|
|
|
Articles -
Screen And Playwriting
|
|
Written by Christina Hamlett
|
|
2004-12-28 |
The Tao Of “No More, No Less”
By Christina Hamlett
As many of you are aware, I teach an online course for aspiring screenwriters through WRITER ONLINE.
Not only do I walk my students through the rudiments of how to craft a
compelling film but also how to package the finished manuscript and
make a stellar impression on industry professionals. Unfortunately, my
experience as a mentor has also revealed the dismaying trend that, in
their zeal to sell a story—be it a book, play, or movie—fledgling
writers will frequently assume that submission requirements apply to
everyone on the planet except them. While they can’t be faulted for
their enthusiasm, this display of arrogance—how ever well
intentioned—will usually result in a rejection instead of a contract.
Thus, the subject of this month’s article on making the most of your writing talents in the coming new year: Always Follow Instructions.
Remember that one-page, mimeographed test that teachers were so fond of handing out in elementary school—the one which began, “Read all of the directions before you start,”
then proceeded to list a long series of silly behaviors such as
quacking like a duck, running around your desk, and putting your shoes
on opposite feet? Not until you got to the last entry did you discover,
“Now that you have read all the directions, please print your name
at the top of the page and sit quietly until the rest of the class is
done.”
The publishing and
production world is not much different from this childhood lesson in
paying attention. Neither, apparently, are those who rush headlong into
the creative process without reading—and comprehending—what’s expected
of them.
Take, for example, the
final assignment of the aforementioned screenwriting course. After six
weeks of interactive lectures and lessons, students are instructed to
turn in the first 10 pages of an original film script for evaluation.
The guidelines are specific in terms of page count, format, and
terminology. The number “10” itself is significant in terms of their
sample representing the first 10 minutes of screen time (1 page=1
minute)—the critical opening window in which you either grab the
audience’s attention or send them channel-surfing or wandering off to
see what’s playing at the theater next door.
Care to take a guess of how many envelopes I receive that contain not 10 but 120+ pages of script?
“I
knew that once you started reading this, you just wouldn’t be able to
put it down,” they typically say, usually on a post-it note festooned
with smiley faces or puppies. If I ever did become that riveted on an
opening scene, of course, I would probably pick up the phone and insist
that the author send me the rest by Fed Ex. (That has yet to happen, by
the way.)
Then there are those
who have a hard time grasping the “1 page=1 minute” concept and will
either submit a scant 2.5 pages with the explanatory margin note that
“the fight scene takes up a whole lot of time” or 17 pages with
directions that “everyone talks really fast.” There is also an
excessive amount of cheating when it comes to typeface (i.e., “I know
you told us all to use Courier but I thought Marlett Bold made a
whimsical statement.”).
Suffice it
to say, the rules of publication and production weren’t written to be
broken; they were written to be adhered to. The standardization of
fonts, margins, and pages in the script market, for instance, is
necessary for prospective directors to know whether they are dealing
with a teleplay, a two-hour feature, or the next TITANIC.
Even the cover stock and brads used to assemble a finished screenplay
are an industry standard; many a wannabe screenwriter has discovered
that the only thing a glitzy presentation binder with bells and
whistles accomplishes is in drawing glaring attention to the owner’s
amateur status.
Magazine
publishers—be they print or electronic—have a litany of guidelines,
too, primarily geared to word-length, perspective/slant, and whether or
not similar topics have been addressed in recent issues. Woe to the
writer who colors outside the lines with a piece that is inappropriate
to the readership, not particularly timely, or rambles into a 3,000
word essay when the maximum count for freelance submissions is a
bite-size 750.
Whether your area of
expertise is film, stage, novels, or non-fiction articles, it’s
essential that you give the requesting party exactly what they want, in
the order they want it, and no more/no less than what is being asked
for.
Let’s say you run across a
listing in WRITER’S MARKET that strictly advises that book proposals be
submitted between June 1st and August 31st. only. Do not, therefore,
assume they’ll be delighted to receive a hefty package from you during
Christmas week. Nor should you dismiss such caveats as “Agented
Submissions Only,” “No Simultaneous Submissions,” and “No e-mail
inquiries.” Authors who might otherwise have a promising future have
unwittingly sabotaged their chances for publication by either ignoring
these requests completely or offering chatty explanations as to why the
editor should re-think the existing company policies. The red flag that
goes up when editors encounter such correspondence instantly translates
to one thing: this person will be a pain to work with.
My
students often protest, of course, that submitting only one chapter or
the first 10 pages of a script is hardly enough to show the buyer was a
tremendous story they’ve written. The truth of the matter is, though,
that people who are the decision makers when it comes to what gets put
in print or on the screen are seasoned enough to recognize what’s good
or what’s bad from the very first paragraph. There is also the grim
reality that there are simply not enough hours in the day for them to
read and evaluate every single submission from cover to cover. The
seemingly “unfair” limitations being placed on the author are actually
performing a favor: would you rather have someone get hooked on a great
query letter plus the first 5 pages of your manuscript and request the
rest…or have your entire tome buried in a back room slush pile, never
to be read at all?
When in doubt,
opt for brevity. A letter-size envelope will almost always be opened
upon arrival; a thick package (particularly if unsolicited) is more
likely to be set aside indefinitely or used as a doorstop.
The
value of abiding by instructions holds equally true after a project has
been assigned or sold. I recall how ecstatic I was back in 1980 when I
received a check for the sale of my very first play, a Medieval comedy
entitled THE KNIGHT OF THE HONEST HEART. In the course of
preparing the work for publication, the letter said, it was requested
that I delete four specific lines of dialogue.
My
excitement quickly spiraled into anger. “They already sent me a check
for it,” I told my husband. “That means they should keep my script
exactly the way it is!”
He pointed
out that my acceptance of the check was conditional. “If you feel that
strongly about keeping the lines in, they’ll probably want their money
back.”
Fortunately, I saw the
wisdom of his advice and complied. To tell you the truth, I don’t even
remember what those four lines were, much less why I ever felt so
impassioned that the success of the play hinged on them being there. I
do know, however, that the show’s debut could have been significantly
delayed if I had held fast to balking with the editor.
The
happy ending to the story is that I’ve continued to sell scripts to
this same publishing house for the past 20+ years. I must be doing
something right; specifically, delivering exactly what they wanted.
Here’s
to the New Year and the publishing kudos it brings to each and every
one of you! If you have an experience or advice you’d like to share,
the mailbox is always open at authorhamlett@cs.com.
Former actress/director Christina Hamlett
is an award winning author and script coverage consultant whose credits
include 21 books, 115 plays and musicals, 4 optioned films, and columns
that appear throughout the world. Her latest screenwriting book, COULD
IT BE A MOVIE, is now available at www.mwp.com. |
|
|