The screenplay you've pounded out on
your trusty word processor is finished at last! Before the reader even looks at
the title of your script, it must pass the "rifle test." The rifle test tells a
professional in seconds whether the script is professionally written or not. Is
the screenplay in the right format? Does it look like it was written by a
professional screenwriter? Is the script vertical?
The Rifle
Test
Hollywood screenwriters know that a reader, agent or producer
can tell instantly by fanning the pages back to front if your script is
professionally written and in the proper format. Your script will not even get
a read at an agency or get studio coverage if it doesn't look right. The
typical development executive reads 35-50 scripts a week on their own time,
away from the office. After reading hundreds and hundreds of scripts, they can
see at a glance if it looks right. If it's not right, it's dumped. It's that
simple. If you use a good screenwriting program, then this is an area you won't
have to worry about. If you don't have one, at least follow the rules. They're
relatively simple. They're also hard and fast and not meant to be deviated
from, so don't "improve" upon the formula, just use it. You can get the layout
details at ScriptNurse.com for free.
Before you get the screenplay
down on paper, watch out for "speed bumps" that are practically guaranteed to
stop the reader in his tracks. Remember, there are only TWO TOOLS to work with
in writing a screenplay:
* ACTION: a description of what is seen on
the screen visually
* DIALOGUE: what the characters say
Here are
some rules and do's and don'ts for writing your screenplay with impact:
Action Description Tips
Don't direct or act: Directors
don't like to be told how to shoot a scene. Besides, a good director might do
it better than you suggest in the script. Actors don't like to be told how to
act, so don't tell them how to play the scene in your script. By using
techniques to make your script more "vertical" you can lead the director and
the reader where you want them to go. Break up paragraphs into smaller ones so
that each paragraph implies a shot. "we see" or "we hear" sounds like you're
directing, so don't use them. Instead, the the technique of making your script
"vertical" to accomplish the same thing.
Kill the camera: Remove all
references to camera movement and angles. If you have to do it more than once
or twice in an entire script, there's something wrong with the way you're
writing it. Eliminate any "we see" or "we hear" references because "we" don't
see or hear. Write the visual action the audience will see on the screen or the
words the actors say. The simplicity of screenwriting is what makes it so hard
to do. Use the "vertical" technique to lead the reader through the shots.
The verb "is" implies a state of being that cannot be photographed. Only
visual action can be put on the screen. Any reference to whom "is thinking,"
"knows about," "wants to be," or "looks like" needs to be rewritten. Action
description doesn't have to be perfect English. This isn't a novel. It DOES
have to be colorful, descriptive and visual so the reader can "see" in their
heads what you want seen on-screen.
Use strong language and avoid
passive voice writing: "Fred is running around crazily" is weak compared to
"Fred runs, flailing his arms frantically." Look for any descriptions that talk
about "is" or "being." That's weak writing. Make it colorful! Use simple,
colorful, visual words. Don't convert verbs into nouns as in the example above.
The verb is "runs" -- keep it a verb and you'll have stronger, present tense
writing.
Eliminate CUT TO: in your script. It's already implied when
you show a new scene heading anyway.
Character Development
If they're good, make them very good. If they're bad, make them really bad.
This makes your characters easier to identify with and clearer in the mind of
the script reader. We all want to know who to root for and who to despise.
Don't make it hard to figure out. It can always be "dumbed down" later.
Write backstories for your characters. Create their past lives and family
history. Note their quirks, habits (good and bad), flaws, compulsions, fears,
phobias and dark secrets. List things that scare them in the night. Write down
every skeleton in their closet. Include parents and siblings, if appropriate.
Write down traits others might see as good, redeeming and to be admired. What
makes them likeable? What makes others immediately not like them? These all
work together to help you understand your characters. It makes them come alive.
Creating a past lets you create a future in your screenplay that's real and
plausible. Having this understanding leads to you knowing that a character
would or wouldn't "do that" or "say that." For example, everyone knows that
Indiana Jones has a phobia about snakes that gives him pause. Since he's bigger
than life, he faces his fear, but because he has a common phobia, we can all
identify with him easily.
Try "casting" your script with a dream cast.
Cast each principal role with the biggest name you can think of who is perfect
for the part. See that $20 Million Star as the character you're writing. Get
their photos and stick them up on a wall with their character name above the
photo. When you've got Jack Nicholson speaking your lines, you find out very
quickly the kinds of things he simply could not do or would not say.
