Screenwriting Video
Screenwriting Video Maker — Create Script Writing and Film Story Videos.
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SKILL.md
Screenwriting Video Maker — Script Writing and Film Story Videos
The screenwriting manual industry has successfully convinced a generation of aspiring writers that the secret to a great screenplay is a three-act structure with the inciting incident on page 12, the midpoint reversal on page 60, and the climax on page 90 — a formula so rigidly applied that it has produced thousands of screenplays that hit every structural beat with the precision of a metronome and the emotional impact of a tax return, because structure without character is architecture without residents: technically habitable but nobody wants to live there. The paradox of screenwriting is that the format is the most constrained in all of narrative writing — 120 pages maximum, one page per minute of screen time, no interior monologue, no narrator explaining what the character feels, nothing on the page that the camera can't see or the microphone can't hear — and yet the constraint is precisely what makes the craft interesting, because when you can't write "he felt a sadness that reminded him of every departure he'd ever survived," you have to find the action, the gesture, the silence that makes the audience feel the sadness themselves: he picks up a coffee mug, walks to the sink, washes a mug that was already clean, and stares at the water running over his hands for three seconds too long — and the audience understands everything the novelist would have spent a paragraph explaining. Screenwriting video content serves the writer trying to master this particular form of visual storytelling — learning to write in images rather than words, to create characters who reveal themselves through action rather than exposition, to structure scenes where what goes unsaid carries more weight than the dialogue, and to navigate the practical realities of an industry where the screenplay is simultaneously the most important element (without it, nothing gets made) and the most disrespected one (everyone who reads it believes they could have written it better). This tool transforms screenwriting craft into polished educational videos — format-and-structure tutorials covering the technical mechanics, scene-writing workshops demonstrating visual storytelling, dialogue lessons teaching subtext and economy, industry-navigation guides explaining the business of selling scripts, script-analysis breakdowns showing how produced films solved specific writing problems, and the adaptation workshops that teach how to translate novels, true stories, and original ideas into the unique constraints and possibilities of the screenplay form.
Example Prompts
1. Visual Storytelling — Writing What the Camera Sees
"Create a 5-minute video teaching screenwriters to write visually. Opening (0-15 sec): two script excerpts side by side. Left: 'John enters the room. He is a man haunted by his past, carrying the weight of decisions that led to the death of his partner, which he has never forgiven himself for.' Right: 'John enters. Stops in the doorway. His hand goes to the light switch but doesn't flip it. He stands in the dark for a beat, then moves to the kitchen by memory.' 'The first version tells you John's backstory. The second version shows you a man who prefers the dark and knows this room well enough to navigate it without seeing. The camera can film the second version. It cannot film the first.' The rule (15-65 sec): 'A screenplay can only contain what the audience can see and hear. That's the constraint. Everything else — thoughts, feelings, backstory, motivation — must be expressed through action, dialogue, or environment.' 'This isn't a limitation. It's the craft.' Show a common mistake: 'INT. OFFICE - DAY. Sarah sits at her desk, thinking about whether to accept the job offer in Tokyo. She weighs the pros and cons, considering her aging mother, her new relationship, and the career opportunity she's been waiting for her entire life.' 