|
After cracking hundreds of screenplays sent into the BlueCat Screenplay
Competition, the same problems in the execution of the story and script
continue to emerge. Here is a general overview of these persistent issues.
Do you realize what you're saying??
In the theatre, they read plays aloud over and over in the process of script
development, and one of the reasons they do this is to hear the dialogue.
When I hear dialogue in my head, it might sound very good, but then when I
hear a person actually speak it, I often have an impulse to jump in front of
a bus. And over and over and over and over, when I read screenplay entries
to BlueCat, I am immediately dismayed when the characters start speaking.
Excellent everything else, awful dialogue. And I often wonder if the writer
has actually heard the lines they have written for their characters out
loud. Either read the whole thing aloud to yourself, or even better, get a
group of your friends to read it. You do not need professional actors to
evaluate dialogue. Just people excited to help. Videotape it. I have
videotaped readings, and then sat down and worked out an entire rewrite off
the tape, addressing every single line that bothered me. Which leads me to
another thing.
Ha.
It's hard to pass a screenplay on to industry contacts if an unfunny joke is
sitting in the middle of page two. It's highly difficult if there's twelve
by page five. You might have a payoff in your third act that would break my
heart, but if your jokes are poor, the heart of your audience will be shot,
probably resentful, and your work will be recycled. Please try your humor
out. If your beats aren't funny to some people, rewrite. Trust a truly
hilarious bit is coming. Think of the patience you need to muster through
this writing process as courage, because it is.
If you find you are not funny, write a script that is not funny. Many, many
great scripts are not funny, as we all know.
Mispellings.
Do you think the development people in Los Angeles, basically the smartest
people in the film industry, will not be annoyed and continue to read your
script when you have misspelled three words in the first five pages?
Perhaps. How do you feel when you're reading something and you find
misspelled words? How does your attitude shift towards the author? Exactly.
If you don't think many scripts have this problem, start a screen writng
comptition.
OKAY, WE GOT IT!
Try to limit your scene description. When a person opens your script, how
many INCHES of action slug are they looking at on page one? Is there anyway
you can convey what you want us to SEE with less words? I always go back and
CUT CUT CUT to prevent my screenplay from fatiguing my reader with excess
words as they try to listen for my story. Do we need to know what necklace
someone is wearing? We all understand making motion pictures is
collaborative. I strive to let the art department and the costumer and the
prop master and so on DO THEIR JOB by not making their decisions in the
screenplay, because I have little passion for it and don't do it well. They
will make their own choices, and most likely better ones, so why bother?
Always use fewer words to say the same thing.
It's not show and tell, it's show not tell.
I constantly find myself being told something by the screenplay the viewer
of the film will not be aware of. Screenplays are not literature. They are
words assembled to describe what motion pictures will play out on the
screen. Telling us a character is a jealous person is passive and dull.
Showing a character in an act of jealousy is more effective and essentially
cinematic. Let the words and actions of your characters carry your story.
This is not easy. You want the actor or director to understand what you want
and what you mean. Allow the description of physical actions and the
recording of spoken words reveal the narrative to the filmmakers. The script
will read faster and offers the reader a richer opportunity to imagine and
discover.
The Joy of Making Things Up.
I really cherish the idea, that as a writer, I can make things up. If I want
the guy to say something, all I have to do is type it. But I have to fight
against creating characters and interactions amongst characters derived from
movies I have watched and television I have seen. I often find myself
writing a scene only to realize I'm not drawing from my imagination or my
own life experience or my observations of people, I'm drawing from the
millions of hours of observing actors play human beings on television and in
movie theaters. And because I'm writing a "MOVIE," it is even more
difficult, because I'm fighting against a subconscious or unconscious
observation that this is "how people act in movies." Stop yourself and ask,
would this happen on planet Earth? Do I know how people from Miami really
speak? What would a person actually say if they had a gun in their face? Can
you possibly imagine what could happen? This is your opportunity to be truly
imaginative. Answer your own expectations of original work. A mature writer
develops a strong capacity to recognize and reject the false.
Ouch.
Forced exposition. This is when a brother tells a sister on page two that he
will be attending a school which dad wouldn't pay for because he bought a
farm that the whole family will be moving to tomorrow because he found that
the city was a really bad place to live in after mom was really scared
because of that mugging thing that happened after they came back from the
sister's graduation from high school. When characters engage in an
unbelievable conversation about matters in which they would be familiar
with, or when they proclaim something completely out of nowhere simply to
inform the audience of key facts crucial to their understanding of the
movie, you have a problem. This awkward exposition will not be seen as
genuine human behavior and will detach your audience from the emotional
current of your story. Exposition is necessary and difficult to execute. Be
careful how you offer information crucial to your story at the start of your
screenplay. This is a common problem in early drafts. Exposition needs to be
seamless and graceful.
Format.
You know what? Go get a script and copy what you think it looks like and
you'll be fine. Trust me. Spec scripts are sitting on desks all over
Hollywood and their format is not consistent at all. Getting crazy about
format sells screenwriting software. I use two tab settings and copied stuff
from a book and not one person in the film industry has ever said a thing to
me in ten years. But if your script looks like a book, or a poem, or a
magazine article, your screenplay format is wrong. Just make it look a
little like a movie script, and if it kicks ass, guess what.
So do you.
Gordy Hoffman
About the Author
Winner of the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award at the Sundance Film Festival
for LOVE LIZA , Gordy Hoffman has written and directed three digital shorts
for Fox Searchlight. He made his feature directorial debut with his script,
A COAT OF SNOW, which world premiered at the 2005 Locarno International Film
Festival. He is also the founder of the BlueCat Screenplay Competition.
Dedicated to develop and celebrate the undiscovered screenwriter, BlueCat
provides written screenplay analysis on every script entered. In addition,
Gordy offers screenwriters personalized feedback on their scripts through
his consultation service, www.screenplaynotes.com .
Article URL address: www.bluecatscreenplay.com/Advice
Copyright © 2006 BlueCat Screenplay Competition
|