Ed Parnell
Tuesday 22nd May 2007 5:34am
LONDON
360 posts
Both a bit obvious, sorry.
I can take a guess at where they came from.
I can also make a suggestion as to where they should have been filed....
Quote: David Chapman @ May 21, 2007, 8:29 PM
I thought they were both quite amusing. Not hilarious though.
Sorry Josh - I agree - yours isn't funny at all. Is it a joke?
It's a line form the office.
The thing about the office is it was turned down originally, so they had to finance a demo to get the BBC to take notice. It's difficult to show something works on paper, it's part of the art of it. I have the Dads' Army scripts, which are phemnominal in that they work straight off the page. Very few works do that, because they lack the intonation and the visual aspect, obviously.
Increasingly you see shows where the writers have had an active input, esp in star/writer shows, because they have the gravitas to be able to say 'this will work if I' or 'we'll do some business here to beef it up'.
If you are outside that loop you have only your script to rely on. Look at Ab Fab, if you read the scripts, forget teh show, they are nothing special. Bt they worked because there was a *lot* of business which was made up during the filming. Some of it was improvised.
However, the trick is, with a new writer, to make the situation 'real'. If you can do that someone at some point will take notice.
Another problem I have noticed is the forcing of gags. For instance, increasingly some shows are having lines which don't belong. I was watching a show earlier today on tape which signposted things really badly.
The art is subtle. If you want to learn how to do subtle, how to signpost things without actually hammering the 'there's a bit coming up about this' watch things like One Foot In The Grave. The signposting is only obvious in hindsight. WHich is why it worked.
Of course, this only really works in one brand of comedy. It's just my opinion.
I agree with Godot though. out of context things rarely work. If they do they are normally catchphrases.