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SO, WHAT'S THE STORY?
By Michele Wallerstein
Screenplay, Novel & Career Consultant
Every agent is waiting for you to bring them the
next big saleable screenplay that will knock the business
off its axis. They want you to show them that piece that
will have producers and studios panting at their doors with
huge offers of money and multiple deals of future movies.
Agents want the best for you, because it means the best for
them. I happen to believe that this relationship is a great
one. It is an honest quid pro quo - if you are successful…I
am successful. How bad is that?
OK, so how do you make that happen? How do you
deliver the perfectly written project that will make the
town sit up and take notice? It’s not as difficult as it
sounds. The first thing you have to do is STOP thinking
that you have to write the most unusual script of all time.
This kind of thinking will destroy your chances of not only
selling the script, but of keeping your agent. I’ve found
that new writers often have the tendency to try to impress
people by “thinking outside the box”. Well folks, the “box”
is there for a reason, it works. Throughout movie history,
audiences have loved certain types of films. They go to see
them over and over again. When you are working to get in to
the business, go with the flow. Perhaps, after you’ve
established yourself as a player, you might be able to
expand your horizons, but it’s not the way to get into your
chosen field.
Insofar as your early spec
scripts are concerned, here are some rules to live by:
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No Togas. By this I mean to say
period pieces. Keep your early scripts contemporary.
Period pieces are extremely difficult to sell. They go
in and out of favor with the studios by the minute. You
never know whether you are too early or too late with
your piece. They are not good as writing samples since
they are too specifically time/era dependent. This
means manners, customs, morals, societal relationships,
styles of speech, etc… . Oh, and by the way, try to
stay on this planet.
-
Keep it simple. Stay away from
twins. Don’t make a script too complicated to produce.
As soon as a development executive or producer sees this
they will toss it into the “circular file”. It is too
much of a pain in the neck. Try not to write a script
that is so complicated that it would make the casting a
horror. Another example, besides twins, is a
multi-generational story of the entire cast. This means
a nightmare of casting as well as costume and set
changes that are a financial pain. Don’t go there.
Besides, no one really wants to watch Brad Pitt or
Ashton Kutcher age before their eyes.
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Keep ‘em young. If you
really want to kick start your writing career, try to have
your early scripts feature a fairly young cast. In my mind
the term “young” means any age up to 29 years old. Not one
minute older. The youth market is what is the most viable
today. Actually if you can write a script for 9 year old
boys, you are really in good shape. The research shows that
those boys will return to see the same film over and over
again with different friends and family members. Recidivism
is the word. Let’s not forget our little friend, Harry
Potter.
-
Location, location,
location. This is not simply a rule in real estate. This
is a real consideration in movie making. A studio never has
a problem putting their money in a viable movie star who can
“open” a movie. That means that any movie starring a
particularly huge actor is guaranteed a certain bottom line
of huge dollars at the box office in its opening weekend.
Foreign or multiple locations do not promise this type of
money for the film and they are very expensive. It is not a
hard and fast rule to keep everything set in one location
but simply something to keep in mind. You always want to be
realistic in your writing. Think bottom line.
-
The Star. Here are the
rules for your main character and they are hard and fast.
These points apply to all genres. Do not try to change them
for any reason.
a. The Star’s
character is on every page.
b. The Star’s
character resolves the problem
c. The Star’s
character has the most lines
d. The Star’s
character gets the girl (or the guy)
e. The Star’s
character is the smartest person in the cast
f. The Star’s
character has the last word in the film
g. The Star’s
character must grow as a person
h. The Star’s
character must learn something about him/herself
-
Coincidences. They only
complicate the plot. Coincidences never, ever resolve the
problems. When you have a coincidence resolve a plot point
the audience feels cheated.
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Depressing/Dramas?
There is a fine line between being depressing and being
dramatic. You need to understand the difference in your
early writing career of dramatic film writing. I love a
good dramatic relationship film. I hate depressing movies
that have no other saving grace but to be sad. “HUD” was a
great drama starring the late Paul Newman, another great
drama was the 1957 film titled “A FACE IN THE CROWD”
starring Patricia Neal and Andy Griffith. These are films
that must be seen by serious film writers. As an agent,
some years ago a client brought in a brand new script that
he had never discussed with me. He proudly handed over a
large box of them, with leatherette covers with gold
embossed titles. This sent a clear message that I was not
to give him any notes and that he wanted them to be sent out
just the way they were. The story in those scripts was
about the murders of elderly, helpless people in an old age
home. It was so depressing that I could barely read it.
Not only couldn’t I submit this well-written script, but I
had to let the client go.
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Choices. Write a
contemporary drama, comedy, suspense, thriller,
murder/mystery, teen-comedy, romance, etc… . Keep your
characters interesting and believable- make us care what
happens to them. Try to write “up” to the audiences’
intellect and emotions. We want to leave the movie theater
feeling like we were entertained and that we learned just a
little bit about the human condition. The movie studios
like this too.
Michele Wallerstein is a former
Literary Agent who now works as a Screenplay and Novel
Consultant. She can be reached at:
Email:
novelconsult@sbcglobal.net
Website:
www.novelconsultant.com
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