Drawing to write: a key to unlocking writing. Drawing, often perceived as difficult, frees the mind and offers a new perspective. By sketching shapes, cards or emotions, you take a step aside to better organize your ideas and boost your creativity.
On the face of it, drawing seems to be a more skill-intensive activity than writing. Most people say they don’t draw well, but yet they often do. For example, who hasn’t drawn “doodles” or geometrical figures while on the phone? This shows that drawing is something we take for granted, even more so than writing.
We can draw without thinking. In a way, having a graphic activity frees up our thinking, as we know when we draw in a meeting, a telephone conversation or while listening to a lecture or conference, by unloading our emotions in an almost automatic way.
As you go along writing a screenplay, you accumulate ideas and ideas. We know we need to organize all these elements, but at some point we hit a roadblock. And yet, we need more elements. I don’t think we should be afraid of having too many elements, or of the perceived difficulty of organizing them. We need new ideas, leads, situations, bits of dramatic canvas, so that we can feel free to extract from all this material things that make sense for our project. But we’re faced with an unmanageable accumulation.
This is where drawing comes in. Make diagrams, geometric shapes, draw characters if you can, maps, paths, or even emotions. Take a moment to “draw anything”!
Drawing allows us to change our perspective. By using brain skills other than those required for writing, drawing helps us to see things differently. These drawings allow us to take a step aside. We can keep them, take photos of them, and even integrate them into our writing.
Even if these drawings are not, strictly speaking, writing, they are a valuable writing tool. They help us to see more clearly, because they allow us to see differently.
Tools and Techniques for Screenwriting and Film Project Development.
In our world where artificial intelligences create films directly from the desires of their authors expressed in very few words, in this world where 3.5-hour films in dark theaters coexist with 10-second videos on social networks—which of these require screenplays, why, and what is a screenplay?
Is a screenplay still useful in an era where everyone carries in their pocket audiovisual creation tools of nearly professional quality? What is the purpose of a screenplay?
For writers, directors, producers, and especially content creators, as they are most often called today, I believe that the screenplay, its methods of creation, its writing techniques, and its ways of telling stories, is an extremely powerful tool to help us create the most impactful audiovisual works possible—works that will best connect with their audiences today and tomorrow, across their respective distribution platforms, whether in movie theaters, on television screens, on SVOD platforms, on community video sites, or on new media built exclusively around collaborative video like TikTok.
This guide does not claim to be exhaustive, but it is based on concrete experiences—those I have lived and those I have facilitated. For over 30 years, I have supported thousands of people in making films of all genres, founded and directed several film festivals, created numerous innovative events around audiovisual media, and also served on creative funding committees. What I share here is therefore subjective and practical, drawn from my journey and my observations in practice.