How to Write for Animation by Jeffrey Scott
Contents
- 1 Getting Ready to Write
- 2 Writing for Animation
- 2.1 Basic Overview
- 2.2 How to Write a Premise
- 2.3 Developing Your Story Beats
- 2.4 How to write an Outline
- 2.5 How to Write a Script
- 2.6 Writing Description
- 2.7 Writing Dialogue
- 2.8 How to Write Funny Stuff
- 2.9 Feature, Internet, and Sample Scripts
- 2.10 Creating an Animated Series
- 2.11 Writing a Presentation, Bible, and Pilot
- 3 Selling Your Animated Project
Getting Ready to Write
Understanding the World of Animation
A Brief Overview of Animation production - From Script to Finished Cartoon
Types of Animation
Types of Distribution
Audiences
Types of Animated Media
Genres of Animation
Non-Prime-Time Animation
Prime-Time Animation
Choosing Which Type of Animation to Write
Tools of the Trade
Writing for Animation
Basic Overview
TV most common format is the "half hour" (22 minute) 3 basic steps:
The Premise
Premise - a simple telling of the story, 1.5-3 pgs. Beginning middle end.
- Communicates the story
- Sells the story
Should be as short as possible but long enough to tell the story!
Economy of words.
Work well in context of series - fit characters and format
Needs to stand out as different
old idea + new time/place/characters = fresh idea
character-driven story
The less experienced (younger) your audience, the more interested in action rather than people.
Look at what's popular (really?)
Keep it simple
Working writer needs to be able to come up with LOTS of ideas. Like, 50+ at once, and at best half approved.
Keep a file of ideas.
Stay true to your audience - whether the ultimate audience of the show or the editors reviewing the premises.
What does the buyer/backer want?
Next Comes the Outline
An outline is a complete story, in written prose form, laying out every scene that will be in the final script. (Story beats)
Half-hour outline: 15-25 beats, 10-20 pages.
Beats (scenes): 5 sec to 5 minutes long
Dialogue optional!
Then Comes the Script
In screenplay format!
- description of the physical environment
- any action
- dialogue
- transitions, camera angles, camera moves when necessary
Format Lengths
- 7 minute
- Looney Tunes, etc. Slapstick, no time for character or story
- 11 minute "Quarter Hour"
- Powerpuff Girls, Dragon Tales, WordGirl - story arc, minor character changes, B story, no act breaks (act break between episodes)
- 22 minute "Half Hour"
- My Little Pony, Batman, Muppet Babies. Time for A, B, C stories, character interaction. 2-3 acts, sometimes a cold open. 30-45 pages.
The following designations do not appear in the book
- 44 minute "Hour"
- uncommon in animation as a format, but frequently done as a two-parter of 22 minute episodes. Also Star Trek: TNG. A plot, B plot, C plot, D-velopment. You can have one main story going on and a secondary framing story in the background, or something evolving over the course of the episode, worldbuilding, etc.
- 89 minute "Feature"
- The minimum for a movie to be considered an animated feature - and hence the running time of most non-Disney animated features. Sometimes a 4-parter TV movie broken into 4 22minute episodes, for example WordGirl's "The Rise of Miss Power". Each act practically has its own 3 act structure, lots of time for musical numbers etc. Think of it this way: you can introduce a season-arc-sized problem in the first half and resolve it in the second, without having to reference it over the season. See also the (frequently overused) Blake Snyder's Beat Sheet, from Save the Cat, which expands each of the four acts of the dramatic structure with 3 acts or so each.
If you're not pitching to an existing show, choose your format based on how you like to write, or what depth of story you're best at.
How to Write a Premise
Developing Your Story Beats
Logic
Putting the Beats in Order
Breaking a Scene into Beats
Story Dynamics
How to write an Outline
How to Write a Script
How to Begin Your Script
Editing Your Script
Writing Description
Visualization
The Importance of Communication
Continuity
Pacing
Writing Dialogue
Dialogue Checklist
How to Write Funny Stuff
Feature, Internet, and Sample Scripts
Writing an Animated Feature
Writing a Sample Script
Writing Animation for the Internet
This book was written before YouTube existed, it has no useful information here.