Dagon wrote:Then I don';t think you need to write out everything. If you were going to try getting someone else to do this movie, then yes, because they'd have to understand what you want it to look like. But if it's just you, then do what you want. If you know what you're doing, then you don't need to write it all out.
Exactly. Probably the best advice. Essentially, screenplays are tools for others (director, producers, execs) to understand the writer's vision.
Even then, action screenplays are pretty sparse with the action sequence description. All of those moments are designed by the director and the storyboard artist.
For example from my favorite action script last year... Star Trek.
Winona PUSHING -- giving birth to their baby -- and we're BACK AND FORTH between a husband and wife that will never see each other again, MUSIC SWELLING as the Kelvin TURNS HARD, avoiding TORPEDOES -- the shuttle BANKING as the Doctor and Nurse help Winona -- and we're ON GEORGE as he HEARS A BABY CRYING -- and TEARS COME TO HIS EYES
Look at how sparse the description reads. In that moment of the movie has so much going on yet Orci and Kurtzman wrote the reason why we should care about the scene.
Great screenwriters don't write the details, they capture the important moments.
I'd recommend storyboarding those action sequences for your stop motion film. Quick descriptions should be enough for the script.