sootyj
Monday 29th December 2008 5:17pm
51,287 posts
Quote: Marc P @ December 29 2008, 10:22 AM GMT
alright, here's one Paul Mendelson gave me many years ago on scriptwriting.
When you are near to finishing for the day always finish half way through a scene. That way you can hit the ground running the next day rather than staring at the tyranny of a blank page and wondering how to kick it off.
Thank's most helpful, I can't be the only person here to hit writers block.
Quote: Griff @ December 29 2008, 11:48 AM GMT
Nice tip Marc but it sounds tough. If I've actually got "into the zone" on writing a scene, the self-discipline required to walk away and leave it would be incredible. Like trying to leaving a pint half-finished. But I will try.
I'll go with ... USE FEWER ADVERBS. Not only does Stephen King bang on about this in his book On Writing but it was one of the first things they mentioned in the sketch writing workshop at Recorded For Training Purposes.
Adverbs should be definitively, actively, clearly, indisputably avoided.
Where exactly would that leave Black Adder?
Quote: Marc P @ December 29 2008, 11:26 AM GMT
I think the natural urge when you are on a bit of a roll is to finish the scene and sit back with a sense of accomplishment. If you resist it you can carry that 'bit of a roll' forward to get you going next day.
I used to beat him at racquetball mind!
Well if he's wandering out of the match half way through, to refresh for the next day...
Oh another tip from the untidy mind of Sootyj.
If you're going to be gross, controversial or shocking do it for a purpose. It's virtually never funny in and of it's self.