Video-Analysis: The First Ten Minutes of SEVEN

Seven - The First 10 Minutes - thescriptblog.com

During the first key 10-15 minutes of any movie, the audience takes a fundamental decision: they make their minds about going with the film or just disengaging.


10-15 minutes is the amount of time that filmmakers, in general, have to set the very basics of the drama which is to unfold.
As well, it’s the amount of time to convey the essential exposition which will make it possible for the audience to follow the film. The main difficulty of delivering the needed information is that it requires to be done without the public noticing.

A very tricky stretch of time to seduce and to inform. Kind of a minefield.

Let’s see how the masters do it:

These are The First Ten Minutes of Seven (David Fincher, 1995).

More The First Ten Minutes? Check Video-Analysis: The First Ten Minutes of THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS (Jonathan Demme, 1991)

More about Making Movies? Check How Billy Wilder’s SOME LIKE IT HOT Was WrittenFilm Blocking, What is it?The 5 Best Books on Making Movies, by Darren Aronofsky,  First Assistant Directors: Who Are They?The World of Movie Posters and Foley Artists: Who Are They?, amongst many others!

More on “Making Of” Books in Best “Making Of” Books: EASY RIDERS, RAGING BULLSBest “Making Of” Books: BLADE RUNNERS, DEER HUNTERS &…Best “Making Of” Books: THE JAWS LOG, Best “Making Of” Books: The Making of CITIZEN KANEand Best Screenwriting Books: ADVENTURES IN THE SCREEN TRADE, amongst others.

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