Real vs. Reel Dialogue
There's real dialogue and "reel"
dialogue. If you want real dialogue, just go outside, where there's plenty of
it. Reel dialogue in film is different. It's terse and more direct without
being "in your face" or "on the nose." Here's where reading good, quality
scripts can really help you. If you need help with dialogue, I recommend
getting a great dialogue tool called Great Dialogue (www.greatdialogue.com).
Rule of Thumb: In a properly formatted script, if there are more than
five lines of dialogue under a character name, it's starting to become a
speech. Too many speeches and your script becomes too "talky."
Strike
every "well," "now," "listen," "oh," etc. that you find in your dialogue.
Actors put those in where it's natural to do so and they only make a script
harder to read.
Delete the "pleasantries" and "chit-chat" from scenes.
You're just wasting time, boring the reader and keeping them from your story.
Act it out: say the lines out loud as you write them. It's amazing how
much this helps.
Let's Start Hacking
It's time to get
rid of the weak, passive and pointless from your script. Start by making a
backup copy of the script before you get out the hacksaw and start chopping
everything to pieces.
Your story might be too long, wanders aimlessly,
or lacks impact. Let's thin it out without gutting it. Do this:
1. Strike every "well," "now," "listen," "oh," etc. that you find in
your dialogue. Get to the subject at hand and cut to the chase. Cut out the
unnecessary clutter in what your characters say. You can always put it back in
if the producer wants it. Actors hate to be told how to act and producers hate
reading about that, too.
2. Look for parentheticals
(instructions to the actor in parentheses in the dialogue). Hack them out. Use
them ONLY when there's no other way to indicate that a particular line is
directed to a specific character out of several in the same scene or if it
cannot be done by carefully selecting the words for a character. Parentheticals
are speed bumps in a script. Avoid them entirely if possible.
3. See just how terse you can make the dialogue. Terseness helps to
create impact and makes characters seem more forceful and decisive in a drama
and funnier in a comedy. When it gets to the point where you're feeling a
little uncomfortable with the directness, it's probably about right.
4. Review the action descriptions. Any "is" or "being" description
needs to be re-written to give it impact. Strike references to ANYTHING not
seen on the screen, like reminding the reader that "so-and-so was the same guy
who..." -- you get the idea. If it can't be seen: HACK IT OUT! Think in master
scenes. It's okay to write the interior and exterior scenes at one location as
one scene. Use a separate action description paragraph to signal a separate
shot without explicitly saying so, to let the reader know we went outside, if
you started with INT. BAR - NIGHT. It's a LOT easier to read that way.
5. Find every instance of a simple word and give it more impact. Get
simple, colorful language in your descriptions. Cars don't just "pull up at the
curb." They also gasp, lurch, grind, shudder, gurgle, clatter and expire at the
curb. Get a good thesaurus or use the one built into your screenwriting or word
processing program. The point is -- use it! Also, eliminate big words not
commonly used in everyday speech unless it's part of a character's persona.
By now, you should have thinned things out a LOT. Good. You're down to
meat and potatoes, if you're lucky. Your script should be more visual, carry
more impact and possess tight, crisp dialogue. Now set it aside for at least a
week, preferably two. When you come back in one or two weeks, start again and
repeat the process. You're done when you run out of things to hack out.
Making Your Script Vertical
A reader is looking for any
excuse to dump your screenplay on the ever-growing reject pile. One way to do
this is to look for the amount of white space that is seen when doing the
"rifle test." Vertical scripts have more white space. How do you make a script
vertical? Just break up the densely packed paragraphs into two or three
sentence paragraphs. There's a side benefit to this approach, too. All of these
smaller paragraphs serve to imply the shots that are needed. It's not good to
tell a director how to direct, but it's not bad to lead him down the path. You
can do this by the way you write the script and by making it vertical.
Conclusion
There you have it: a few approaches, do's and
don'ts, exercises and suggestions. I hope you will put the exercises to a test.
You might be very surprised at the results. Perhaps there's a better script
inside the one you're working on just waiting to get out.
About the
Author
Long wanting to be in "the business," Don Bledsoe started young,
producing a short film for NBC while still in high school, worked in the Story
Department at Paramount Studios at age 19, and later as an actor and makeup
artist in film and television in Hollywood. He took up screenwriting in the
early 90's and founded Script Nurse in 1999.




