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  1. Dartmouth Libraries
  2. Research Guides
  3. Dartmouth Libraries Guides
  4. Film Studies
  5. Screenwriting

Film Studies

This guide is an introduction to the resources for Film Studies at Dartmouth. If you are interested in Television, see the separate research guide for Television.
  • Introduction
  • Basic information on film
  • Finding a specific film title
  • Streaming film services
    • Readings on streaming video
  • National cinemas This link opens in a new window
  • Course guides for Film & Media Studies
  • Starting your research ...
  • Researching early films
  • Film history through the decades
    • 1960's film history
    • 1970's film history
  • Books about film
  • Film reviews
  • Journals & magazines about film
  • Film theory
    • Feminist film theory
    • Auteur theory
  • Film criticism
    • Feminist film criticism
  • Box office information
  • Film audiences
  • Mass media Industry
  • Primary sources for historical film research
    • Cinema Pressbooks from the Original Studio Collections
    • Congressional Hearings & Communism
    • Film Daily
    • Herrick Library Digital Collections
    • Hollywood and the Production Code
    • Media History Digital Library
    • Moving Picture World
  • Themes
  • Acting
  • Racial & ethnic representation on film
    • African American diaspora
    • Asian American diaspora
    • Hispanic American diaspora
    • Native American & Indigenous peoples diasporas
    • Examples on film
  • LGBTQIA+
    • Examples on film
  • Women on/in/creating Film
    • Examples on film
  • Film genres This link opens in a new window
  • Film & society
  • Screenwriting
  • Film adaptations
    • Shakespeare on film
    • Television to Film adaptations
  • Color in film
  • Film music
  • Film festivals
    • A short list of film festivals
  • Film awards
  • Disney
  • Hitchcock
  • Internet resources
  • Future of Media
  • Back to Film & Media
  • Scholarly communication This link opens in a new window
  • Video Help

Subject Librarian

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Lucinda M. Hall
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Contact:
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Subjects: Film and Media Studies, Geography, Polar Studies

Manuals for screenwriting

  • Cover artThe screenwriter's bible: a complete guide to writing, formatting, and selling your script by David Trottier
    • Book
    Call Number: Baker-Berry PN 1996 .T76 2019
    ISBN: 9781935247210
    Publication Date: 7th ed.
    This 7th edition marks the 25th anniversary of one of the most popular, authoritative, and useful books on screenwriting. Always up-to-date and reliable, it contains everything that both the budding and working screenwriter need under one cover -- five books in one! ...
  • Cover ArtThe screenwriter's roadmap: 21 ways to jumpstart your story by Neil Landau
    • On Campus or VPN
    • E-Book
    Call Number: eBook
    ISBN: 9781136071898
    Finally, a GPS system for screenwriters! The potentially long and arduous journey of writing a screenplay was just made easier to navigate with The Screenwriter's Roadmap. Avoid the wrong turns, dead ends, gaping p(l)otholes, and other obstacles that result in frustration, wasted time, and wasted energy. The Screenwriter's Roadmap keeps you on track and helps you reach your destination- a finished, professional quality screenplay. ...
  • Cover artScreenwriting for neurotics: a beginner's guide to writing a feature-length screenplay from start to finish by Scott Winfield Sublett
    • On Campus or VPN
    • E-Book
    Call Number: eBook
    ISBN: 9781609382766
    Screenwriting for Neurotics is a quirky and accessible handbook for beginning screenwriters. Whether you are a student in a screenwriting class or just someone who wants to try their hand at writing for film or television, this handy guidebook makes the entire process simple and unintimidating. Scott Winfield Sublett walks you step by step from start to finish and helps you navigate potential and unforeseen difficulties along the way, offering handy tips and suggestions to keep you from becoming blocked or stalled. ...
  • Cover artWriting for animation, comics, and games by Christy Marx
    • On Campus or VPN
    • E-Book
    Call Number: eBook
    ISBN: 9781136144455
    Writing for Animation, Comics, and Games explains the practical aspects of creating scripts for animation, comics, graphic novels, and computer games. It details how you can create scripts that are in the right industry format, and follow the expected rules for you to put your best foot forward to help you break-in to the trade. ...

Keeping up with the journal literature

Want an easy way to keep up with the journal literature for all facets of Film Studies? And you use a mobile device? You can install the BrowZine app and create a custom Bookshelf of your favorite journal titles. Then you will get the Table of Contents (ToCs) of your favorite journals automatically delivered to you when they become available. Once you have the ToC's you can download and read the articles you want.

