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Usenet Posted 21 years ago
Screenwriting

Good writer vs. good storyteller

Trying to decide which script(s) to enter in Nicholl and Austin this year, and I have a question.

It occurs to me that a person can be a good writer but not have cinema-worthy script ideas. They say a lot of specs are well-crafted duds. The stories are not high-concept enough, or just don't have enough "oomph" to bother putting up on the screen.

So my question is: how can one tell when to keep plugging away, and when to give up because one doesn't have good story sense?

I look at people like the guy who wrote the book that "Million Dollar Baby" was taken from. The guy tried to be a novelist for FORTY-NINE YEARS! He was finally published at something like age 70. He died before MDB was produced; his heirs received the $250K for film rights.

For that guy, or people like Jasper Fforde, it's about perseverance. (Fforde got 100+ rejections before his book finally sold; now it's a worldwide series of bestsellers being made into a film.) Again, how can you tell when to persevere, and when the rejection notices mean you really, truly and seriously don't have good stories?

Lois
  

Top answer

You can't. Friends of mine have demonstrated that often it's not what you know, it's who you know. People who spend more of their time trying to charm and persuade other people, stand a much better chance of getting other people to use their resources to turn their visions into something.

  • You can't.
  • Friends of mine have demonstrated that often it's not what you know, it's who you know.
  • People who spend more of their time trying to charm and persuade other people, stand a much better chance of getting other people to use their resources to turn their visions into something.
  • You might add "vs.
  • good businessperson" to the title of this thread.
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10 Answers
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You can't. Friends of mine have demonstrated that often it's not what you know, it's who you know. People who spend more of their time trying to charm and persuade other people, stand a much better chance of getting other people to use their resources to turn their visions into something. You might add "vs. good businessperson" to the title of this thread.

Also, even having won a charm o
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At the end of the day, one man's poison is another man's poodle. Er, or something like that.

Just because someone doesn't like your story doesn't necessarily make it a bad story, just maybe that it's being told to the wrong person.

Unless of course it really does stink. LOL!

-- MON __ SceneWriter Pro "Bring your script to life" www.scenewriterpro.com
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The more you write, the more scripts & movies you break down into scene-by-scene analyses, the more classes you take, the more screenwriters you talk to, the clearer this all becomes. If you've written five scripts and they all have the same flaw, it's time to get professional help to work on that flaw. If you've written eight scripts and can't place in a contest or get enthusiasm from instructor
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I suppose when I spoke earlier and said "you can't tell," I was assuming good work that goes unrecognized for business reasons.

-- Cheers, www.indiegamedesign.com Brandon Van Every Seattle, WA

"The pioneer is the one with the arrows in his back." - anonymous entrepreneur
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[nq:2]The more you write, the more scripts & movies you ... time to get professional help to work on that flaw.[/nq]
[nq:1]I suppose when I spoke earlier and said "you can't tell," I was assuming good work that goes unrecognized for business reasons.[/nq]
yah, I was answering Lois' question 'when can you tell your stories aren't cinema-worthy' not 'how can you tell if you'll ever sell a s
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Mysti Berry (Email Removed) wrote:
[nq:1]yah, I was answering Lois' question 'when can you tell your stories aren't cinema-worthy' not 'how can you tell if you'll ever sell a script' which is, as you pointed out, quite unknowable...[/nq]
Well, I think honest self assessment if a vital part of any writer's process, and it's one of the hardest things to learn.

If you really think y
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[nq:2]Trying to decide which script(s) to enter in Nicholl and Austin thisyear, and I have a question.[/nq]
It occurs to me that a person can be a good writer but not have cinema-worthy script ideas. They say a lot of specs are well-crafted duds. The stories are not high-concept enough, or just don't have enough "oomph" to bother putting up on the screen. <<

So true. There's "good wr
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Ron,
i think it's key that the writer match the type of script he's selling to the corner of the market to which it best fits, sounds like you did just that!
I invoke the Rule of Dungeons and Dragons (which I only played once, mind you) for scripts:
the more "points" you knock off for perceived difficulty to market, the more points you have to add for quality or originality to compens
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Too many questions! Focus!
1) Story ideas: danged important. You should be able to open the entertainment section of the newspaper and compare your idea to the movies out there and realize yours is coolest...
And non-industry people should get excited about your story idea. I still pitch my ideas to guys I used to work with at my old day job. If they can't wait to see the movie, that's pr
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There is no acid test. You just have to feel that you did well. Many great movies had their origin with under rated or rather "under estimated" scripts. Even many edited movies were considered during previews to be a failure. Raging Bull, American Grafiti are just two of the many.
A great script can be ruined by a bad director. An average script can be elevated by great director. I didnt want

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