Okay, yes, the ultimate in lazy blogging is re-posting an old blog. But since me, with the new found expertise reading my blog stats, has concluded only three people ever actually read this one, I don't feel so bad out the re-post 'cause it is one of my favourite rants and I'm in a ranty sort of mood but too pooped to work up the fresh head of steam required for a truly fabulous original shellacking. So here's hoping one or two more of you enjoy this, the inaugural Friday Rant.
Really I crack myself up sometimes. I mean seriously, who am I to
have such strong opinions about writing and story. Me with my one and
only option cheque for 1$ stuck up on my book case with a bit of sticky
tape. After a morning spent giving notes for favours it seems
particularly hilarious that I’m still, at 7 pm at night, fuming over the
issue of voice over in film scripts.
Just in case
you’ve never heard me say it out loud before, here it is. "Voice over is
the refuge of the lazy writer." Or the addition of a spectacularly
insecure director or producer who doesn’t trust the very expensive team
of artists and craftspeople they’ve hired to express the story in the
glorious visual aural literary medium that is film.
I
read this same sentiment once in one of my hundred books on
screenwriting and I do so wish I could remember which A-list
screenwriter to attribute the quote to, but, I don’t. Which is sad
because sometimes I feel like I’m standing alone, screaming it into the
teeth of a hurricane force wind with fellow writers and film business
folks lined up like pilgrims in front of a pilloried (your word for the
day) harlot chucking rotten root vegetables at me chanting the names of
successful and highly touted films that use the medium. And I don’t
care if that is a dreadful run-on sentence that needs an editor. Get
your own blog.
You really think you are Robert Redford
and your script the next A River Runs Through It? Okay, maybe you are
but if you’re going to get the voice over by me man you better be
chucking the Oscar or Golden Globe at me instead of a moldy rutabaga.
You
see the great glory of film is when the music, words, acting, visuals,
camera movement, casting, costuming all become a greater synthesis – you
know the whole becomes greater than the sum of their parts. It is
possible. Just layering good acting and nice visuals with a poetic
voice over is self-indulgent crap. Sorry too harsh. It is what I call
“young man” writing which is actually separate and distinct from “young
woman” writing which has its own pitfalls.
Young man
writing is self-indulgent and masturbatory while young woman writing
tends to innumerable cups of tea and tedious descriptions of the actions
of other people not on the screen to trustworthy confidantes. Certainly
a place for both voices in the cannon of our craft, but really people.
Look at not only what you are writing but how you are writing. Go ahead
and chuck the moldy rutabagas if you must but be brave enough to have
the tosser taunt me in his own voice.
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