You can get the app from the App Store or Google Play.

Don't own or use a mobile device? You can still use BrowZine! It's now available in a web version. You can get to it here. The web version works the same way as the app version. Find the journals you like, create a custom Bookshelf, get ToCs and read the articles you want.

A short definition for screenwriting

A document setting out all the scenes, dialogue, and action of a feature film, sometimes including details of camera position, camera angle,shot size, and so on (see shooting script). The script identifies what needs to be shot, what has to be made in terms of sets, props and costumes, the locations that will be required, the roles to be cast, and the time frame of the shoot. A script is in essence, and crucially, a planning document: it is used in budgeting and arranging the production of the film. So, for example, production personnel, including those responsible for casting, costume, hair, props, and special effects, will make use of the information in the script in planning their work. The format and style of a script are functional and follow recognized conventions (for example, all scripts are presented in 12-point Courier font), and these are consistent across the film production industry.

[Source: Kuhn, A., & Westwell, G. (2020). Script. In A Dictionary of Film Studies. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 21 Feb. 2021]

Storytelling terminology

The vocabulary used in the mainstream film industry for story development and scriptwriting, developed with the purpose of keeping plot, action, and character motivation as clear as possible so as to maximize audience involvement. Some of this terminology is taken from drama and literature, and some has been created ad hoc. Character establishment is the key to both narrative clarity and audience involvement, and a mainstream fiction film will ensure that each of a story’s main characters is established through a specific scene or vignette. The Godfather (Francis Ford Coppola, US, 1972), the story of a mafia crime family, establishes the main characters through various scenes set at a wedding that takes place early in the film. The inciting incident, also known as the disruption of equilibrium, sets up a through-line for the central characters of the film, and this ensures that the characters are seen to have clear goals, or character objectives. In The Godfather, the head of the crime family, the Don, is badly wounded in an assassination attempt. This is the inciting incident: it disrupts the equilibrium of the fictional world set out in the opening scenes, where the Don’s authority is shown as ensuring peace and stability. The through-line of the Don’s eldest child, Sonny, established by the attack on his father, is to kill his father’s enemies: this goal motivates Sonny’s actions in a range of scenes. The through-line of a character, their overarching external goal, translates into specific scene-objectives, action beats and change of beats (see beats), and this consistency ensures that the audience can understand a character’s actions. If a character were to break their through-line, their actions would become confusing because their behaviour would appear to have no coherent motivation. Clarity of motivation—consistency of through-line—creates the emotional bond between viewer and character that is the aim of the mainstream film. Character arc sets out how a character is changed and influenced by events in the story. In The Godfather, Michael, the Don’s youngest son, is established as someone who is going to follow his own path: he does not intend take part in the family’s activities. However, through a number of incidents—the assassination attempt on the Don, the need to assassinate a closely-guarded adversary, and the revelation of a conspiracy against the Don—Michael’s intentions are changed. His character arc takes him from being outside the family to being its committed leader. In a mainstream film it is important that the character arc be resolved and returned to equilibrium. The central character needs to achieve their external objective, and this is also likely to resolve an inner conflict. For Michael, the son in The Godfather, taking charge of the family means he is able to protect the Don: this constitutes the resolution of Michael’s external goal. This protective role also allows Michael to express his love and respect for his father, an unresolved tension—an inner conflict—established at the start of the film. Conflict, tension, and resolution are regarded as the essential ingredients for a feature film story that has the plot and the momentum necessary to involve an audience. Film scriptwriting uses the dramatic theatrical terms protagonist and antagonist because central characters in an adversarial relationship is an age-old dramatic trope.   ...

[Source: Kuhn, A., & Westwell, G. (2020). Storytelling terminology. In A Dictionary of Film Studies. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 10 May. 2023]

In the Library's collections

The following are useful subject headings for searching the online catalog.

