Ultimately, a flashback’s goal is to help the audience understand the motives and actions of characters. This can be a brief flash, a singular scene, or an extended sequence. Typically, a flashback appears during a moment of trauma for a character in the present, triggering a memory of the past. It’s a scene that took place in the past but is inserted into the present narrative in order to advance the story, characters and theme.
Put simply, a flashback is a moment in which the narrative flashes back in time-from the present day to some point in the near or distant past.
In this post, we’re going to show you how to write a flashback in a script that deviates from the linear storyline yet keeps the audience “in the moment.” So forget any advice you may have heard to “never use flashbacks.” (More on this later.) Wanna know how to write a flashback in a script the right way? Great, because some of the most memorable moments in cinema history have been flashbacks.įrom Alvy’s iconic “seems like old times” montage at the end of Annie Hall, to Cheryl’s painful memories of her past in Wild, flashbacks can be a very powerful screenwriting device. 29 comments How to write a flashback in a script.