How do directors use screen direction to suggest conflict? How do screenwriters exploit film
space to show change? How does editing style determine emotional response?Many first-time
writers and directors do not consider this. They forgo the huge creative resource of the film
medium defaulting instead to dialog and narration to tell their screen story. Yet most movies
are carried by sound and picture. What the industry's most successful writers and directors
have in common is that they have mastered the cinematic conventions specific to the medium.
They have harnessed non-dialog techniques to create some of the most cinematic moments in movie
history.This book is intended to help writers and directors more fully exploit the medium's
storytelling techniques. It contains 100 non-dialog techniques that have been used by the
industry's top writers and directors. From 'Metropolis' and 'Citizen Kane' to 'Dead Man' and
'Kill Bill' the book illustrates - through 500 frame grabs and 75 script excerpts - how the
inherent stortytelling devices specific to film were exploited.Learn how non-dialogue film
techniques can advance story Discover how master screenwriters exploit cinematic conventions to
create powerful scenarios Brilliantly illustrated throughout with 500carefully chosen frame
grabs from classic films of the past and present