Featured Posts

Scolding the Muse Earlier this week Patti Stafford, of The Stafford Scribe, wrote, "The muse is like a child. It needs love and affection, but sometimes it needs to be scolded too." Most writers...

Readmore

The Things We Crave now on Amazon It's official - The Things We Crave is now for sale. I don't know how long it's been available. Last week's communication from the Booksurge people mentioned something about...

Readmore

How to Make Writer's Oatmeal ($27 value FREE) Writer's Oatmeal is unlike regular oatmeal. It's what a writer makes when working under a deadline so tight he has only minutes to spare for eating. Follow the instructions...

Readmore

Dream Eater Defense Tactics (Part I) It's time again to address the Dream Eaters, the people you know who blurt idiotic statements such as, "If you're going to be a writer you better have a good job," or, "It's...

Readmore

The Monkey Without a Shadow As a grubby little boy I wrote a short story. I'm not sure why. Maybe I was born to be a writer and had no other choice? The other possibility is that writing that one story...

Readmore

Script Frenzy, Final Entry

Posted by Lake | Posted in Script Frenzy 2009 | Posted on 27-04-2009

0

I’m not surprised that it’s possible to write 100 pages of draft in a month. Nor am I shocked that the draft can be quality. Writers pull that feat off all the time. If you don’t believe me dangle a check in front of one and watch what he’s capable of… Three other things struck me as important learning experiences from Frenzy.

Screenplays are not Novels: We all know this, but writing a script in 30 days really drives the lesson home. A novelist can create a scene by describing the setting. The road was lined with dark trees and, at night, their branches formed a thick canopy that not even a full moon’s light could penetrate. This sets up a scene and signals the reader that something scary is about to happen! A screenwriter has only EXT. ROAD – NIGHT. Tough gig.

Movie Dialogue is not Conversation: Life is a long improvisation and most of what comes out of a person’s mouth is said with planning. Joey asked, “Did you have a good weekend?” “Oh, yes, it was fine. How about you? Did you have a pleasant one?” This is how real people talk. It’s also intolerably boring. If this exchange was actually in a movie the audience would begin digging for their own ear wax out of a desperate need to look at something more interesting. In a movie this would be: “How was your weekend?” “Well, I found a werewolf sleeping in my Honda and it got worse from there…”

Planning is Key, but Expect the Unexpected: If you’re going to write a screenplay (or anything of length) you need to know what’s going to happen. However, you don’t want to be so rigid that your characters can’t surprise you. I’m not a fan of outlines that script every detail of every scene. Had I used one for The Weeping I would not have the twist ending I so like now. My thought is that you need something in between “knowing every detail” and “being clueless.” Know your major plot points and most of the minor ones, then let the story emerge from the characters living it.

Good lessons, even if they are repeats.

screenplay1

Special thanks to Apollo16 for the warm welcome and to Madartista for being such a great writing buddy. Never Write Alone!

Script Frenzy, Day 25

Posted by Lake | Posted in Script Frenzy 2009 | Posted on 26-04-2009

0

Finished The Weeping.

winner_200x200

*Script Frenzy entries Day 23 and 24 were previous drafted, but not posted until the 25th.

Script Frenzy, Day 24

Posted by Lake | Posted in Script Frenzy 2009 | Posted on 26-04-2009

0

8 pages from done is a great place to be in a screenplay, especially when a character does something completely unexpected. Considering what happened, I’ll have to go back and change a few events, but that’s a small price for a twist ending.

Script Frenzy, Day 21

Posted by Lake | Posted in Script Frenzy 2009 | Posted on 22-04-2009

0

I’m tired, but The Weeping is on schedule. I’m pondering the Mother-Daughter relationship and how it’s like / different from the Father-Son relationship. Need to explore this more when the rewrites begin.

Script Frenzy, Day 19

Posted by Lake | Posted in Script Frenzy 2009 | Posted on 20-04-2009

0

Storm clouds are conducive to creativity. Today’s grey sky and drizzling rain fed a lot of writing. Crave revision are going well and, for the first time since Screnzy started, I’m ahead of schedule. Planning to wrap up The Weeping next weekend with four days left to spare.