A screenplay is a narrative mechanism, like a bicycle: the energy of the characters and the story move forward in time, guided by precise gears. A useful metaphor for spotting weaknesses and building harmony in writing.
A screenplay is a narrative framework that enables a film to exist and the audience to be drawn into it. It’s like taking a journey. For this journey to be experienced in a rich, almost organic way, it needs a solid structure. However, a film is not a living organism, it’s a technical mechanism.
So I suggest we look at the construction of the script from a mechanical point of view: gears, drive chains, tires, motive power, and so on. We’ll use the mechanics of the bicycle as a metaphor, rather than those of the car or train. A metaphor, in my opinion, that is both useful and helpful for writing.
In a bicycle, it’s we who impart the energy with our muscles, and this energy is transformed, thanks to mechanics, into a movement in space and time. A film is somewhat similar: we move forward in time between a starting point and an ending point. If we compare a film to a bicycle ride, there’s a kind of relentless dimension to the movements we set in motion and sustain. And if the mechanics are right, the journey is very pleasant.
We could compare each turn of the wheel to a shot of the film, in which all the elements coexist permanently: the subject is the strength of the characters’ energy, as well as the various components of the bike: the saddle, the handlebars, the front wheel, the rear wheel, the gears, the tires, the air inside the tires, and so on.
We know that for the trip to go as smoothly as possible, even the oil on the chain has to be taken care of, which we see as one of the elements in the scenario. All it takes is for one element to seize up, go missing or become defective, and potentially bring the whole thing to a halt, slow it down, or make the journey very unpleasant at times.
What’s more, the bike moves through a space, and the space it moves through is the viewer’s mind and sensations. The film gradually enters the spectator’s space. And it has to take the right roads, the paths on which cobblestones won’t make everything vibrate! Or why not, sometimes there may be difficult climbs to get over, where you need encouragement, or dangerous slopes where you’re going too fast.
The object of your work is to ensure that the inner conditions of the story and the narrative are in good relationship with the outer conditions. In other words, to organize the meeting between the mechanics of the film and the interiority of the spectator in a way that is harmonious. A woven, constructed, flexible relationship.
This vision of a screenplay as a little bicycle, with the screenwriter sitting and pedaling, is of course a big step aside! But I believe that this sideways step allows us to take an unusual look at the constituent elements of a screenplay, and to observe certain weaknesses, certain difficulties, certain obstacles that we didn’t see when we were concentrating solely on the characters, the story, and so on.
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.