'The camera sees: a woman sitting at a desk. That's it. Everything after "thinking about" is invisible to the audience.' Live revision on screen: 'INT. OFFICE - DAY. Sarah stares at the offer letter. She picks up her phone. Scrolls to "Mom." Hovers over the call button. Sets the phone down. Opens a new browser tab: "Tokyo apartments for rent." Another tab: "JFK to Narita flight time." She looks at the photo on her desk — her and David at the beach last month. She turns the photo face-down. Then turns it back up. Picks up the phone again.' 'Now the camera has something to film. Every internal conflict is expressed through a physical action: the hovering finger, the browser tabs, the photo turned down and back up.' Showing character through environment (65-130 sec): 'The fastest way to reveal character without a word of dialogue: show their space.' 'INT. APARTMENT - MORNING.' 'Version A — telling: "Mark's apartment reveals that he is a meticulous, organized person with a passion for jazz."' 'Version B — showing: "Shoes lined up by the door, organized by color. Books on the shelf, spines aligned to the millimeter. A turntable on a dedicated stand — the only object in the apartment that looks touched. A stack of vinyl records, the top one out of its sleeve."' 'The audience sees the shoes and knows he's meticulous. They see the turntable — the one thing that breaks the sterile order — and know it's what he loves. The contrast between the surgical organization and the handled-with-love records tells a character story in a single shot.' Exercise — three character apartments: 'Show me: a recently divorced father who doesn't want his kids to know he's struggling.' 'The fridge: pizza boxes and beer. But on the counter — a children's placemat, two small cups, a box of goldfish crackers. All arranged neatly.' 'The juxtaposition: the beer and pizza say he's not taking care of himself. The placemat and goldfish say he's trying to take care of them. The neatness of the children's items versus the mess of his own says everything about his priorities.' Action as dialogue replacement (130-200 sec): 'The strongest moments in film are often silent.' Show a scene written two ways. With dialogue: 'SARAH: I don't think I can forgive you. MARK: I understand. I'm sorry. SARAH: Sorry isn't enough. MARK: What can I do? SARAH: Nothing. It's done.' 'The information is clear. The emotion is flat.' Without dialogue: 'Mark sets a coffee cup on the table and slides it toward Sarah. She looks at it. Wraps her hands around it. The warmth. She slides it back across the table. Gets up. Walks to the door. Stops. Doesn't turn around. Opens the door and leaves. Mark stares at the coffee cup, still warm, still full.' 'The coffee cup becomes the scene. Offering it. Accepting the warmth but not the gesture. Returning it. Leaving. The full cup he stares at. Every beat of the conversation happened without a word.' 'When you find yourself writing dialogue that states emotions — "I'm angry," "I'm sad," "I can't forgive you" — ask: what is the physical action that expresses this? Write the action. Delete the dialogue. See if the scene still works. It usually works better.' Scene transitions (200-265 sec): 'The cut between scenes is a storytelling tool.' 'A character says: "I would never, ever do that."' 'CUT TO: the character doing exactly that.' 'The cut IS the joke. The juxtaposition creates meaning that neither scene contains alone.' 'Three transition techniques:' '1. The match cut: a character blows out birthday candles. CUT TO: a different character lighting a cigarette. The flame connects the scenes visually while the context shifts.' '2. The contrast cut: a character at a lavish dinner party, champagne flowing. CUT TO: a different character eating instant noodles alone. The cut comments on inequality without stating it.' '3. The sound bridge: we hear a phone ringing over a scene of someone sleeping. CUT TO: the phone on a desk in an office. The sound crosses the cut before the image does.' Close (265-300 sec): 'Write what the camera sees. Write what the microphone hears. Trust the audience to feel everything else.' 'The photo turned face-down and then back up. The coffee cup slid across the table. The shoes organized by color next to a turntable that looks loved.' 'These are images. They do more work than paragraphs of description. That's the craft of screenwriting: make the invisible visible.'"
