Using TV as a way to write better? Your thoughts?
- moderntimes
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Using TV as a way to write better? Your thoughts?
Then I learned to do this: I set my characters into a scene, let them "go with it" and just "took dictation" of what they said and did. And boy, did it improve my fiction!
Thinking about this technique earlier today, I realized that in fact what I'm doing is casting my characters as actors on a stage or in a movie or TV show. In an attempt to obtain verisimilitude, I imagine real people doing and saying real things in accordance with the scene they're in, which is of course, in a way, as if they were actors, that little idea just coming into my mind today.
So after this reflection I realized that I was in fact "casting" a TV episode or movie as I wrote my mystery novels. Now putting aside bad TV shows and movies, let's instead use an ideal great cast, fine production values, top notch director, all the requisite goodies which make a first rate TV episode or movie.
Then, as we're writing out chapter, we think of it as if we were writing or directing a screenplay -- the narrative and the dialogue -- and maybe that's a good way to get our writing to have more vibrancy and energy, seem more realistic, with reasonable behavior of characters and therefore a solid outcome.
Good idea? What say you?
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One thing I add to my writing is, "What would I be thinking right now if this were me?" That's never really portrayed in television, but it's a good writing guide.
I hearken back to days of yore, when sitcoms like Everybody Loves Raymond had two or three really long sequences in each episode. That same actress, Patricia Heaton, is currently on another sitcom, The Middle, in which each scene lasts exactly one minute long. Pathetic. No substance.
I like to create scenes like that, from ELR, that are really well fleshed out, and I'm glad I used to watch that show all the time.
Totally true story: back when I was in college, my campus counselor asked why I watched TV all the time. I told her I was practicing in my mind to become a great writer one day. She gave me a "look," and I knew she didn't believe me. Snort.
- moderntimes
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On stage, you are given your stage directions: Antonio enters stage right (stage right is audience left) and moves centerstage to complain with the Count (Ah, Senior!) then the Count and Antonio both move stage left and upstage to argue (Ascotate!) until Figaro and Susanna move center (Deh Ventura) and so on... [I'm just pulling the little teaser lyrics from my memory and am probably wrong]
And our stage coach recommended that we either try to "become" the character and not "pretend" to be that character. Or, alternatively, imagine you're watching yourself on the stage from the audience and you've got to please yourself.
The whole objective to that form of acting is to detach yourself from the person you are and immerse yourself into that character's personality. Which is the root of the Stanislavsky "Method" acting.
And by that same token, as a writer, we must immerse our sensibility into the scene we're writing and have our characters do real things and say real things. Otherwise it's gonna be wooden and lifeless.
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That might also be interesting for finding ways to characterize, just letting scenes play out.
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In writing my novels, as I said, I placed my characters in a scene and "let them go" and recorded the outcome. This tool works so well for me that I thought others might try such.
Now understand, I personally am a little skeptical about writing gimmicks and lots of these seem to be used by writing classes as an exercise but the actual results are more related to getting a good grade in class than the actual selling or publication of the writing. A lot of these exercises I've seen listed in this forum and elsewhere are a bit self-indulgent and it often seems to me that the exercise is only meant to complete the exercise, a circular logic which gives the fledgling writer no real successful "product" at all.
In other words, I think that exercises which are meant to help the writer create a better story or whatever are fine. But if the exercise has no real "output" other than the exercise itself, it's a waste of time. Myself, I'd rather be writing than performing an exercise about writing.
I use the technique I describe in this thread as a helpful tool to let me create a much more realistic chapter. But I really don't stop writing and sit and contemplate the stage production or TV episode playing out. I just write and write and write. But in the back of my mind I visualize the event which I'm writing about. But the object of the mental imaging is to create a novel which I want to sell. Period. And thus far, it's worked.
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That sealed my opinion of writing as if for a movie then develop and layer plot & characters. Doesn't necessarily mean perfection but a possibly better narrative.
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Modern screenplay formatting is precise. The font, margins, and layout are consistent and newbie screenplays must adhere to that exact page formatting. Reason is that if a script is formatted correctly, it "plays" at about 1 minute per page. Now if there's a larger amount of narrative on that specific page (narrative being the "commentary" which describes what's happening) this takes less time than actual dialogue, because the narrative (commentary) is never read on screen but only helps the director and such. Regardless, the average "play time" is 1 page per minute.
Anyway... an actual screenplay is very, very different in tone and texture from a book on the same story line, and this is true even if both are well written. There's a whole different styling and structure, which of couse means that the writer has to switch mental gears. It's quite tricky.
However, if the writer of the book imagines a screen story occurring as the writer, this is a bit different. So yes, imagining a "screenplay" form of the book would work fine, so long as the author doesn't try to recreate the actual screenwriting process, because the actual process of screenwriting is quite different from text writing.
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