The second critique that I was given during my second script consultation for my screenplay of Dig Down had to do with the dialogue. And I believe it’s one the best pieces of advice I’ve ever gotten when it comes to screenwriting.
To give some context, although I hadn’t really written many scripts prior to this experience, I had tried my hand at it a few times. I’ve even read to of the most well-regarded books on how to write screenplays: The Screenwriter’s Bible, and Story by Robert McKee. Both books provide a fantastic foundation for how to write a screenplay, understanding what makes a scene, and even advanced concepts such as infusing subtext into the dialogue.
But – and it has been a while since I read them – they both didn’t have this advice. And to be honest, I don’t even think the judge who made the comment realized how profound it was for me. I attribute that to them just having so much experience in screenwriting, it was probably something they just assumed people know.
The critique I was given for my script was that the main audience for the screenplay was actors.
This is something that I never considered. To me, I always saw the screenplay as the written form of the movie it would eventually become. This is in some ways true, because it provides the structure to the movie, and if you ever read the script of a film you were familiar with, you’d be able to envision the scenes from what you were reading.
But after he said it, I realized how much sense it made. And in turn, how wrong I was about who the audience of the screenplay was. Because people don’t tend to read scripts, they watch the movie. So they can’t be the audience.
When he saw that, his constant harping about actors, and how the fury they would have about constant wrylies, and demanding to let them act, all made a lot more sense. It wasn’t about them trying to take more and more creative control of the film making process. They’re the end user, its about them being able to use the script as they see fit.
What I was doing was the equivalent of selling something and then telling the customer how they needed to use the product that was now theirs.
As big as this was, this was actually laying the foundation for the best piece of screenwriting I received. I’ll get into that revelation, next time.