I guess it depends...
hello, i am writing a screenplay about a post apocolyptic earth. I have many scenes where i want the gun shots to be in slow motion. I have written it down like this.
Jimmy shoots two bullets. They come out of the gun
in slow motion. The first bullet hits Waste lander#1’s gun.
The second hits his left knee cap.
and
He pulls the
trigger and the bullet flies out in slow motion. The bullet
travels through the air in slow motion. The bullet pierces
Waste Lander#1’s right leg.
is this looking okay or....
What are you trying to achieve here? Are you writing a script you want to shoot on your own? Is this a story/screenplay you hope to sell one day?
I think it's been mentioned many times before here on the site that if you're shooting something on your own, of course you can write it any way you like... Having said that, there is STILL an argument to be made for writing it the right way ESPECIALLY when or if you're involving others to help develop your vision ESPECIALLY if any of those others are experienced filmmakers.
So I won't say that how you did it is wrong but I would say that there is PROBABLY a better way to do it.
Make sense?
If I were writing this and I did in fact want the slow motion to be part of the action, I might do it something like this...
Jimmy FIRES twice at Wastelander #1.
SLOW MOTION
Two bullets cut through vapor -- one hits Wastelander #1's gun -- second
bullet penetrates his left knee cap.
JIMMY'S FINGER
pulls the trigger again
SLOW MOTION
A third bullet on a straight trajectory pierces Wastelander#1's right leg.
Not saying that's the actual way to do it because there is no actual way to do it. What you want to do is direct the MIND'S EYE of the reader. Play the scene in your own mind's eye and then try to transcribe that to the the written page. This is how I would see the action but that's just me...
Of course the way you did it is fine as a first draft... In a first draft, you write everything the way you NEED to write it to get it OUT of you. During the rewrite and tweaking is when you can tighten it all up and make it look nice -- properly formatted -- and more appealing to the mind's eye.
As for the slow motion itself... You don't want to get too bogged down by these kinds of effects. While it is perfectly okay to include them (not overdo them), they should provide some kind of tone or flavor to the writing IF they are not germane to the actual scene. Contrary to popular belief, it is okay to pepper a script with some cool effects along the way as long as you have an actual story.
filmy