  • motion picture authorship
    This is the subject heading used instead of "screenwriting." The books on screenwriting and screenwriters are shelved in the PN 1996 through PN 1997.85 on Baker Level 4.
  • motion picture authorship AND manual
    This is a subject, keyword search.
  • screenwriters
  • women screenwriters
  • screenplays
  • motion picture plays technique

Introductory reading(s)

  • Cover artAnalysing the screenplay by Jill Nelmes, ed.
    • Book
    Call Number: Baker-Berry PN 1996 .A64 2011
    ISBN: 9780203843383
    Most producers and directors acknowledge the crucial role of the screenplay, yet the film script has received little academic attention until recently, even though the screenplay has been in existence since the end of the 19th century. Analysing the Screenplay highlights the screenplay as an important form in itself, as opposed to merely being the first stage of the production process. ...
  • Cover artEssentials of screenwriting: the art, craft, and business of film and television writing by Richard Walter
    • On Campus or VPN
    • E-Book
    Call Number: eBook
    ISBN: 9780452296275
    Publication Date: Updated ed.
    Hollywood's premier teacher of screenwriting shares the secrets of writing and selling successful screenplays. Anyone fortunate enough to win a seat in Professor Richard Walter's legendary class at UCLA film school can be confident their career has just taken a quantum leap forward. His students have written more than ten projects for Steven Spielberg alone, plus hundreds of other Hollywood blockbusters and prestigious indie productions, including two recent Oscar winners for best original screenplay-Milk (2008) and Sideways (2006). In this updated edition, Walter integrates his highly coveted lessons and principles from Screenwriting with material from his companion text, The Whole Picture, and includes new advice on how to turn a raw idea into a great movie or TV script-and sell it. ...
  • Cover ArtThe Hollywood pitching bible by Douglas Eboch; Ken Aguado
    • Book
    Call Number: Baker-Berry PN 1995.9 .M29 E26 2018
    ISBN: 9781717242792
    Publication Date: 3rd ed.
    Finally, a book that tells the truth about the art of pitching in Hollywood. The Hollywood Pitching Bible breaks it down, step by step. From choosing the right idea, to selling it in the room, this book tells you how it's done, in clear language, suitable for the beginner or the seasoned Hollywood professional. ...
  • Cover artInclusive ccreenwriting for film and television by Jess King
    • On Campus or VPN
    • E-Book
    Call Number: eBook
    ISBN: 9781000584240
    Breaking down the traditional structures of screenplays in an innovative and progressive way, while also investigating the ways in which screenplays have been traditionally told, this book interrogates how screenplays can be written to reflect the diverse life experiences of real people. Jess King explores how existing paradigms of screenplays often exclude the very people watching films and TV today. Taking aspects such as characterization, screenplay structure, and world-building, King offers ways to ensure your screenplays are inclusive and allow for every person's story to be heard. ...
  • Cover artScreenwriter's compass character as true north by Guy Gallo
    • On Campus or VPN
    • E-Book
    Call Number: eBook
    ISBN: 9781138136458
    Ever watch a movie, and despite great production value, fantastic action sequences, a great cast, etc, you come away thinking-I just didn't buy it. Chances are it was because you didn't care about the characters. Screenwriter's Compass presents a new way of approaching screenwriting, examining how effective screen storytelling must be grounded in the vivid imagining and presentation of character. Screenwriter's Compass will not offer formulas to follow but instead will give you the tools needed to chart your own path to screenwriting success. ...

Selected book title(s)

