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Free Screenplays (Screenplay Search Disclaimer)

Want to read the screenplays that spawned your favorite movies? Try searching our database of free online film scripts. Still working on your screenplay? Check out our Writers Workshop. Ready to start querying literary agents and production companies about your own screenplay? Check out our Writers Database.

44 screenplays begin with the letter G

New Search

Title Genre(s) Writer(s) Release Year Type
G.I. Jane Action,  Drama David Twohy 1997 Script
G.I. Jane Action,  Drama David Twohy 1997 First Draft
Galaxy Quest Action,  Adventure,  Comedy,  Sci-Fi David Howard, Robert Gordon 1999 Shooting Script
Game 6 Comedy,  Drama Don DeLillo 2005 Script
Gandhi Drama John Briley 1992 Script
Gattaca Drama,  Sci-Fi,  Thriller Andrew Niccol 1997 Script
Gattaca Drama,  Sci-Fi,  Thriller Andrew M. Niccol 1997 Script
Get Carter (1971) Action,  Crime,  Drama Mike Hodges 1971 Script
Get Carter (2000) Action,  Crime,  Drama David Mckenna 2001 Script
Get Rich or Die Trying Biography,  Crime,  Drama Terence Winter 2005 Second Draft
Get Shorty Action,  Comedy,  Drama Scott Frank 1995 Script
Get Shorty Action,  Comedy,  Drama Scott Frank 1995 Script
Get Shorty Action,  Comedy,  Drama Scott Frank 1995 Script
Ghost Ship Action,  Horror,  Thriller Mark Hanlon 2002 First Draft
Ghost World Comedy,  Drama Daniel Clowes, Terry Zwigoff 2001 Script
Ghostbusters Comedy,  Fantasy,  Sci-Fi Harold Ramis, Dan Aykroyd 1984 Shooting Script
Ghostbusters 2 Comedy,  Fantasy,  Sci-Fi Harold Ramis, Dan Aykroyd 1989 Script
Giant Drama,  Romance,  Western Fred Guidol, Ivan Moffat 1956 Final Draft
Gladiator Action,  Drama David Franzoni, John Logan 2000 Second Draft
Gladiator Action,  Drama David Franzoni, John Logan 2000 First Draft
Gladiator Action,  Drama David Franzoni, John Logan 2000 Second Draft
Glengarry Glen Ross Drama David Mamet 1992 Script
Glory Road Drama,  Sports David Callaham, Wesley Strick 2006 Script
Gods And Monsters Drama Bill Condon 1998 Shooting Script
Godzilla Action,  Sci-Fi,  Thriller Dean Devlin, Roland Emmerich, Ted Elliott, Terry Rossio 1998 First Draft
Godzilla Action,  Sci-Fi,  Thriller Dean Devlin, Roland Emmerich, Ted Elliott, Terry Rossio 1998 Final Draft
Goldfinger Action,  Adventure Richard Maibaum, Paul Dehn 1964 Script
Gone In 60 Seconds Action,  Crime/Mystery Scott Rosenberg 2000 Script
Gone In 60 Seconds Action,  Crime/Mystery Scott Rosenberg 2000 Script
Gone in Sixty Seconds Action,  Crime Scott Rosenberg 2000 First Draft
Good Fellas Biography,  Crime,  Drama Nicholas Pileggi, Martin Scorsese 1990 First Draft
Good Night, and Good Luck Drama,  Historical/Period George Clooney & Grant Heslov 2005 Script
Good Will Hunting Drama Matt Damon, Ben Affleck 1997 Script
Good Will Hunting Drama Matt Damon, Ben Affleck 1997 Script
Goofy Movie Animation,  Comedy,  Family,  Romance Jynn Magon, Chris Matheson, Brian Pimental 1995 Script
Gosford Park Comedy,  Crime/Mystery,  Drama Robert Altman, Bob Balaban 2001 Transcript
Gothika Horror,  Mystery,  Thriller Sebastian Gutierrez 2003 Second Draft
Graffiti Bridge Drama Prince 1990 Second Draft
Gran Torino Crime,  Drama Nick Schenk 2008 Script
Grosse Point Blank Crime,  Romantic Comedy Tom Jankiewicz, D.V. deVincentis, S.K. Boatman, John Cusack 1997 Second Draft
Grosse Pointe Blank Comedy,  Crime/Mystery,  Romance Tom Jankiewicz, D.V. deVincentis, S.K. Boatman, John Cusack 1997 First Draft
Grosse Pointe Blank Comedy,  Crime/Mystery,  Crime/Mystery,  Romance Tom Jankiewicz, D.V. deVincentis, S.K. Boatman, John Cusack 1997 Script
Groundhog Day Comedy Danny Rubin, Harold Ramis 1993 Second Draft
Groundhog Day Comedy,  Romance Danny Rubin 1993 Second Draft
 
Tips and Fun Stuff

Screenwriting Books
There are hundreds of screenwriting books that can aid a writer in losing his voice and squelching his originality. If the writer does need screenwriting help...

