’A scenario that gives, on reading, the sensation of the soundtrack of the film, will have a rare, extremely convincing evocative power.}
A film is, physiologically, an object that addresses only two of our senses: vision and hearing. The scenario is the prefiguration of the film, its moment and its space of invention, and it deals with an immense number of elements. From only a few words, it must bring to the reader’s mind: a story, characters, costumes, sets, sound atmospheres, music, sound effects, historical contexts, emotions...
In the viewer’s experience, I usually say that sound represents 70% of the film. Why this hypothesis, which is quite basic, it is true? Because we are physiologically freer in front of the image than in front of sound: it is easy to close our eyes, to look away, but much less so to come out of a sound in which we are immersed. One could object to me that this is true in the case of a screening in a cinema but much less so in the case of a screening on a mobile phone for example: we are less bathed in sound (except if we wear headphones, in which case the sound can be even better than in a cinema). Moreover, just as a film can be seen in different contexts, and in particular by being immersed in the soundtrack, sound does not become, under any circumstances, a secondary element of cinema.
Imagine a strident, bumpy, unpleasant sound on beautifully framed and illuminated images: the film will be unbearable in thirty seconds and you will probably leave the room very quickly. Now imagine fuzzy, poorly filmed, shaky images, served by a magnificent soundtrack of deep counterpoints between orchestral music and real sound effects: you will live a powerful film experience. That’s why I propose this simplistic idea that sound represents 70% of the film. This does not mean that the 30% of the work on the image is not essential, of course!
It is not complicated in itself to write, in your script, sound evocations. The important thing is to think about it, and especially to think, when reading again, about what we hear in our heads during the reading.
In cinema, we usually separate the sound into four “tracks”:
When we “write the sound” in our script, we realize that these new sound elements that we integrate can, for some, because we have taken the trouble to describe them, become real dramatic actors: the sound of the school bell will become a major element of the character’s psychology, which will intervene at a key moment in the film, to bring about a fundamental awareness in the story, for example.
In short, by choosing to “write the sound” in your script, you give yourself the opportunity to make the sound truly an actor in the film. For the final spectator it will be an even more intense cinematic sensation. For the reader of the scenario, its reading will be of exceptional pleasure. And for the screenwriter, it is an opportunity to find new cinematographic ideas.
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.