2. Scene Structure — The Unit of Screenwriting
"Build a 4-minute video on how scenes work in screenplays. Opening (0-10 sec): 'A screenplay is not a collection of scenes. It's a chain of scenes where each one changes the conditions for the next.' 'If you can remove a scene without affecting what comes after it, the scene shouldn't be in the script.' The scene as a unit of change (10-60 sec): 'Every scene begins with a character wanting something and ends with the situation changed.' 'The change doesn't have to be dramatic. It can be subtle: a character who entered suspicious now exits convinced. A character who entered confident now has doubt.' 'But change must occur. A scene where the character enters and exits in the same emotional and informational state is a scene where nothing happened — and the audience felt it.' Map it visually: 'Beginning state → Obstacle → New information or confrontation → Ending state (different from beginning).' Example — a detective scene: 'Beginning: Detective Chen enters the interrogation room believing the suspect is guilty.' 'Obstacle: The suspect has an alibi.' 'Confrontation: Chen challenges the alibi. The suspect provides a detail that Chen can verify — and the detail accidentally reveals something the suspect shouldn't know.' 'Ending: Chen exits believing the suspect is innocent of this crime but involved in something else entirely.' 'The scene started with one question (did you do it?) and ended with a different, more interesting question (what are you actually hiding?).' Scene goals vs story goals (60-120 sec): 'The character has a scene goal (what they want in this room, right now) and a story goal (what they want across the entire film).' 'Scene goals should often conflict with story goals.' Example: 'Story goal: a father wants to reconnect with his estranged daughter.' 'Scene goal: he's meeting her for lunch and trying not to say the wrong thing.' 'The tension comes from the gap: the story needs them to connect, but the scene-level anxiety of saying the wrong thing creates obstacles.' 'If the scene goal and story goal align perfectly — he wants to reconnect and this scene makes reconnection easy — there's no tension.' 'Tip: give the character something they want in the scene that makes the story goal harder. The father wants to reconnect but also wants to ask for money. Now every kind gesture is contaminated by the ulterior motive.' Entering late and leaving early (120-175 sec): 'The oldest screenwriting advice: enter a scene as late as possible and leave as early as possible.' 'Don't show the character driving to the meeting, parking, walking through the lobby, taking the elevator, and entering the office. Enter the scene: they're already in the office. The meeting is already tense.' 'Don't show the resolution, the goodbyes, the walking to the car. Cut the scene the moment the important thing happens.' Bad version: 'EXT. RESTAURANT - DAY. Sarah parks. Gets out. Walks to the entrance. Pauses. Goes inside. INT. RESTAURANT - CONTINUOUS. Sarah looks around. Sees John at a table. Walks over. Sits down. SARAH: Hi. JOHN: Hi. Thanks for coming. SARAH: Of course.' Good version: 'INT. RESTAURANT - DAY. Sarah is mid-sentence: "—and that's when I realized you'd been lying the entire time." John sets his fork down.' 'We entered late. The boring setup is gone. The audience is dropped into conflict immediately and pieces together the context from what follows.' When to break the rule (175-220 sec): 'Sometimes you enter early on purpose. When the waiting IS the scene.' 'A character sitting in a doctor's waiting room. Every second of sitting, not knowing, builds dread. The scene goal is to receive results. The tension is the wait.' 'If you entered late — the doctor already delivering results — you'd lose the most cinematic part: the anticipation.' 'The rule is: don't show time that doesn't create meaning. Arriving at a restaurant doesn't create meaning. Waiting for a diagnosis does.' Close (220-240 sec): 'Each scene changes something. The character enters with one understanding and leaves with another. You enter the scene late and leave early — unless the waiting is the point.' 'Before you write a scene, answer two questions: what does the character want when they enter, and how is the situation different when they leave? If the answers are the same, you don't have a scene yet.'"
3. Subtext in Dialogue — What Characters Don't Say
"Produce a 3-minute video on writing screenplay dialogue with subtext. Opening (0-8 sec): 'The best dialogue in film history is about something other than what the characters are literally discussing.' 'When a character says exactly what they mean, they're in a therapy session. When they say one thing and mean another, they're in a scene.' The principle (8-45 sec): 'Subtext is the real conversation running underneath the apparent one.' Film example on screen — annotated: 'The scene: two ex-lovers meet at a mutual friend's wedding. The conversation is about the food.' '"The salmon's good." (I didn't expect to see you here.) "It is. Better than the ceremony." (This is awkward and I'm deflecting with humor.) "You always hated ceremonies." (I remember everything about you.) "I hated boring ones. This one was fine." (Don't assume you still know me.)' 'On the surface: food commentary. Underneath: two people navigating the minefield of a shared history in a public setting.' 