  • Cover artAlternative scriptwriting: successfully breaking the rules by Ken Dancyger; Jeff Rush
    • On Campus or VPN
    • E-Book
    Call Number: eBook
    ISBN: 9781136053696
    Alternative Scriptwriting is an insightful and inspiring book on screenwriting concerned with challenging you to take creative risks with genre, tone, character, and structure.
  • Cover ArtBackstory series by Patrick. McGilligan
    • Book
    • On Campus or VPN
    • E-Book
    Call Number: Check catalog for locations
    ISBN: 9780520204270
    The Backstory series is a unique collection of "oral histories" that chronicle the lives and careers of notable Hollywood screenwriters--in their own words.
  • Cover artBring the funny: the essential companion for the comedy screenwriter by Greg DePaul
    • On Campus or VPN
    • E-Book
    Call Number: eBook
    ISBN: 9781138929258
    A sharp, funny book about comedy screenwriting from a successful screenwriter that uses recent - as in this century - movies you've actually seen as examples. ...
  • Cover artScript culture and the American screenplay by Kevin Alexander Boon
    • On Campus or VPN
    • E-Book
    Call Number: eBook
    ISBN: 9780814332634
    Though the history of the screenplay is as long and rich as the history of film itself, critics and scholars have neglected it as a topic of serious research. Script Culture and the American Screenplay treats the screenplay as a literary work in its own right, presenting analyses of screenplays from a variety of frameworks, including feminism, Marxism, structuralism, philosophy, and psychology. ...
  • Cover artWomen in Chinese martial arts films of the new millennium: narrative analyses and gender politics by Ya-chen Chen
    • Book
    Call Number: Baker-Berry PN 1995.9 .H3 C54 2012
    ISBN: 9780739139103
    Women and Gender in Chinese Martial Arts Films of the New Millennium is an excavation of underexposed gender issues focusing mainly on contradictory and troubled feminism in the film narratives. In the cinematic world of martial arts films, one can easily find representations of women of Ancient China released from the constraints of patriarchal social order to revel in a dreamlike space of their own. They can develop themselves, protect themselves, and even defeat or conquer men. This world not only frees women from the convention of foot-binding, but it also "unbinds" them in terms of education, critical thinking, talent, ambition, opportunities to socialize with different men, and the freedom or right to both choose their spouse and decide their own fate. ...
  • Cover artWomen screenwriters today: their lives and words by Marsha McCreadie
    • Book
    Call Number: Baker-Berry PN 1998.2 .M425 2006
    ISBN: 9780275985424
    The question of whether women write from a unique perspective has been debated since the silent era. McCreadie examines how this female sensibility has been defined and whether, in fact, it exists at all. Such films as Lost in Translation and Monster suggest that women screenwriters are moving in a new direction, heading away from the big-budget action movies that dominate Hollywood today. But action-driven genre films, like the thrillers of Alexandra Seros, seem to belie the perception that women write films that are more dialogue- and character-driven than those of male screenwriters. Whether or not women actually write differently from men and about different topics, the author's unique approach, working with and through the words and lives of the women screenwriters themselves, allows both readers and writers an otherwise unattainable look into the ever-growing and ever more essential world of women in Hollywood. ...

Other library resource(s)

Between the collections in Rauner Special Collections and Baker/Berry Libraries, Dartmouth has a large collection of scripts. Do a title search for the movie you want and see what you find.

  • Resource logoAdaptation from Oxford Bibliographies Online by Thomas Leitch, Kyle Meikle
    • On Campus or VPN
    Call Number: Electronic resource
    ISBN: 9780199791286
    Studies of cinematic adaptations—films based, as the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences puts it, on material originally presented in another medium—are scarcely a century old. Even so, particular studies of adaptation, the process by which texts in a wide range of media are transformed into films (and more recently into other texts that are not necessarily films), cannot be properly understood without reference to the specific period they were produced in. ...
  • Resource logoFilm scripts online by Alexander Street Press
    • On Campus or VPN
    • Database
    Call Number: Electronic resource
    Film Scripts Online is an ongoing collection of feature films, when completed, will hold 1,000 scripts and over 100,000 scenes. Many of the scripts have never been published. The database is full-text searchable and includes detailed indexing on scenes, characters, and people. Supplemental information includes short biographies on the writers and awards given to individual films have been noted.
  • Resource logoCreative labor in cinema and media industries from Oxford Bibliographies Online by Michael Curtin, Kevin Sanson, John Vanderhoef
    • On Campus or VPN
    Call Number: Electronic resource
    ISBN: 9780199791286
    The rapidly burgeoning popularity of cinema at the beginning of the 20th century favored industrialized modes of creativity organized around large production studios that could churn out a steady stream of narrative feature films. By the mid-1910s, a handful of Hollywood studios became leaders in the production, distribution, and exhibition of popular commercial movies. In order to serve incessant demand for new titles, the studios relied on a set of conventions that allowed them to regularize production and realize workplace efficiencies. This entailed a socialized mode of creativity that would later be adopted by radio and television broadcasters. ...
  • Dialogue: learning from the masters by Mike De Luca, host
    • DVD
    Call Number: Jones Media DVD #various numbers, check the online catalog
    An interview series that looks at some of the more notable screenwriters of our time. The writers interviewed include Paul Haggis, Sheldon Turner, Stuart Beattie, David Goyer, Ted Griffith, Jim Uhle, Ganz & Mandel, Jose Rivera, Scott Rosenberg, Callie Khouri, John Hamburg, Nick Kazan.
  • Resource logoNarrative from the Oxford Bibliographies Online by Donald F. Larsson
    • On Campus or VPN
    Call Number: Electronic resource
    ISBN: 9780199791286
    Narrative is often simply equated with story, a sequence of causally linked events with a beginning, a middle, and an end; however, narrative has also come to be understood as an essential component of human discourse and a complex concept in its own right for many disciplines in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. The study of narrative (narratology) has focused on written fiction, even though stories may be told (narrated) through a variety of media, including the cinema, but because motion pictures have historically drawn on literary sources, literary narratology has had a major influence on the study of film narrative as such. ...
  • Cover artWithout lying down: Frances Marion and the power of women in Hollywood by Bridget Terry & Cari Beaucamp
    • Video
    • On Campus or VPN
    Call Number: Sreaming video
    Gives voice to Frances Marion's words taken from her letters, diaries and memoirs. Footage from more than twenty of Marion's movies align with commentary by silent film historian Kevin Brownlow, critic Leonard Maltin and Marion's biographer, Cari Beauchamp.

