Amy Suto

Hello! πŸ‘‹ I’m Amy Suto, a published author and freelance memoir ghostwriter. Subscribe to my newsletter & writing job board here!

Adventures in 24 Hour Filmmaking
Adventures, All Posts, Musings Amy Suto

Adventures in 24 Hour Filmmaking

Every year, USC hosts a 24 hour film contest called the Ed Wood Film Festival. It sets out to prove that students can make a better film in 24 hours than Ed Wood could in his career. Quality aside, 24 hour filmmaking competitions are a great chance to test run ideas, experiment with special effects, and learn how much coffee it takes to pull a productive all-nighter. (Answer: four cups MINIMUM.)

Read More
How to Create A Web Series [Part One: Pre-Production]

How to Create A Web Series [Part One: Pre-Production]

This year is my year of doing big, scary things I've never done before. In December, I remember walking home from class and thinking, "what challenges scare me?" I came up with two: skydiving and helming a web series.Since skydiving is a perfectly rational fear I don't want to tackle anytime soon, I decided to create my own web series. It's a good challenge since I want to be a showrunner one day, and this experience will help me hone important skills, like serving some of the best crafty you've ever had in your life. (People who have had my chocolate chip cookies know what's up.) My web series is called Antidote 15, and you can read more about it here.

Read More
6 Tips for Setting Writing Resolutions
All Posts, Writing Amy Suto

6 Tips for Setting Writing Resolutions

Which brings me to the importance of setting writing resolutions. It's far too easy to lose your shining writerly aspirations in the whirlwind inferno of daily life if you don't have "WRITE A HOMELAND SPEC IN 2014!" sticky-noted all over your desk/room/forehead.

Read More
Good Books: The Fault in Our Stars
All Posts, Good Books Amy Suto

Good Books: The Fault in Our Stars

I've been trying to find new authors to add to my list of favorite authors on my Facebook page (a prestigious list of high importance and influence, I assure you) when I made the mistake of reading John Green. I say mistake because once I read The Fault in Our Stars, I knew I was going to get nothing done in the next week while I made my way through all his other books.So today's blog post is dedicated to John Green, who stole my productivity but instead gave me something much more valuable: great books that will stay with me forever.

Read More
Webseries School: Creator Up! [Review]
All Posts, Screenwriting Amy Suto

Webseries School: Creator Up! [Review]

Webseries are the great Wild West of the film industry, and for new content creators, it can be a daunting plain to navigate. Creator Up is the online Webseries School created by USC alumni who want to bring the joy of collaboration and creation from film school into this new realm of content creation.

Read More
4 Ways to Find the Emotional Core of Your Story
All Posts, Screenwriting Amy Suto

4 Ways to Find the Emotional Core of Your Story

When it comes to selling your scripts, the most powerful weapon you have is being able to make your audience feel something. Emotion will get you where structuring and formatting and perfect grammar alone cannot. That's why today's post is all about finding ways to connect with the emotional core of your story!

Read More
For Men: How to Write Female Characters
All Posts, Screenwriting Amy Suto

For Men: How to Write Female Characters

This post was originally intended to be a satirical comment on the state of female characters in screenplays written by men.But, ironically enough, after talking to a handful of male screenwriters, I realized that there is a legitimate, long-standing issue amongst male writers when it comes to writing female characters.I say this without judgment: some male writers just don’t know how to write female characters. Which is why I’m here to help!How Are Female and Male Characters Different?

Read More
5 Ways to Write What You Don't Know
All Posts, Screenwriting Amy Suto

5 Ways to Write What You Don't Know

The phrase write what you know can be damaging to a writer when taken too literally.If I wrote only what I knew, I would be limited to the quirky adventures of a screenwriter and her friends in Los Angeles. My main character would spend most of her time writing, running, and blogging, with occasional trips up to abandoned ski resorts to film horror movies or battles done with crocodiles in the harbors of Mexico.In short, the movie that I want to write does not resemble my life.But that's not how "writing what you know" is supposed to be interpreted. It means that you're supposed to use what you do know as a jumping off point to write what you don't know anything about, thus lending authenticity to your writing.Here are 5 ways to write what you don't know, in a way that will ring true with the reader:

Read More
13 Ways to Be a Better Screenwriter in 2013

13 Ways to Be a Better Screenwriter in 2013

Hey guys! It's 2013, and now that the holidays are over, it's time to get to work on that screenplay you've been wanting to write. Today is a fresh start, where we can put procrastination and overcaffeination behind us, and become more productive, creative people who make up fictional relationships and events alone in front of a laptop (or typewriter, if you're classy like that.)

