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Posted März 3, 2008 - 9:53am
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A little help, please? (Format-Related Question) |
So, exactly what is the difference [format-wise] between a Graphic Novel/Comic Book script and, say, a screenplay? I've written a screenplay, and am toying with the idea of writing a graphic novel script this year. But I haven't got the sightest clue how to go about it.
Could anyone help point me in the right direction?
(I couldn't figure out if I should post this here or the Formatting forum - I decided to post it here because you'd all know best XD)
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Posted März 3, 2008 - 3:24pm
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RE: A little help, please? (Format-Related Question) |
A graphic novel is broken into pages, which are further broken down into panels or cells (the vocabulary is a little fast and loose). There are two styles of graphic novel/comic book scripts - actually there's probably a million - but the main two are a synopsis type of script that instructs the artist to draw the main action, and then the author fills in the dialogue later, or a detailed script that you'll probably want to write for this frenzy.
A good resource is this page: http://www.comicbookresources.com/columns/index.cgi?column=pd&article=21... which shows a couple of example pages, and this one: http://www.marvwolfman.com/WHAT%20TH%2049.html
Both of these are templates so feel free to take them as a starting point rather than written in stone.
And there's a bunch of other resources online if you google comic book scripts or writing for comics. Hope this helped!
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Posted März 3, 2008 - 6:00pm
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RE: A little help, please? (Format-Related Question) |
Like other people have said, a graphic novel script is usually broken up into pages and panels. But personally, as I'm both a writer AND artist, I prefer to figure out page layouts and such while I'm drawing, not while I'm writing. So I just write out the comic script more like a movie script.
But if you're writing it professionally, and/or if you want someone else to draw it, then DEFINITELY, DEFINITELY use the official way of formatting.
I think it depends on what you want to do with the script, who is going to see it, and your personal style.
But of course, I'm not a professional. Nowhere close. I'm just a measly little webcomic artist :)
__________________________________
SF '07: Sand & Stone (Won)
SF '08: Untitled [amount plotted: 5%]
Angelfish, my sci-fi/fantasy webcomic.
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Posted März 11, 2008 - 12:23pm
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RE: A little help, please? (Format-Related Question) |
I've done some very amateur comicking before, and the way I do it is that I write a script pretty much similar to a screenplay first, and then do "thumbnails" of page layouts to get a good idea of how things will be paced and how everything will look. It also helps me get a good idea of whether what I've written is actually going to work on the page, and lets me know if I need to make any changes to the script to make the story flow better before I start putting full pages together.
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Progress Blog | Snippets & Doodles
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Posted März 27, 2008 - 8:37pm
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RE: A little help, please? (Format-Related Question) |
It depends on the author, what they are trying to convey to the artist, and what the artist/author relationship is. I am lucky that my husband is my artist so I can write the script how I want and if he doesn't 'get' what I wanted per panel, all he has to do is lean over the desk and ask me. I tell him what I NEED to happen on this page and he can fill in the blanks, and I only write something if I want it drawn. If you are the artist as well as the writer, you won't need as much detail per panel as, say, a writer whose artist is a thousand miles away.
Some OGN authors write their scripts like screenplays, including camera angles. Alan Moore rambles on for fifteen pages about the God of War for a one-panel description. I'm serious. His standard 22 page comic book scripts were easilly a hundred pages long. But, he's cheating.
Typical Marvel way, however, is page, panel, description.
Write On!
-K
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Posted März 28, 2008 - 5:41pm
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RE: A little help, please? (Format-Related Question) |
I decided to throw out any rules (whatever they are) since I'm not verifying as a winner this year.
I don't have a "real" computer.
I'm doing something inbetween a comic and graphic novel - I suppose. I've written 100 scene ideas on giant index cards. I've decided to do a full page for major parts of the story. Kind of in the style of Mad Magazine's old "behind the scenes". That will be on the right-hand page. Then on the left hand page I'll do close ups and more of the story.
Probably in two columns - one frames, one story.
I'm a real beginner with cartooning and have little drawing talent. I've decided to do some kind of mixed media - cartooning / collage / whatever works.
I have no intent to publish so I'm pretty free to do whatever art and format I want.
Possible title: "Senior Delinquents"
I have some sub-plots and comedic "how to's".
If I do 6 to 7 pages of drawing a day - the full pages of penciling will be done by the 15th of April. I figure penciling isn't cheating - it's extra. But it's easier for me to tell the story visually.
I found adapting one of my short stories into a comic was harder than doing NaNoWriMo. I'm serious - I've won NaNo 3 times (one year close to 100k) and wrote a 20k stage play last year for Fenzy. I think starting with a comic/graphic novel format will be easier than adapting.
I suppose the length makes it more of a graphic novel unless I figure how to break it up into a series of comics.
TJ
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