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Episode 320 – Writing Screenplays vs Writing Novels with Emma Jane Heaton

In this episode, Jeff sits down with author Emma Jane Heaton to talk about her writing and what she’s been working on. They discuss the difference between writing screenplays and writing a novel and talk about what they’ve learned doing both. 

Find Emma Jane’s film work here: https://www.youtube.com/@EmHeatonFilm

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Watch Jeff and Emma Jane here.

AI Summary of the Session

In this conversation, Emma-Jane Heaton and Jeff Elkins discuss the transition from writing novels to creating screenplays, specifically focusing on the differences in craft, the collaborative nature of filmmaking, and strategies for character development.

Professional Updates

Emma-Jane shares that she has recently finished editing the second book in her nine-part sci-fi series and plans to publish it by June. While her original goal was to treat filmmaking as a hobby while earning a living from her books, she finds that her film work—specifically directing, producing, and writing horror shorts—has become a major focus. She is currently entering a werewolf short film titled Lone into festivals.

Screenplays vs. Novels: The “Time Lock” and Conciseness

The speakers highlight several technical differences between the two mediums:

The Collaborative Nature of Film

A significant portion of the conversation focuses on how filmmaking is inherently more collaborative than novel writing:

Process and Troubleshooting

Critique of Recent Media

The conversation concludes with a critique of the final season of Stranger Things. Both speakers feel the season suffered because there were too many plot lines and the writers were “too in love” with their characters to let them face permanent consequences or death. Jeff suggests that a better approach would have been to “do less” and focus on a more heart-wrenching, earned climax.

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