Q - T
Products
A remarkable screenplay where Sequences are delineated by changes in room location and historical time period.
A good example of how to integrate independent story-lines of several characters.
How to use memory loss and mistaken identity to create a hopeless situation.
A prototype for a multiple Flashback format screenplay where all is not what it seems and characters are not who they say they are.
This is the Sequence-Scene structure of the 1998 restored version derived from Welles's 1958 memo.
An excellent example of pursuit where the protagonist (Bond) and antagonist (Carver) cross paths from Act II onwards. The antagonist also has a surrogate fighter (Stamper) for Bond to continuously battle.
(hide)The script utilizes both the death of Jo's father from a tornado, and the estrangement of Jo and Bill as emotional backdrops to their scientific pursuit of tornadoes.
(hide)An excellent script of escalating tension and emotion during personal deterioration and self-destructive behavior.
'Red Eye' is an excellent to model how to create tension and action in a confined space (Act II).
Two superpowers are almost fooled into annihilating each other by a neo-Nazi industrialist. Jack Ryan must prove the industrialists involvement.
(hide)Socially ostracized Finbar moves to a rural train station. There he meets insistent friend Joe and saddened Olivia. A perfect model screenplay of beautiful relationships.
(hide)A remarkably good biography and 'black humor' approach to an addict who manages to come through the experience alive. Excellent example of how to use additional characters to magnify the personality and challenges of the protagonist.
(hide)Excellent structure for an innocent man being framed and then pursued whilst having to reveal the real perpetrators.
Masterful example of a heist with thieves stealing the loot from each other. How do you find it and steal it back?