'The audience reads both layers simultaneously. That's what makes the scene compelling — the gap between what's said and what's meant.' How to write it (45-120 sec): 'Technique 1: Give characters a reason not to say what they mean.' 'People hide their real feelings when:' '— They're in public (the wedding)' '— The truth is too painful (the estranged father)' '— They're afraid of vulnerability (the job candidate)' '— They have an ulterior motive (the con artist)' '— Power dynamics prevent honesty (the employee to the boss)' 'Every one of these situations creates subtext automatically. The character wants to say something but can't or won't, so they say something adjacent.' 'Technique 2: Use concrete topics as emotional proxies.' 'Characters fight about dishes, parking, what to have for dinner — because fighting about the real thing (you don't respect me, I feel invisible, I think we're failing) is too large.' Revision example: 'On the nose: "I feel like you don't prioritize our relationship." → With subtext: "You moved my stuff off the bathroom counter again." "It was taking up too much space." "Everything I own takes up too much space in this apartment, apparently."' 'The fight is about the bathroom counter. The fight is about whether there's room for her in his life. Both are true simultaneously.' 'Technique 3: Let the audience do the work.' 'Don't explain subtext through action lines. Don't write: "She says this but really means that." If the dialogue requires explanation, the subtext isn't working. Rewrite until the two layers are both readable without annotation.' Close (120-180 sec): 'Write the scene about the salmon. About the bathroom counter. About the car keys.' 'The audience will find the love story, the power struggle, the grief underneath.' 'Trust them. They're better at reading subtext than you think — because they navigate subtext in their own conversations every single day. Your dialogue just needs to be as layered as real life. Usually, that means making the characters talk about something smaller than what they feel.'"
Parameters
| Parameter | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
prompt | string | ✅ | Describe the screenwriting topic, technique, or script example |
duration | string | Target length (e.g. "3 min", "4 min", "5 min") | |
style | string | Video style: "visual-storytelling", "scene-structure", "dialogue-subtext", "format-tutorial", "script-analysis" | |
music | string | Background audio: "cinematic-ambient", "typewriter-minimal", "none" | |
format | string | Output ratio: "16:9", "9:16", "1:1" | |
script_format | boolean | Display examples in proper screenplay format with sluglines and action (default: true) | |
side_by_side | boolean | Show before/after comparison of weak and strong script pages (default: true) |
Workflow
- Describe — Outline the screenwriting topic and craft focus
- Upload — Add script pages, film clips for reference, and structure diagrams
- Generate — AI produces the video with script-format examples, visual breakdowns, and pacing
- Review — Verify screenplay format accuracy and craft principles
- Export — Download in your chosen format
API Example
curl -X POST https://mega-api-prod.nemovideo.ai/api/v1/generate \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $NEMO_TOKEN" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"skill": "screenwriting-video",
"prompt": "Create 5-minute visual storytelling lesson: side-by-side telling vs showing script excerpts, camera-can-only-see-and-hear rule, live revision of Sarah job-offer scene from internal monologue to physical actions with browser tabs and photo, character-through-environment with organized apartment and turntable detail, silent coffee-cup scene replacing dialogue, three transition techniques with match-cut contrast-cut and sound-bridge examples",
"duration": "5 min",
"style": "visual-storytelling",
"script_format": true,
"side_by_side": true,
"music": "cinematic-ambient",
"format": "16:9"
}'
Tips for Best Results
- Show script pages in proper format — Courier 12pt, sluglines, action blocks. The AI renders screenplay format when script_format is enabled.
- Compare telling vs showing versions — The unfilmable backstory next to the filmable action makes the lesson instant. The AI uses side-by-side when enabled.
- Use silent scenes to teach visual writing — The coffee-cup scene without dialogue demonstrates the craft better than explanation. The AI builds action-only scenes.
- Annotate subtext in dialogue — Showing the surface line and the underneath meaning simultaneously teaches layer reading. The AI annotates dialogue subtext.
- Enter late in examples — Start every example scene mid-action. The AI models the technique it teaches.
Output Formats
| Format | Resolution | Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| MP4 16:9 | 1080p / 4K | YouTube screenwriting lesson / film school content |
| MP4 9:16 | 1080p | TikTok / Reels writing tip clip |
| MP4 1:1 | 1080p | Instagram / Twitter screenwriting post |
| GIF | 720p | Script comparison / scene structure diagram |
Related Skills
- creative-writing-video — Fiction and storytelling craft
- blog-writing-video — Blog and content writing
- copywriting-video — Marketing and persuasion writing
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