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FOUR
WORDS FOR THE ASPIRING SCREENWRITER
Peter Kremer
This
story is about me and maybe about you. It's about that thing that grabs
us and makes us want to be screen writers. It's really about that first
great idea for a movie.
I had an idea
for a movie. I had interesting characters complete with strengths, weaknesses
and little quirks of personality that made my characters real and interesting.
The scenes! Oh
the scenes! Ante-bellum mansions, riverboats, and crowded merchant fairways
defined the world. Scenes were rich with elaborate descriptions of ambiance,
cutting dialogue and action that was choreographed down to the individual
footstep. And first and foremost, I knew how I wanted to weave my statement
on life's irony and cruelty into my glorious screenplay.
I wrote it and
rewrote it, becoming more and more convinced that this was a great cinematic
story that needed to be told. My wife agreed it was wonderful. A coworker
loved the idea. And my mother in law was sure I was a creative genius
destined for fame. This screenplay was my baby. It was me and I was it.
I knew every nuance, every detail and every breath each character took.
If only I could
get a someone important to read my movie, I was sure they would snap it
up and I would of be on my to a new career and a more artistically fulfilling
life. So I joined the TSA, an organization of like-minded people. The
TSA promotes the craft of screenwriting. I was sure they would love my
idea. So I read my baby to the group. I waited for the flood of kudos.
This is what I heard.
"What is
your protagonist's goal? The girl is your protagonist. Right?"
"Everything
seems to happen to her. She doesn't actually do anything. That's not good!"
"Why doesn't
the antagonist just kill her when he has her in his hands? He'd have to
be stupid not to!"
"That whole
opening scene in the doctor's office has absolutely nothing to do with
the girl's story."
"Let me tell
you all the reasons this doesn't work."
At that point
I knew this was not a mutual admiration support group.
I thought to myself,
"WHAT DO YOU MEAN!!! I love the doctor's office scene! And isn't
it obvious? He can't kill her because.eh." Then I felt a little hurt.
Okay really demoralized. But I went on. "Well she's a victim of her
up bringing and." Then I got mad. "Well this story is really
about her search for her birth right and. eh."
As I spoke I realized
the awful truth. My baby, my idea, my labor of love, made sense to only
one person. Me! What was in my head was not making it to the paper. Of
course I understood it. I'd lived it for a year. I knew how to type the
proper screenplay format, but the problem was, I didn't have a story.
It was just a series of elaborate scenes, an idea.
So I listened.
I used the tools the TSA provided. I rewrote. I added characters. I eliminated
characters. I presented it to the group again and got the same questions.
I changed the
scenes. I changed goals. I changed protagonists. I wanted to make my idea
work. It didn't.
Then someone made
a simple suggestion. "Why don't you start a different story. Make
it a learning experience. Then come back to this story later." I
thought, "But.but. This is my story! My baby!"
That was a year
ago. I go to TSA meeting regularly. I read a lot of scripts. I read a
lot of screenwriting books, and I'm writing a comedy about a goose that
poops gold.
People are laughing.
The questions are about what is going to happen, which means they understand
what has happened. That is an important step forward because that means
there is a story line. I still get advice on better ways to tell the story,
but it doesn't hurt anymore because I know I have the basic understanding
of how to tell a story through a screenplay.
So what are "Four
Words" For the Aspiring Screenwriter?
"Give It
A Rest!" Sometimes we become so entwined in our first inspired effort
that we can not see the forest for the trees. Put it down. Walk away from
it. Go to neutral ground. Start another story from scratch and build it
step by step so the basic foundation is solid.
TSA Premise Sheets
are wonderful tools. Above all, DON'T THINK SO HARD! The answers to the
premise sheet questions are usually fairly simple.
Learn the three-act
structure. Understand what the inciting incident is. Know when plot points
should happen and what a plot point does.
If you learn these
things, one day you'll come back to you baby, look at it, and VOILA! You'll
finally see the real story.
I know! It happened
to me. My "baby" is now going to be a comedy about. Well, You'll
have to wait and see cause it's going to be a smash hit blockbuster mister
DeMille!
See? You don't
have to give up your dream. You have to "give it a rest!"
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