Craft: The Most Serious
Screenwriting Mistakes
BY CHARLES DEEMER
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Now that my university
class is over, with a new one to begin in January,
I have a break during which to wonder, as I always
do, what I can do to help students avoid the most
common and serious screenwriting mistakes. Term
after term, year after year, I keep seeing the
same errors, especially early on before students
begin to understand how different screenwriting is
from all other narrative forms. Here then is my
list of the most common errors, in no particular
order.
Fiction Rhetoric. Many of my
students come from a fiction background -- and it
immediately shows. They overwrite at every level.
They describe too much. Their sentence structure
is too complex. Their paragraphs are too long,
giving the script great text density and the look
of a literary document. Here are some guidelines
to avoid fiction rhetoric:
- Write in simple sentences only. Remember
what a complex sentence is? Right, a sentence
with a subordinate clause. Avoid them like the
plague! They slow down a quick reading
and all screenplays are read quickly, even
skimmed, before they are read carefully.
Direct, simple sentences. Don't be afraid to use
sentence fragments. Pretend you're in Junior
High.
- Write in short paragraphs. Each paragraph
should take no more than four or five lines
across the page before you double space and
start a new one. This opens up the script,
making it vertical, making it easier to read. If
there is a new subject, a new focus, start a new
paragraph. Though you can't "direct the film" in
a spec script, you can in a way by your
paragraph spacing. Make each paragraph a new
shot.
- Too much description. You are not the
costume designer. Every time you describe a
piece of clothing or something in a room,
anything, ask yourself: is this essential
or is it an option? Is Mary's red coat
necessary? If the coat is blue, does her
character change or the story fall apart? Get
rid of the options, letting your collaborators
make the decisions, and retain the
essentials.
Expository
dialogue. In general, dialogue is a clumsy way
to communicate facts and figures. It takes skill
to pull it off. Until you reach this level of
craft, avoid doing it. Find other ways to relate
essential information, preferably visually.
Chit chat. The problem with most
dialogue in beginners' screenplays, however, is
that too much of it goes nowhere. It is realistic,
yes, but life moves much more slowly than a well
crafted story does. Again, the final test is
elimination: if you remove this line of dialogue,
what happens? Do the screenplay and story collapse
into incomprehensible gibberish? Is an essential
character trait lost? If nothing happens, then why
is it there? Like descriptive writing, keep your
dialogue lean and mean. Exchanges of dialogue that
are short and quick play much better, in general,
than wordy exchanges.
Poor focus.
Who is your main character, what is his or her
goal, and what is stopping success of reaching it?
These are the immediate questions we need answered
to understand your story. You need to address them
sooner rather than later. Poor focus on the main
character is a common error I see. Keep your
protagonist on screen as much as possible -- even
two or three pages off the screen may be enough to
knock the story focus askew. Keep on the main
character like glue.
In my classes, I try
to get students to solve the rhetorical challenges
of screenwriting (fiction writing, slow dialogue)
as soon as possible so they can concentrate on the
story issues like focus. Screenwriting, in fact,
is more about storytelling than writing as we
usually think about it. Yet the rhetorical issues
occupy some students for most of the term, as if
they have a hard time accepting that screenwriting
is not literary writing. Some have observed a
trend in screenwriting to greater literary quality
(The Hours script comes to mind), but it
must be remembered that these examples are written
by established writers. The plight of the spec
script writer is different and much more
competitive. To be read in such an environment
requires special attention to economy so that your
story is easily found and understood.
Screenwriting is the only form of writing
about which it can be said: don't let your
writing get in the way of your story. Keep it
simple. Keep it clear. Keep in focused.
Charles Deemer teaches graduate and undergraduate
screenwriting at Portland State University. He is
the author of the electronic screenwriting
tutorial, Screenwright:
the craft of screenwriting. His book Seven
Plays was a finalist for the Oregon Book
Award. His new book, Practical
Screenwriting, is due in 2005. Deemer
maintains two websites:
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Published on:
2004-12-21 (11119 reads)
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