Write Your Screenplay Podcast

A podcast by Jacob Krueger - Fridays

Fridays

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241 Episodes

  1. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: How To Pitch A Work For Hire Project

    Published: 8/29/2019
  2. Produce Your Script: An Interview with Indie Producer and Filmmaker Ramfis Myrthil

    Published: 8/13/2019
  3. Chernobyl: How To Write A Miniseries

    Published: 7/11/2019
  4. Game of Thrones Final Episode: The Case for Compression

    Published: 5/31/2019
  5. Game of Thrones Episode 5: Three Levels of Structure

    Published: 5/20/2019
  6. Game of Thrones Episode 4: Lessons in Revision

    Published: 5/13/2019
  7. Game of Thrones Episode 3: The Poetry of Violence

    Published: 5/6/2019
  8. Game of Thrones Episode 2: How To Make Them Care

    Published: 5/4/2019
  9. Game of Thrones Episode 1: Save the Best For First

    Published: 4/28/2019
  10. Game of Thrones Season 8 vs Season 1: Building A Series Engine That Lasts

    Published: 4/22/2019
  11. ROMA: Turning Your Life Story Into A Screenplay

    Published: 3/5/2019
  12. From GoodFellas to Breaking Bad with Stephen Molton

    Published: 2/26/2019
  13. Beautiful Boy-Where Does Screenplay Structure Come From?

    Published: 2/12/2019
  14. Destroyer: How to Use Flashbacks in Your Script

    Published: 1/10/2019
  15. MANDY: An Interview with Linus Roache

    Published: 12/4/2018
  16. BlacKkKlansman: Adapting a True Life Story

    Published: 10/19/2018
  17. SUCCESSION PART 2: How To Write Subtext In Your Dialogue

    Published: 9/21/2018
  18. SUCCESSION vs ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT: The Series Engine

    Published: 8/21/2018
  19. HEREDITARY: The Power of the First & Last Image

    Published: 7/11/2018
  20. DEADPOOL 2: Where Tone Meets Genre in Screenwriting

    Published: 6/29/2018

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Rather than looking at movies in terms of "two thumbs up" or "two thumbs down" Award Winning Screenwriter Jacob Krueger discusses what you can learn from them as a screenwriter. He looks at good movies, bad movies, movies we love, and movies we hate, exploring how they were built, and how you can apply those lessons to your own writing. More information and full archives at WriteYourScreenplay.com