EVALUATING
YOUR OWN WORK By Derek Rydall
Founder, ScriptwriterCentral.com “Words
strain,
Crack and sometimes break, under the burden,
Under the tension, slip, slide, perish,
Decay with imprecision, will not stay in place,
Will not stay still.”
-- T.S. Eliot, Four Quartets
WRITING IS REWRITING
As a writer, you may use other script consultants to critique
your material, but inevitably you’ll need to master
the ability to analyze your own work. This can be a difficult
task, somewhat akin to trying to look at your own face (without
a mirror). If you are going to write at a level that sells,
however, you will need to rewrite.
And rewrite.
And rewrite…
But do not despair, you’re in good company. Many screenwriters
struggle over evaluating their own work. I still have bloodstains
on my office walls where I pounded my head as I rewrote one
script sixteen times before putting it in the market. I once
spent so long looking at a single word that it lost its meaning
and was reduced to its original, primordial symbolism. Talk
about a head-trip! And it’s not just screenwriters that
suffer with this. The French poet, Paul Verlaine, once said
that a poet never finishes a poem, he abandons it. Marcel
Proust continued to correct proofs for Remembrance of Things
Past on his deathbed. Henry James rewrote some of his novels
long after they were published. And Oscar Wilde once proclaimed
that he spent all morning adding a comma and all afternoon
deleting it. Boy, do I know that one!
So how do you analyze your own work without becoming an alcoholic
or a guest at the Mad Hatter’s tea party? First, you
have to accept the fact that you will never have a completely
objective perspective. Second, you have to learn when to just
grit your teeth and conclude that the work is finished --
even if you have the uneasy feeling that more can be done.
Honestly, I still feel that way about almost everything I’ve
written. It goes with the territory.
There are certain things you can do, however, to gain some
perspective:
ABSENCE MAKES THE HEART GROW (LESS) FONDER
Writing is a love-hate relationship. We start out hating everything
we’re writing, and end up blinded by love for every
word we’ve put on paper (or the other way around). In
order to gain objectivity, we must get distance. Putting your
work away for a while – sometimes weeks or months –
can allow you to come back not so enamored by it. (Falling
in love with a new piece of material can also help.) It gives
you a chance to read it almost as if it’s someone else’s.
This is the first, and perhaps most important, step for evaluating
your own work. If you find yourself getting hung up again,
wanting to save all your babies, stick it back in the drawer
and move on to something else – or send it to a trusted
friend or script consultant.
BACK TO THE DRAWING BOARD -- OUTLINING AGAIN
Deconstructing your script back to an outline form can make
the process more analytical again and give you some much-needed
objectivity. It allows you to see the basic building blocks
and recognize if this house will really stand. Then you can
make the necessary changes in outline form before you go back
to script.
HAVE A READING
Getting a group of actors together to read your script aloud
can be an anxiety-producing experience -- but almost always
an illuminating one. Hearing the actors speak, and often stumble
over, your dialogue, definitely gives you a fresh perspective
on it. You begin to see that some of your words don’t
fall trippingly over the tongue, but cause the tongue to trip
and fall over the words.
After the reading is done, you can elicit feedback from the
actors – or the audience, if you have one. But I must
issue a word of warning here. Having a group of actors give
feedback on your script could be one of the most painful experiences
of your creative life. The first time I did it, the group
ganged up on me to proclaim just how bad the script was. It
was downright ugly. AND THESE WERE MY FRIENDS! Even my mom
was part of the lynch mob! It dealt a crushing blow to my
fragile writer’s ego. I promptly threw the script away,
indulged in the nearest libation, and curled up in a warm
and cozy depression. A couple weeks later, however, I emerged
from the near-suicidal encounter with a ton of insights and
a much better script.
THE FAST “NO-BRAINER” READ
Your unconscious already knows what’s wrong with your
script, it just can’t get through the filtering of your
conscious monitoring mind. So sometimes, just riding over
your script roughshod, writing every note that comes to you
without considering the absurdity of it, can result in some
pretty insightful and inspired comments. It might also result
in some pretty brutal ones as well. But that’s okay.
After the group therapy session you had with your script reading,
you’re tough enough to take it.
THE HIERARCHY OF NOTES
One of the toughest parts about rewriting, once you’ve
evaluated your script, is knowing where to start. You’re
sitting there, staring at a big smelly pile of notes -- scribblings
and late-night ramblings on every page, legal pads covered
in blood and coffee stains. There’s just no way to begin
easily and painlessly with that mess. So don’t. Yet.
Organize your notes from ‘easiest’ to ‘most
difficult.’ In other words, at the top of the list will
be the typos and grammatical errors, then descriptive polishes,
dialogue polishes, moving on down to the more difficult character,
plot, and theme notes.
I know that a major time-management proposition is to begin
with the most important goal or task and stick with it until
it’s finished. But this ain’t time management,
folks. This is art. It’s not rational. So I believe
it’s better to start with the easiest damn thing and
get it done fast. Then move to the next easiest thing and
whip it out quickly. Now, with a little more momentum, you
might actually be willing to tackle the more difficult notes
with a higher level of confidence and a lower level of antidepressants.
A FINAL NOTE ON GIVING YOURSELF NOTES
Some of you will be way too eager to get your script out to
every producer in town – even after the first draft.
Your task is to develop patience. You’ve spent this
long on the script, what’s another few weeks or months
to make sure you’ve got it right.
Just take a breath.
Put the script away. Rewrite it. Whatever you do, don’t
send it out there knowing it could be improved, thinking “they’ll
just fix it in post.” NO THEY WON’T. The only
‘post’ that script will see is ‘compost,’
because that’s the pile it’ll end up on. So unless
you want your work to become fertilizer for someone else’s
lawn -- chill out, dude.
Then there are those of you who will resist sending your script
out into the seemingly cold, harsh world of Hollywood no matter
how long you’ve been working on it. This is not only
inefficient, it’s creatively debilitating. Think of
your script like a plane that has landed and is still on the
runway. If you don’t move it along, all those other
planes (stories) can’t land. If you’ve done everything
you can, had others give notes on it, rewritten it until the
words have lost their meaning -- it’s time to abandon
your baby. Wrap the little babushka up in a blanket and set
it on the doorstep of every production company you can.
With a little luck, someone will decide to make that child
their own.
“As a screenwriter, Derek Rydall has sold, optioned,
or been hired on assignment for over 20 film and TV projects.
He has developed projects for the producer of Ghost, RKO,
U/A, Miramax, Saturn (Nick Cage), and many indie producers,
as well as worked as a staff writer for Fox, Disney, and Deepak
Chopra. As a story consultant/script doctor, Derek has helped
writers, producers, actors, and directors turn books into
screenplays, secure millions in financing, make six-figure
script deals, get hired to exec produce, direct, star in their
movies, obtain major distribution, and win awards. And as
an author, Derek's book, I Could've Written a Better Movie
than That!: How to Make Six Figures as a Script Consultant--
Even if You're Not a Screenwriter, is due out October by Michael
Wiese Publishing.
For more info, you can check out his sites:
www.scriptwritercentral.com
www.enlightenedentertainer.com
email derek@scriptwritercentral.com
or call (661) 296-4991
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