Friday, April 07, 2006

The 4-Day Feature

Not to keep postponing the love-fest…but as things pop up, I want to share. I’ve neglected everything else in my life (Brent/Chris/Scott: I’m sorry –getting to it!) since last Saturday. Other than pausing to meet with Karen, Michael, and Billy (with a welcome Chubb sighting!), the following is a Coles notes version of my past week: Wake up, work. Home quickly to shower, off to Second Cup. Get a green tea latte. Write until it closes. Watch the Daily Show. Rinse and repeat.

Those close to me know that I’ve been super busy – embarrassingly, too busy to explain why. I’ve been vague on the details. I assured you, I’m not trying to shroud myself in mystery.

I’ll explain the reason behind all this madness after, but I wanted to first describe the actual ‘act’ of putting your rambunctious imagination on paper under a less than pregnant deadline without years of writing-under-the-gun experience.

I wrote a feature script in 4 days. From scratch. Assembled a potpourri of ideas and details into 94 pages. I must admit, I’m pretty proud. Despite not actually reading it or knowing if its anything more than words on a page, I’m proud that I did it. (This ties into the Love-Fest that I’m neglecting…more on that in the future). I wrote notes at the end of each day, in order to better figure out my process and to share it with others. Here it is, a day by day breakdown of the script - that currently has three working titles.

Dear Diary:

Day 0 (I don't count this day because I didn't technically write anything):

VA leaves the coffee shop. Great meeting. Suggests strongly (asked me) that I write a feature for the upcoming Friday. With a smile on her face. Take my regular seat amongst the armchair in the back of the Second Cup at St. Clair and Bathurst. Having trouble breathing. What the fuck am I going to do? Do I go through my past outlines and see if I can get something to work? Or do I start fresh? What I did is a combination of both. Went through my detail/idea files, and extracted some pieces I wanted to explore and hoped would be complimentary. But, I won’t know until I try..

Day 1:
Took about an hour to mute the ‘Wow, it’s sunny outside!’ recording looped inside my brain. Began to sketch an outline together. I have a document from Noel Baker – sort of a cheat sheet, made from notes from a famous Hollywood script doctor. As Noel said, it’s to be used not as a template or bible, but as a reference tool. I find it helps to get out of the gates. Put the pieces together, tried (unsuccessfully) to write a traditional outline. Came up with what I thought would be a cool beginning, and wrote it out. Paid attention to setting the stage quickly. Jump right into it. I think I’ve done an ok job of that.

I suffer from the tendency to want to ‘do it all’ on the first go round. I know others who hand me a first draft that (I think) isn’t very good, but I know the reason is because they just focused on the protagonist/structure/tone.
Page Count: 18

Day 2:
Sat down, looked at where I left off. After recently reading John August’s March 27 post, I didn’t re-write myself. It’s a habit I got into with Marigold Moon, and I have not been able to shake it since. I’d begin each new writing day with a polish of everything that’s come before it. I don’t have the luxury of time this week, so I fought the urge and pushed ahead. Forward into nothing. There was nothing in my head, just characters standing in a field, staring at each other.

I skipped ahead to the ending. Laid the groundwork. Having the beginning and end somewhat in place, I tried to follow the organic spine inherent in what I’ve set up. (Side note: I don’t’ think you can teach this. Some people just have good story instinct – they can create drama and conflict without thinking about it. Some are better than others – PG comes to mind) I hope the drama is building – I have a vague sense of my character’s arc to this point. I am trying to ensure each relationship is complex and engaging. As usual, I love my secondary characters. Fun to write. I think I’ve found their voices. And, as usual, I feel that my protagonist is still the weakest character. I have to make sure he is active. I still think the atmosphere, the world of the script, isn’t getting enough attention. I know it in my head; it’s just not on the page. Will work on that later.

On a stylistic note, I can’t wait to think in fragments. Scott does this well. I’m prone to using flowery words in an effort to entertain, although I know the primary goal of screenwriting is to tell the story in as few words as possible. Tomorrow, I’m going to tackle the many beats of the second half of the Act 2. I’m promising myself (in the sake of efficiency – only time will tell whether this was a good decision) not to pay too much attention to ‘traditional structure’ – instead to follow my own story beats. Focus on the Action/Reaction/Action/Reaction chain of events and emotions.
Page Count: 48

Day 3:
Again, began without reading it through. I find it takes me a few minutes longer to actually get into ‘writing mode’, but still saves a few hours of fine-tuning. I’ll do that all at once when I’m done the draft. I referred to my end of day notes from yesterday. Trudged forward. Got through most of the second act. I must admit, I can’t completely tell where each act breaks – will undoubtedly have to polish and clarify later.

Relationships growing on their own. Little holes are filling themselves – a great feeling, fills you with confidence. The protagonist is gaining personality. Must go back once I’m done and make sure it’s consistent. Made small changes to the story (mostly subplot changes), so I went back to the beginning just to plant the seeds. Discovering I’m not a lawyer – will have to do some legal research on restraining orders, custody, and wills. The end is in sight. I’ve got the major scenes outlined. All I have to do is fill them in.
Page Count: 70

Day 4:
DONE. D-O-N-E. Can only be described as ‘pounding it’. I think I may have rushed it. Again, I didn’t read – just trusted the notes I made in my exhausted delirium last night. Gotta ensure everything ties together; that there are no loose ends. What’s weird is that it’s the tightest 1st draft I’ve even done in terms of page count – but the whole time I was writing WAY too much dialogue, thinking to myself that I have to go back and sift through the chunks of unnecessary dialogue. After my polish, I could end up with an 80 page draft. I guess worse things have happened.
Final Page Count: 94

Some questions I have about it (by no means ALL the questions I have, but because some of you will be reading it, I don’t want to plant too many seeds of doubt):
- The story is good. This I believe. But, does it move at a cinematic pace? Or did I write About Schmidt?
- Are the arcs, motivations, conflicts clear and logical?
- Am I hitting the same emotional beat or does it build?

Day 5 (today):
Walked to work with my iPod on shuffle. The first song that came on was U2’s “Beautiful Day’. My own disgustingly cheesy movie moment, but despite the rain, it did feel like a beautiful day.

Let it be said here first – I have not read the script as yet. I cannot yet discuss the quality, largely because I cannot determine it. Writing under the most luxurious circumstances, it’s still awfully difficult for me to distance myself right away and make an unbiased decision. I’m going to read it tonight, as well as send it off to some trusted friends for feedback. If it still needs a bunch of work (read: NOT GOOD), I’ll chalk this all up to a good experience and send off a sample.

An explanation of exactly why I put myself through this intensely scary but ultimately satisfying experience will come (if) the script is good enough to send out. If it’s not, well, then you needn't know anything.

BTW, tried a new green tea ‘chiller’. Fucking revolting. Tastes like someone already drank it, let it mix with their stomach acids, and then spit it into a clear Second Cup (cup) and handed me a straw. The warm one, delicious. The cold? Not so much.

Nervously anxious to read it…jb

2 Comments:

At 10:07 AM, Blogger Red Devil said...

Josh - it is good to read about the experiences of another writer and understand that we all go through similar experiences (although not necessarily in four days). I am looking forward to hearing what you think of it after you finally sit down and read it.

 
At 3:39 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Bravo, Josh. I didn't know you were in the middle of all this when we met for drinks that evening in April. I'm doublly glad to have been able to buy you a few pints. An inspiration.

 

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