Screenwriting Conferences

What if every fictional screenplay were, in reality, a trial?

Through three conferences, I present my approach to screenwriting and the principles that follow from it.

Conferences by Florent Durth, author of The Screenwriting Code.

Understanding what the audience judges in a story changes the way we write it.

01

The screenplay as a trial

Every fictional screenplay tells a trial (even when it doesn’t seem to)

Format : 60 to 90 minutes + discussion

Audience : Screenwriters, film schools, producers, cinephiles

Whatever the genre — comedy, drama, thriller, adventure — a fictional screenplay always tells, beneath the surface, the trial of its characters.

The audience unconsciously turns behaviors into facts.
Then interprets the final situation as a verdict.

This conference makes this underlying layer of storytelling visible.

Through the analysis of well-known films, participants discover a simple framework for reading any fictional screenplay as a moral case.

👉 Takeaway: a reading framework that can be applied immediately.

02

The truth about the “happy ending”

The three expectations that create a “happy ending”

Format : 60 to 90 minutes + discussion

Audience : Screenwriters, film schools, producers, cinephiles

Why do some endings feel immediately satisfying, while others leave a sense of emptiness?

Without being aware of it, the audience expects three things at the end of a fictional story:

  • that the characters receive a sentence
  • that this sentence is just
  • that its intensity is proportional to what has happened

This conference clarifies these three expectations and shows how to shape an ending with precision, without relying on imposed narrative models.

👉 Takeaway: a practical checklist to diagnose and improve a story’s ending.

03

Why a Screenplay Doesn’t Work

Diagnosing a failed ending in 20 minutes

Format : 60 minutes + live demonstration on a synopsis

Audience : Professionals, writing residencies, fiction development programs

A fictional screenplay can contain strong scenes — and still fail to hold together.

In most cases, the issue is identifiable: the ending does not validate the sense of justice the audience expects unconsciously.

This conference presents a precise and immediately applicable diagnostic method:

  • identify who must receive a final outcome
  • check the moral coherence of the ending
  • adjust intensity
  • correct with minimal changes

Live demonstration, followed by a solution-oriented discussion.

👉 Takeaway: a concrete revision protocol.

Writing a fictional screenplay means orchestrating an invisible trial.

These conferences provide a clear understanding of its principles and how to apply them directly to one’s own work.

They can be adapted to your format — film schools, festivals, writing residencies, professional events — as well as to the desired duration.

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