

Masterclass - Aaron Sorkin Teaches Screenwriting

English | mp4 | H264 1280x720 | AAC 2 ch | 8 hrs 1 min | pdf | 3.7 GB

eLearning, Business, Writing English | mp4 | H264 1280x720 | AAC 2 ch | 8 hrs 1 min | pdf | 3.7 GBeLearning, Business, Writing

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Aaron Sorkin grew up in Scarsdale, a suburb of New York City where he was very involved in his high school drama and theater club. After graduating from Syracuse University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theater, Sorkin intended to pursue a career in acting. It took him only a short time to realize that his true love, and his true talent, lay in writing.01 INTRODUCTIONMeet Aaron. Hes an Oscar winner, a TV hitmaker, and the writer of the some of the smartest dramas ever to hit the screen. And now, hes your instructor.02 INTENTION & OBSTACLEEvery great story is born from intentions and obstacles. Learn how to build the drive shaft that will set your scr in motion.03 STORY IDEASHow do you know if your idea is good enough to turn into a scr? Aaron walks you through the steps every writer should take to test an idea-and decide whether it will work best in TV or film.04 DEVELOPING CHARACTERS PART 1Aaron shares some of the decisions he made to develop some of his most unforgettable characters-like The Social Networks Mark Zuckerberg and The West Wings Toby and Leo.05 DEVELOPING CHARACTERS PART 2Your characters dont have to be like you-or even likeable. Drawing on examples from A Few Good Men and Steve Jobs, Aaron explains why he always empathizes with his characters even if he disagrees with them.06 RESEARCHGood research is the key to a great scr. Bad research is a waste of time. How can you tell the difference? Aaron shares lessons from Malice and The Social Network to help you gather the information you really need.07 INCORPORATING RESEARCHYou have pages of research-now what? Avoid clunky exposition and learn how to seamlessly weave research into your story.08 THE AUDIENCEAaron knows that the audience isnt just watching his work. Theyre participating in it, too. Learn how to write stories that will keep them engaged and entertained.09 RULES OF STORYThe rules of great drama arent new. Here, Aaron explains how most of them were laid out more than 2,000 years ago by Aristotle in his Poetics, and how to use those lessons to become a diagnostician for your own story ideas.10 FILM STORY ARCPage numbers dont sound exciting, but theyre a great tool for tracking the act-structure and pacing of your story.11 WRITING HABITSEven Aaron gets writers block. Learn how gets unstuck and what writing tools he uses to make sure hes ready when inspiration strikes.12 GROUP WORKSHOP: UNTITLED BY JJ BRAIDERWhile workshopping J.J.s scr, Aaron shares his tips on writing action scenes that moveas fast on the page as they will on the screen.13 GROUP WORKSHOP: E IS FOR EDIE BY JEANIE BERGENThe offbeat characters in Jeanies scr are a hit with Aaron, who warns about the dangers of getting feedback from close-minded studio execs. (Warning: explicit content).14 GROUP WORKSHOP: CHRONIC BY ROLAND ZALESKIDiscussing Rolands scr, Aaron reveals a simple trick that writers can use to justify improbable events in their stories.15 GROUP WORKSHOP: THE MERC BY EVELYN YVESEvelyns TV pilot kicks off a conversation about opening scenes and the importance of showing your audience something theyve never seen before.16 GROUP WORKSHOP: FROM HERE TO ALLI BY COREY WRIGHTAfter workshopping Coreys scr and learning about his background, Aaron discusses the importance of having confidence as a writer, and shares his own origin story, starting with his days as a struggling New York actor.17 WRITING SCENES PART 1A great story is more than just a collection of great scenes. Learn how to give your scr momentum from one beat to the next.18 WRITING SCENES PART 2Your scr only has one opening scene. Make it memorable by introducing your theme, grabbing the audience, and setting up your characters intentions and obstacles.19 SCENE CASE STUDY: STEVE JOBSIn a study of a scene from Steve Jobs, Aaron explains how high stakes, strong intentions & obstacles, and competing tactics make for an exciting scene to write.20 SCENE CASE STUDY: THE WEST WINGAaron analyzes a classic scene from The West Wing: the scathing confrontation between President Bartlet (Martin Sheen) and Governor Robert Ritchie (James Brolin).21 WRITING CAPTIVATING DIALOGUEIf you want to write Aaron Sorkin-worthy dialogue, learn from the master himself on how to make music with your words and put them to the test by performing your own scenes out loud.22 DIALOGUE CASE STUDY: THE WEST WINGAaron does a deep dive into the musical nuances of dialogue in the BartletRitchie scene.23 REWRITES: FIRST DRAFTRewrites arent a sign of a bad scr; theyre a sign of a good writer. Hear how Aaron reworks and strengthens his screenplays during the rewriting process.24 REWRITES: NOTESRewrites arent a sign of a bad scr; theyre a sign of a good writer. Hear how Aaron reworks and strengthens his screenplays with help from trusted advisors.25 THE WEST WING WRITERS ROOM PART 1Aaron creates a virtual writers room to break part of the Season 5 premiere-an episode hes never seen.26 THE WEST WING WRITERS ROOM PART 2Aaron discusses what is needed in the teaser of the show and how to reverse engineer a plot.27 THE WEST WING WRITERS ROOM PART 3Aaron and the students continue to work together to break episode 501 of The West Wing.28 THE WEST WING WRITERS ROOM PART 4How can research drive the plot forward? Aaron and the students discuss the limitations of the 25th Amendment as a plot point.29 THE WEST WING WRITERS ROOM PART 5Take Aarons advice: When you have great characters, use them. Learn how to keep your protagonists active.30 THE WEST WING WRITERS ROOM PART 6Whos got a bad idea? Aaron and the students run through various plot ideas as the writers room continues.31 THE WEST WING WRITERS ROOM PART 7As Aaron says, You dont have to assault the audience with plot. The writers discuss the value of pacing-plus the limits of reality within fiction.32 THE WEST WING WRITERS ROOM PART 8Aaron and the students wrap up the virtual writers room and discuss lessons learned.33 GROUP WORKSHOP: PITCH SESSIONYouve got a screenplay-now its time to pitch. Learn what questions Hollywoods decision makers will ask you during a pitch and how to effectively answer them.34 GROUP WORKSHOP: AARON PITCHES MISSION TO MARSAaron turns the tables on his writers and pitches them his idea for a brand-new TV series called Mission to Mars.35 CLOSING THOUGHTSIn the final lesson, Aaron offers his parting wisdom and leaves you with one more assignment that will last the rest of your life.Extract files with WinRar 5 or Latest !