Richard Walter's SCREENWRITING provides an excellent overview from the outline to the query letter process.

For a scholarly source into character and motive, try Lajos Egri's THE ART OF DRAMATIC WRITING

For insight into the hero's journey and storytelling myth, Joseph Campbell's THE HERO WITH A THOUSAND FACES which inspired George Lucas and STAR WARS.


Writing Conditions
Music or no music, ball game on the radio, television, urban noise, crickets - the writer may wish to surround herself with nurturing rhythms.

Keith Jarret's KOLN, Stephane Grapelli's OLYMPIAD, Bach's BRANDENBURG CONCERTOS, any Miles Davis, any Mozart, anything free-flowing and non-lyrical to liberate the writer's flow of word without intrusion.



Novels About Hollywood
Bruce Wagner's I'M LOSING YOU - the closest one can get to the filth and moral depravity of Hollywood without actually getting dirty.

Also...
Nathanael West's DAY OF THE LOCUST
Michael Tolkin's THE PLAYER
Charles Bukowski's HOLLYWOOD


Film Criticism
Pauline Kael on how to talk about film. She once set a standard for cinema when filmmakers actually welcomed criticism. James Agee - AGEE ON FILM: CRITICISM AND COMMENTARY ON THE MOVIES - reprinted by Martin Scorcese. Brilliant text on the films of the 1930's and 40's.


Novel Genres
DETECTIVE: Ed McBain - (also known as Evan Hunter screenwriter of the BIRDS as well as dozens of detective novels)...latest is THE LAST DANCE about New York homicide detectives - true to the expectations of the genre and yet etches his original voice.

MELODRAMA: Thomas Hardy - TESS, JUDE THE OBSURE - the dialogue is often very cinematic, but it is the plot that really moves.

HUMOR: John Kennedy Toole - CONFEDERACY OF DUNCES, a one-man wrecking crew, buffoonery and gaseous wit, a "vehicle" for a comic actor.

Joseph Heller - CATCH 22 for absurd plotting and ensemble writing - a forerunner of situation comedy - the humor is derived from the situation and milieu - Heller writes, "There was only one catch and that was Catch 22, which specified that a concern for one's own safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rational mind. Orr was crazy and could be grounded. All he had to do was ask; and as soon as he did, he would no longer be crazy and would have to fly more missions... If he flew them he was crazy and didn't have to; but if he didn't want to he was sane and had to... "That's some catch, that Catch 22," he [Yossarian observed] "It's the best there is," Doc Daneeka agreed.

Charles Bukowski - In all his fiction, he uses setting to depict character - the reader's sympathies are drawn out of the dregs of the protagonist's skid row life.

DIALOGUE: Mark Twain's HUCK FINN - use of vernacular and regional dialect. Twain and Oscar Wilde created the pseudo-intellectual paradox. Twain writes on fighting, "Thrusting my nose firmly between his teeth, I threw him heavily to the ground on top of me."

THEATRICAL DIALOGUE: Eugene O'Neil's ICEMAN COMETH for barroom humor and raw realism - a predecessor to the slang of Mamet.

MEMOIR: John Bayley's ELEGY FOR IRIS - two writers, husband and wife, and their stuggle with Alzheimer's. Poignant commentary on the lifestyle of the writer.

SHAKESPEARE: For dialogue, characterization, and plot. Steal. Steal. Steal.


Films
Classic films for writers - CITIZEN KANE, RULES OF THE GAME, SEVEN SAMOURAI, CHINATOWN, TAXI DRIVER, DINER, SUNSET BOULEVARD, THE GODFATHER, REAR WINDOW, DR. STRANGELOVE

Some other highly regarded films for the writer...

MARTY - a great dialogue movie by Paddy Chayefsky, the great screenwriter who never directed. It was made for television.

PAT GARRET AND BILLY THE KID - underrated humor, redefined a genre, a British comedy of manners, very detailed into the life of a cowboy - how does a sheriff walk down the stairs after a night with four whores - James Coburn ambles gingerly.

THE THIRD MAN - bringing out a main character late in a film, building suspense, giving the audience just enough to chew - classic economy of plot.

UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING and ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST Adaptations - don't get tied to the text. These screenwriters dared to expand on the original material and further enhance its spirit.

NASHVILLE, SHORT CUTS - drama in all its complicated humanity, what Paul Thomas Anderson valiantly but couldn't quite accomplish in MAGNOLIA. Murmured naturalistic dialogue and seamless transitions - should be given full attention on the big screen.

NOTE:
These Script P.I.M.P. references are solely for introspection. If reflections on film or literature should coalesce, please refrain from sending them to Script P.I.M.P.