Daily Script - Movie Scripts and Movie Screenplays - Movie Script A to M 10 Things I Hate About You by Karen McCullah Lutz, Kirsten Smith & William Shakespeare 1999 november 12, 1997 revision 211 kb html format imdb 12 And Holding by Anthony S. Cipriano 2005 april 6, 2004 draft 132 kb pdf format imdb 12 Monkeys by David Webb Peoples & Janet Peoples 1995 6/27/94 production draft 196 kb html format imdb 13 Days by David Self 2000 undated, unspecified draft 212 kb html format imdb 13 Ghosts by Neal Marshall Stevens (based on the screenplay by Robb White) revised by Richard D'Ovidio 2001 november 4, 2000 revised production draft 871 kb pdf format imdb 15 Minutes by John Hertzfeld 2001 undated, unspecified draft 155 kb html format imdb 16 Blocks by Richard Wenk 2006 january 2004, unspecified draft 1805 kb pdf format imdb 25th Hour by David Benioff 2002 april 30, 2001 draft 556 kb pdf format imdb 3 Kings by David O. 3 Kings by David O. 3 Kings (Spoils of War) by John Ridley 1999 7/26/95 writers first draft 206 kb html format imdb Airforce One by Andrew W. Airplane!
Syd Field This article is about the screenwriting guru; for information on the British comedian, see Sid Field. Sydney Alvin Field (December 19, 1935 − November 17, 2013) was an American screenwriting guru who wrote several books on the subject of screenwriting. He also conducted workshops and seminars on the subject of producing salable screenplays. Hollywood film producers have increasingly used his ideas on structure as a guideline to a proposed screenplay's potential. Field was born on December 19, 1935 in Hollywood, California.[1] Field taught screenwriting at the Master of Professional Writing Program, University of Southern California. Syd Field died of hemolytic anemia on November 17, 2013, aged 77, at his home in Beverly Hills, California, surrounded by his wife, family, and friends.[2] The paradigm[edit] Field's most notable contribution is his articulation of the ideal Paradigm "three act structure". Syd Field in an instructional video. Books[edit] References[edit] External links[edit]
Douglas Trumbull Early days[edit] Major projects[edit] 1960s[edit] Trumbull's responsibilities and talents grew as the production continued, and he became one of four special effects supervisors on the film (the others were fellow Graphic Films alumnus Con Pederson, along with Tom Howard and Wally Veevers.) Trumbull's most memorable contribution was the development of the slit-scan photography process, used in the "Stargate" sequence. "... I just happened to be in the right place at the right time ... Although Trumbull's association with Kubrick was a huge boost for his career, he swore afterwards that he would "never work for someone else again", in part because Kubrick "was a hell of a taskmaster ... his level of quality-control bordered on perfectionism." Trumbull was often incorrectly credited in print as being the sole special-effects creator for 2001. 1970–1974[edit] Silent Running was produced by Universal on a shoestring budget of one million dollars, one-tenth the budget of 2001. 1975–1980[edit]