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Scriptus Interruptus
Scriptus Interruptus
Scriptus Interruptus by Julie
Gray
If you are a screenwriter with more than a couple half-finished
scripts, you really have to stop and take stock. Is this a pattern?
Be really honest with yourself - could you have Scriptus
Interruptus?
Often a writer will start off strong, with an idea he or she is
really excited about but somewhere in the second act,
discouragement and confusion set in. The premise is dead-ending or
becoming seemingly ridiculous. The writer feels like a rat in a
maze; running down this alternative and that only to come up
against a brick wall. After a few agonizing weeks, the writer bails
out. The primary culprit is a premise that just doesn't have enough
story to make it all the way across the finish line. The solution:
learn to thoroughly test your premise before you start pages.
Develop this muscle and take it seriously. Don't just jump into a
script without a plan and without a solid sense of story and
screenwriting structure.
Without correcting the source of the Scriptus Interruptus,
half-finished scripts pile up like so many empty beer cans and a
feeling of futility sets in; I can't do this. I can't write and
what kind of lousy person can't follow through and and
and….it's a terrible trap. If you think this might be you,
stop right now, breathe it out and without judging yourself,
correct the problem.
Perhaps a weak premise is not the culprit. Maybe you have a fear of
failure. If a writer completes a script then it will be read. By
someone in the industry, maybe some snot-nosed assistant or intern
and they will coldly dissect your baby, ripping it limb from limb
and leaving you feeling empty and humiliated. What if the gilded
dream of writing a movie is nothing but a torpid fantasy about to
be popped by a needle-sharp bad coverage?
Rejection is part of being a writer. It's a cliché but it's
true. Yes, when you finish your script it will be read, judged and
likely passed on. But it may not get passed on by everybody. You
only need one yes. And if that script can't find a single fan
– you write another one and hope that one will.
Aspiring screenwriters need feedback from within the industry.
Otherwise how can you know how you stack up compared to other
writers. Whether you use a script reading service, a consultant or
maybe a friend who reads in the business – get a reality
check. How are you doing? Yes, it's painful, it really is. But
otherwise, how will you ever know how you measure up? The trick is
to not take it personally. Every time a script gets a thumbs down,
you must use that experience to learn so that you can do better the
next time around. Be selfish about your negative feedback. Grab it,
horde it, and use it to do better.
They say the average writer has written ten scripts before they
become a WGA member. Nobody knows whether that statistic is a
certainty, but it's not a bad yard stick for a new writer to think
about. The chances that your first, second or third scripts will be
written much less received well is slim, relatively speaking. But
you can't get to fabulous script number eight without having done
the time on numbers one through seven. It's tedious, it is painful
but a writer cannot learn and improve without putting some serious
time and effort in.
Screenwriting workshops or classes are a great way to learn the
craft of scriptwriting and meet other writers too. And
screenwriting contests are another avenue of feedback.
Of course the paradox is that with every single script you write,
you have to believe with all of your heart and soul that it is
terrific. That's why this business is so terribly difficult; having
faith in the face of crushing odds is nothing short of attaining a
kind of grace.
So for some writers the easy way out is to never join the race.
They get about halfway through a script and sort of – just
– peter – out. They spend a lot of time discussing
things on message boards; opining, judging and lol-ing. It's much
more pleasant to talk about screenwriting than it is to take your
heart in your hands and just do it. But there is no other way,
kids. You can't go around it. You can't skip over it. You have to
go through it.
So take a good hard look at your inventory and your patterns. Are
you a serial Scriptus Interruptus writer? Maybe it's time to get to
the bottom of it. You can change that pattern right now. Today. But
if you choose to curl up in the wet blanket of
fear-of-rejection-it's-not-fair victimhood - well, terrific.
Because you just left an open spot for some other writer who will
can and will finish their script. One after the other.
Copyright (c) 2007 Julie Gray
Julie Gray is a mom, screenwriter and script consultant who works
and lives in Los Angeles, California http://www.thescriptwhisperer.com
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