by Charles Deemer
In my teaching experience, the first thing students
find confusing about screenwriting is format. No
wonder. There is no "Chicago Manual of Style" that
brings the rules between one pair of covers, no
ultimate reference source for what is right and wrong
in format. Instead there are a variety of formatting
fashions all existing at the same time -- and few
models available for what a good, clean spec script
should look like in today's highly competitive
marketplace.
Let me put screenplay format in two contexts: first,
historical context; and next in practical context.
Then I will summarize what I believe are the essential
principles of good spec screenplay format today.
THE HISTORICAL CONTEXT
Screenplay format has evolved over recent decades but
its evolution has moved in two consistent directions:
first, to remove special visual directing power from
the hands of the writer; and next to encourage a quick
easy reading in the increasingly crowded marketplace.
Both changes make absolute sense once you understand
their context. Therefore, it is silly and
self-defeating to fight them.
The first change, removing visual power from the
writer, was accomplished by getting rid of all
references to the camera. CUT TO:, ANGLE ON, CLOSE ON,
THE CAMERA MOVES, and such similar jargon no longer
belong in a spec script. Little is lost and much is
gained by this change. The writer still can write
visually, as indeed s/he should, by giving important
images their own paragraphs. If you direct the movie
in your head as you're writing, instead of mentioning
the camera, just start a new paragraph every time you
see a new shot. This will open up your script,
isolating the important visual information. Without
the jargon, scripts also are much easier to read.
The second change leads to the recent practical
context in which scripts must be written today.
THE PRACTICAL CONTEXT
Format must make the script easier to read, not more
difficult. Format defines how the script looks to the
eye: it must look text-light and easy to read. Short
crisp simple sluglines. Short paragraphs separated by
lots of white space. An invitation to a vertical read,
not a text-heavy horizontal one. A blueprint for a
movie, not a literary document.
Format contributes to the reader's first impression.
When I was a reader and saw a text-heavy script, I
groaned inside and the screenwriter began with two
strikes against him.
There are principles to follow in order to avoid
making this impression.
THE PRINCIPLES OF GOOD SPEC SCRIPT FORMAT AND STYLE
1. Make sluglines self-sufficient, without
reference to prior sluglines for understanding them.
If a reader puts a bookmark in a script and returns to
read C0NTINUOUS, s/he must read up the script to
remember what this means. Don't do this. Put all
relevant information in every slugline.
2. Make sluglines consistent and as simple as
possible. Don't use DAY, MORNING, AFTERNOON, NOON,
EARLY AFTERNOON, etc., when DAY works. Think not when
the action is happening but when it will be
shot. How often in a movie do you actually know
what time it is? Not very often. Only add the details
if they are essential to the story and then put them
in action when describing the scene. In other words,
use DAY and NIGHT almost exclusively. It shows you
know how sluglines are used in production. Along the
same lines, avoid putting descriptions in sluglines.
Don't write EXT. HOUSE IN A CUL DE SAC, write EXT.
HOUSE and describe its location, if important, in the
action element. Generally speaking, if you use a
preposition in a slugline, it's not written simply
enough.
3. Write action in very short paragraphs. This
is how the writer can direct the reading, if not the
movie. When you imagine a new shot, start a new
paragraph. No paragraph should be longer than five
lines across the page, perferably less. This also
gives the script verticality and makes it easier to
read.
4. Avoid parentheticals. They seldom add
anything essential. Often they smack of directing,
which is not your job.
5. Avoid using "we see" and "we hear." Duh.
This is a movie, dummy. Using "we" is pure fat and
smacks of directing. Also avoid all reference to the
camera.
6. Minimize capitalization. You don't have to
capitalize sounds any more. Don't. In general, only
use capitalization to introduce a new character and
for extreme and infrequent emphasis. Scripts look
cleaner and are easier to read without them.
7. Write with simple sentences and fragments but
also with style. Avoid complex sentence
construction and long modifying phrases. Write very
simply. You are not here to dazzle anyone with your
prose style. Wrong place for that. Tell the story
directly, simply. Don't be afraid to use incomplete
sentences, especially in fast action sequences. Don't
be afraid to add sizzle and style to your writing with
an occasional short expletive when appropriate, i.e.
No way! or Ka-bang! or Snoring zzzzzzzzzz. Make the
script fun to read.
Many experienced readers can tell at a glance,
without reading a single word, whether or not a
screenplay invites a quick read or not. Make sure
yours does.
Finally, don't let your writing get in the way of
your story. What a thing to say about any kind of
writing! But in screenwriting, it's so true. Write so
that your story comes forward. Don't hide it behind
over-writing and other rhetorical devices. You are
trying to sell your story, first and foremost, and the
best writing style to accomplish this is a simple
style with touches of economical individuality. Dazzle
us with your story, not your writing style.
Charles Deemer teaches graduate and undergraduate screenwriting at Portland State University. He is the author of the electronic screenwriting tutorial, Screenwright: the craft of screenwriting. His book Seven Plays was a finalist for the Oregon Book Award. His new book, Practical Screenwriting, is due in 2005. Deemer maintains two websites:
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