Channel: Lessons from the Screenplay
Category: Film & Animation
Tags: how tostorytellingbasicsstory worldvideofilmmakingphilip k dickscreenplaytipscharacterscience fictionvideo essaywritinglessons from the screenplaymichael tuckerscreenwritingscifiscreenwritertom cruisescreenwriting techniquesminority reportsteven spielbergwriting tipsscriptstructurefilmmakerscreenwriting tipsessayexposition
Description: Listen to our podcast episode in which we dive deeper into Minority Report bit.ly/2WPtJSM: Patreon: patreon.com/LFTScreenplay Facebook: facebook.com/lessonsfromthescreenplay Twitter: twitter.com/michaeltuckerla LFTS Merch: standard.tv/collections/lfts Get your first 31 days of CuriosityStream for free by going to curiositystream.com/LFTS Phillip K. Dick is well known for inspiring some of the greatest story worlds ever put on screen, and Minority Report is no exception. But the design of the technology isn’t the most important part of the story world. The concept of Precrime—arresting people before they’ve actually committed a murder—is the important part of Minority Report’s story world; the futuristic cars, jetpacks, and illogically transparent screens are just cool. In this video we compare three versions of this story—Philip K. Dick’s original short story from 1956, Jon Cohen’s 1997 script, and Scott Frank’s final script—to explore how each tries to establish the philosophy of the story world. We look at how they attempt to persuade the audience to believe in the system of Precrime, and examine how the story world itself becomes the antagonist of the story. Let’s take a look at Minority Report. ## Sources: youtube.com/watch?v=4JgxdY1zV2s&ab_channel=BAFTAGuru cinephiliabeyond.org/minority-report-steven-spielbergs-proof-dont-need-sacrifice-substance-produce-spectacle youtube.com/watch?v=A5RsWBFd-U8&ab_channel=Cinemusic7888 scriptmag.com/features/interview-screenwriters-minority-report-jon-cohen-scott-frank ## Credits: Produced by: Michael Tucker (twitter.com/michaeltuckerla) Written by: Brian Bitner (twitter.com/BrianBitner) Edited by: Alex Calleros (twitter.com/alex_calleros) Become a channel member here on YouTube: youtube.com/channel/UCErSSa3CaP_GJxmFpdjG9Jw/join Check out my kit, from screenwriting books to gear: kit.co/LFTS/screenwriting-books LFTS Recommended Reading List: lessonsfromthescreenplay.com/reading-list Translate this video: youtube.com/timedtext_video?ref=share&v=QbMPjas_rRU Thanks to Diego Rojas for composing original music for this video and this channel! Check out more of his work: soundcloud.com/diegorojasguitar TwinSmart's Marxist Arrow is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Artist: twinmusicom.org With the company Twin musicom licensed under the Creative Commons license Attribution (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Artist: twinmusicom.org