Finding scholarly articles & journals

Articles and other writings about screenwriting can be found in many publications. Our collection doesn't have any current titles that look exclusively at screenwriting. You can use Film & Television Literature Index or the search box at the top of the page.

  • "A Hollywood Muse Sought at Georgetown" from The Washington Post by Ryan Bacic
    • On Campus or VPN
    Call Number: Electronic resource
    Publication Date: 12/4/2017
    A recent article from The Washington Post about screenwriting professor John Glavin from Georgetown University.
  • Resource logoFilm & television literature index
    • On Campus or VPN
    • Database
    Call Number: Electronic resource
    This index covers over 300 journal and magazine titles for film and television reviews, scholarly and critical analysis of cinema and television, and articles of popular interest about film and television. About half the journals and magazines are film periodicals and the other half cover film and television with some regularity. Subject coverage includes film & television theory, preservation & restoration, writing, production, cinematography, technical aspects, and reviews.
  • Resource logoThe web of science citation databases by ISI (Institute for Scientific Information)
    • On Campus or VPN
    • Database
    Call Number: Electronic resource
    The online version of 3 separate ISI indexes: Arts & Humanities Citation Index, Science Citation Index and, Social Sciences Citation Index.

Internet resource(s)

  • ASA logo
    American Screenwriters Association
    • Link
    American Screenwriters Association was the first screenwriting organization developed exclusively for emerging screenwriters, and we continue to provide guidance and support for new and upcoming screenwriters.
  • The Black List logo
    The Black List
    • Link
    The Black List is where filmmakers find great material to make films and great material finds filmmakers to make them.
  • Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting
    • Link
    The Don and Gee Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting is the world’s most esteemed screenwriting competition. Each year up to five $30,000 fellowships are awarded to authors who have previously earned less than $5,000 writing for film or television.
  • The Screenwriter's Market
    • Link
    A place where screenwriters without an agent and producers seeking screenplays can find each other.
  • Screenwriting.info
    • Link
    This overview tells about the screenplay format writing rules and screenwriting etiquette you need to know about. As you browse this material, you will see the words 'don't', 'avoid' and '...' unless you are directing the movie.' Pay attention!
  • Association of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences logo
    Screenwriting Resources from A.M.P.A.S.
    • Link
    Screenwriting tips from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
  • Script Magazine
    • Link
    Script has been the leading source for information on the craft and business of writing for film and television since 1995. With inside information, articles written by working writers and filmmakers, and in-depth interviews, Script is the resource on every scriptwriter’s must-read list.
  • Scripts on Screen logo
    Scripts on Screen
    • Link
    Scripts on Screen is a movie script search engine. It indexes films from 300+ sites – to help you find the script you want. They label the draft version if known to them and whether it is a PDF. Links that cost money are marked with a dollar sign ($).
  • Writers Guild of America, East
    • Link
    The Writers Guild of America, East, (WGAE) is a labor union of thousands of professionals who are the primary creators of what is seen or heard on television and film in the U.S., as well as the writers of a growing portion of original digital media content. They have a whole section of "Resources" for screenwriters.
  • Writers Guild of America, West
    • Link
    The official site of the union representing writers in the motion picture, broadcast, cable and new media industries. They have a whole section of "Writer's Resources" for screenwriters.
  • Written by ...
    • Database
    • Link
    Written by ... is the official magazine of the Writers Guild of America, West.
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  • Next: Film adaptations >>
  • Last Updated: Apr 25, 2025 12:36 PM
  • URL: https://researchguides.dartmouth.edu/filmstudies
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Subjects: Film and Media Studies
Tags: Arts, box office, festivals, FILM, film aesthetics, film color, film criticism, film music, film reviews, film studies, future of media, genres, LGBTQIA+, media industry, primary resources, queer cinema, representation in film, screenwriting, streaming film services, themes, women in film

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