You need more than a blank sheet of paper to succeed in this business...

You need a step by step guide if you want to give your screenplay a fighting chance.

DVDs

When you're writing a screenplay, you should try to see everything in that genre.

For a good basic film education, however, you can always brush up on the classics. The following is a complete list of AFI's 100 greatest American movies as announced by the American Film Institute (AFI). These 100 top films were selected by a blue-ribbon panel of leaders from across the American film community and were all produced during the first 100 years of American filmmaking. To order any of these as videos or DVDs, click here.

AFI's 100 Greatest American Movies

1. Citizen Kane, (1941) Orson Welles
2. Casablanca, (1942) Michael Curtiz
3. The Godfather, (1972) Francis Ford Coppola
4. Gone With the Wind, (1939) Victor Fleming
5. Lawrence of Arabia, (1962) David Lean
6. The Wizard of Oz, (1939) Victor Fleming
7. The Graduate, (1967) Mike Nichols
8. On the Waterfront, (1954) Elia Kazan
9. Schindler's List, (1993) Steven Spielberg
10. Singin' In the Rain, (1952) Stanley Donen, Gene Kelly
11. It's a Wonderful Life, (1946) Frank Capra
12. Sunset Boulevard, 1950) Billy Wilder
13. The Bridge On the River Kwai, (1957) David Lean
14. Some Like It Hot, (1959) Billy Wilder
15. Star Wars, (1977) George Lucas
16. All About Eve, (1950) Joseph L. Mankiewicz
17. The African Queen, (1951) John Huston
18. Psycho, (1960) Alfred Hitchcock
19. Chinatown, (1974) Roman Polanski
20. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, (1975) Milos Forman
21. The Grapes of Wrath, (1940) John Ford
22. 2001: A Space Odyssey, (1968) Stanley Kubrick
23. The Maltese Falcon, (1941) John Huston
24. Raging Bull, (1980) Martin Scorsese
25. E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, (1982) Steven Spielberg
26. Dr. Strangelove, (1964) Stanley Kubrick
27. Bonnie & Clyde, (1967) Arthur Penn
28. Apocalypse Now, (1979) Francis Ford Coppola
29. Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, (1939) Frank Capra
30. The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, (1948) John Huston
31. Annie Hall, (1977) Woody Allen
32. The Godfather, Part II, (1974) Francis Ford Coppola
33. High Noon, (1952) . Fred Zinnemann
34. To Kill a Mockingbird, (1962) Robert Mulligan
35. It Happened One Night, (1934) Frank Capra
36. Midnight Cowboy, (1969) John Schlesinger
37. The Best Years of Our Lives, (1946) William Wyler
38. Double Indemnity, (1944) Billy Wilder
39. Doctor Zhivago, (1965) David Lean
40. North By Northwest, (1959) Alfred Hitccock
41. West Side Story, (1961) Robert Wise, Jerome Robbins
42. Rear Window, (1954) Alfred Hitchcock
43. King Kong, (1933) Merian C. Cooper
44. The Birth of a Nation, (1915) D. W. Griffith
45. A Streetcar Named Desire, (1951) Elia Kazan
46. A Clockwork Orange, (1971) Stanley Kubrick
47. Taxi Driver, (1976) Martin Scorsese
48. Jaws, (1975) Steven Spielberg
49. Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs, (1937) David Hand, et al.
50. Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid, (1969) George Roy Hill
51. The Philadelphia Story, (1940) George Cukor
52. From Here to Eternity, (1953) Fred Zinnemann
53. Amadeus, (1984) Milos Forman
54. All Quiet On the Western Front, (1930) Lewis Milestone
55. The Sound of Music, (1965) Robert Wise
56. MASH, (1970) Robert Altman
57. The Third Man, (1949) Carol Reed
58. Fantasia, (1940) Joe Grant, Dick Huemer
59. Rebel Without a Cause, (1955) Nicholas Ray
60. Raiders of the Lost Ark, (1981) Steven Spielberg
61. Vertigo, (1958) Alfred Hitchcock
62. Tootsie, (1982) Sydney Pollack
63. Stagecoach, (1939) John Ford
64. Close Encounters of the Third Kind, (1977) Steven Spielberg
65. The Silence of the Lambs, (1991) Jonathan Demme
66. Network, (1976) Sidney Lumet
67. The Manchurian Candidate, (1962) John Frankenheimer
68. An American In Paris, (1951) Vincente Minnelli
69. Shane, (1953) George Stevens
70. The French Connection, (1971) William Friedkin
71. Forrest Gump, (1994) Robert Zemeckis
72. Ben-Hur, (1959) William Wyler
73. Wuthering Heights, (1939) William Wyler
74. The Gold Rush, (1925) Charlie Chaplin
75. Dances With Wolves, (1990) Kevin Costner
76. City Lights, (1931) Charlie Chaplin
77. American Graffiti, (1973) George Lucas
78. Rocky, (1976) John Avildsen
79. The Deer Hunter, (1978) Michael Cimino
80. The Wild Bunch, (1969) Sam Peckinpah
81. Modern Times, (1936) Charlie Chaplin
82. Giant, (1956) George Stevens
83. Platoon, (1986) Oliver Stone
84. Fargo, (1996) Joel Coen
85. Duck Soup, (1933) Leo McCarey
86. Mutiny On the Bounty, (1935) Frank Lloyd
87. Frankenstein, (1931) James Whale
88. Easy Rider, (1969) Dennis Hopper
89. Patton, (1970) Franklin Schaffner
90. The Jazz Singer, (1927) Alan Crosland
91. My Fair Lady, (1964) George Cukor
92. A Place In the Sun, (1951) George Stevens
93. The Apartment, (1960) Billy Wilder
94. Goodfellas, (1990) Martin Scorsese
95. Pulp Fiction, (1994) Quentin Tarantino
96. The Searchers, (1956) John Ford
97. Bringing Up Baby, (1938) Howard Hawks
98. Unforgiven, (1992) Clint Eastwood
99. Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, (1967) Stanley Kramer
100. Yankee Doodle Dandy, (1942) Michael Curtiz

