first little thought about the intricacies and effectiveness of storytelling structure.
One of the most basic storytelling advices I suppose everybody heard a lot of times is that a good story needs beginning middle and end. But even this simple truth is a lot less basic than it seems at fir...
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Your job as a screenwriter is to entertain (not to preach, command, dictate...) Leading the audience astray a little bit here & there can certainly be entertaining at times and has its value but tying...
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Memento (2000) is a story about someone with retrograde amnesia. It is presented in reverse order. to give viewers the feeling of the world as the MC experiences it. I had to see it twice to get past the discomfort of the situation.
This is a great breakdown of structure. I really appreciate how you explained the difference between flipping beginning/end vs. starting in the middle.
I’ve actually experimented with reverse storytell...
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Amanda Toney Interesting read. Independent filmmakers today seem to be exploring more creative financing models beyond traditional studio funding. From crowdfunding and private investors to new fintec...
Expand commentAmanda Toney Interesting read. Independent filmmakers today seem to be exploring more creative financing models beyond traditional studio funding. From crowdfunding and private investors to new fintech platforms and partnerships, the landscape is definitely evolving. It’s encouraging to see how innovation in financing is helping smaller projects get made while still maintaining creative independence.
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Amanda Toney Absolutely. Innovate or die. The one constant is change.
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Great article. It’s encouraging to hear that independent filmmakers are adapting in these uncertain times and evolving for the next chapter of entertainment. Independent financing is just the start. I...
Expand commentGreat article. It’s encouraging to hear that independent filmmakers are adapting in these uncertain times and evolving for the next chapter of entertainment. Independent financing is just the start. I think we are going to start seeing similar behavior in independent distribution, marketing, production, and other realms. As the article mentioned, international collaboration, private investment, and utilizing social media and streaming platforms are all key tools that will prove to be essential for independent filmmakers throughout this transitional period in Hollywood.