Read More
Good Books: Sociopaths and Suicide Pacts
All Posts, Good Books Amy Suto

Good Books: Sociopaths and Suicide Pacts

Three cheers for a new blog series!I spent four hours hanging out in LAX the other day because my flight was delayed (blizzards, you sly dogs, you). Considering they only give you an hour of complimentary internet there (blasphemy!) I had to stop blogging and tweeting and instead read some of the books I'd recently bought on my Kindle. I'm glad I did, because I read two great books that I want to share with you today.

Read More
The Last Piece of Writing Advice You'll Need
All Posts, Screenwriting Amy Suto

The Last Piece of Writing Advice You'll Need

Some gurus tell you that the three act structure will kill you, while others tell you that if you don't hit every story beat, your screenplay will be doomed. Still, others tell you that outlining is a hoax and you should just write a screenplay with no structure at all because that kills your creativity. Then there are the champions of the outline who say that without it, your script will die in the rough draft phase, and if you do manage to get a final draft out of it, it will take you twice as long as if you'd done an outline.

Read More
5 Things You Forgot About Rough Drafts

5 Things You Forgot About Rough Drafts

Working screenwriters tend to have several screenplays in the pipeline at once, all at different levels of completion. This way, they can bounce around between all the stages of the writing process without getting fatigued, and always have an answer for the dreaded question, 'what else do you got?' But balancing a pipeline of different projects -- and actually completing them -- takes time. When you start off, chances are you'll just focus on one screenplay at a time. And sometimes, it's easy to forget about the messiness that is the rough draft.

Read More
The Doomed Love Trope (And Why It's Awesome)
All Posts, Screenwriting Amy Suto

The Doomed Love Trope (And Why It's Awesome)

You've seen it before.Two starstruck lovers fall into such a perfect, idealized form of true love that their passion for each other could burn out the sun if it was one kilowatt brighter. These two youngsters resemble all of our romantic hopes and dreams, and we want them to overcome every obstacle in their path in order to be together.But, of course, their love is doomed due to timing.

Read More
3 Reasons Why Screenplays are Like Lattes
All Posts, Screenwriting Amy Suto

3 Reasons Why Screenplays are Like Lattes

Welcome to AmySuto.com! You may also know this website by its alternate name, "Gratuitous Photos of Delicious Caffeinated Beverages."Now, you may be asking "Amy, how on earth are you able to craft an extended metaphor around lattes and screenplays?" And to that I laugh and exclaim, "silly readers! I'm a writer! I make extended metaphors for a living!"Anyways.Here are four reasons why screenplays are like lattes:

Read More
10 Ways to Prepare for National Novel Writing Month
All Posts, Writing Amy Suto

10 Ways to Prepare for National Novel Writing Month

Greetings, traveler! Chances are, you're reading this because you've decided to embark on the highly dangerous, highly caffeinated thirty-day whirlwind known as National Novel Writing Month. The goal? To write a 50,000 word novel in the month of November. You may not even have an idea for a novel in this point in time. But never fear! This guide exists to divulge the secrets behind a successful month of noveling. Let the adventure begin!

Read More
5 Storytelling Lessons We Can Learn From Rian Johnson

5 Storytelling Lessons We Can Learn From Rian Johnson

Hey Amy, was this blog post partially created out of you wanting to tell people that you saw LOOPER before it was even out in theaters? Why yes, yes it is. That, and writer/director Rian Johnson's films make all of my top ten movie lists. If I were stranded on a deserted island, I'd bring his high school noir film Brick with me. If I had three hours left to live, you can bet I'd be watching his feel-good con man love story adventure, The Brother's Bloom. What's that you say? There's been a nuclear war and I'm only allowed to save five movies from the impending destruction? Looper, consider yourself saved.

Read More