I would add several other films, which defined a genre or created one. These are not in any particular order. If it's been remade (like Sabrina), or serialized (like Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles), I'm referring to the original only.

1. Invasion of the Body Snatchers
2. The Abyss
3. Blade Runner
4. Terminator 2
5. Die Hard
6. The Fugitive
7. The Sixth Sense
8. Ghost
9. The Thin Man
10. Miracle at Morgan Creek
11. The Women
12. Sabrina
13. Breakfast at Tiffany's
14. Captain Blood
15. Out of Africa
16. The English Patient
17. Gladiator
18. Braveheart
19. L.A. Confidential
20. In the Heat of the Night
21. McCabe and Mrs. Miller
22. Fried Green Tomatoes
23. Dead Poets Society
24. Stand By Me
25. Babe
26. Beauty and the Beast
27. The Princess Bride
28. Pretty Woman
29. Romancing the Stone
30. Moonstruck
31. Groundhog Day
32. Jerry McGuire
33. Airplane!
34. A Fish Called Wanda
35. There's Something About Mary
36. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

You can order any of these films here.

Think I missed something? Need suggestions in a particular genre? Email me with your list, or your question, and I'll do my best to put together a list tailor-made for your needs.

 

ebook

173-page E-book
Buy it now for
only $19.95

Add to Cart

View Cart

Also available on Amazon.com as a Kindle e-book

Sandy Eiges

 

 

E-book Testimonials:

Dear Sandy,

"I just wanted to take a moment to thank you for writing such a helpful book. I have read other script-writing books and tried to apply the techniques they suggested, but there always seemed to be something missing and I could never grasp the concept enough to do anything with what the author was “teaching”. Now, after reading just a few pages of your book things are finally starting to “click” into place. I have a 1 page synopsis, written in the present tense that (to me) flows perfectly. What a great feeling! ....I will finally complete the script that I have wanted to write for many years now."


-  Marlene B.


"Hi Sandy,

I recently purchased and downloaded your book on screenwriting and am really enjoying it. This is the best book on the subject I've read so far. It is clear,concise and covers all the important areas of screenwriting. I've gone through some of the exercises and would like to know your thoughts on my idea. Can we schedule a quick pitch appointment? I think this would be most helpful. Thanks."

-  Ralph H.

 


"Dear Sandy,

...I am midway through your book on how to turn a story idea into a good screenplay, and I can't thank you enough for all the tips that I've read in your book so far. I recently got this story idea, based pretty much on a real-life happening, that I started to write down thanks to the hints you offer, because until now I was really "with hands tied" as to where and how I should start, and what things I should and should not do with the screenplay. I have read many other explanatory how-to books on this area, but none of them helped me as much as yours did..."

-  Jacob G.


"Hi Sandy,

I am in the process of reading "HOLLYWOOD SCRIPT WRITING: HOW TO BIRTH YOUR IDEA INTO A BANKABLE SCREENPLAY". There is a plethora of books/articles etc. out there, but in my opinion, yours is head and shoulders above the rest. The publication is informative and very enjoyable to read...
Thanks, Sandy!"

-  Robert S.



"Brilliant, masterful, I appreciated your comments...You have a positive outlook and that is much appreciated. You have added fuel for the imagination and I am ready to go to work..."

-  Ken P.

 

"Sandy,
The scriptwriting book you wrote is clear and also inspiring to me. I
just had to send you this thank you note.

You write really well...Very good stuff.

...You have packed so much practical experience into [these]...pages...I have started some sketches of stories. I'm motivated. One hour per day. Same time every day. You've helped me to know where I am going.

Thank You So Very Much,

-  Neil K.