25 TO LIFEwritten by ToddyWoddy
"An impulsive, headstrong girl, who left home with the dream of opening her own book store, is summoned home by her over-protective grandmother to reunite her with her estranged bank robbing, just-out-of-prison mother, and the ensuing clash of wills uncovers a deep-rooted family secret."
Sounds good! Let's jump in.
LEGENDGREEN: Strong, punchy verb -- nice
YELLOW: Need to do something here?
RED: Cut
1."Runs" is bland. You can't fault it terribly, but it does feel like a placeholder for something genuinely exciting. "Runs" tells us nothing about the action other than there was a brisk vertical scissoring of the legs resulting in speedy physical transportation between points A and B, and possibly C.
We know there's some urgency: the clerk BURSTS out the door. It's the first shot and shit's already going down, earning Todd an early gold star. If the clerk's slamming through the door then surely he would dash, hurtle, tear, rush, bolt, rocket, or sprint down that concourse. On the other hand, maybe it's not life and death and he only jogs, hustles, or hurries past the shopfronts. All those synonyms spark and snake like a shorting electrical cable while "runs" lays there on the page, inert and unremarkable.
Pitchpath, why bother? you ask. Runs is runs is runs. The clerk RUNS and that's all it needs. Well, okay. But this is the first sentence on the first page. First impressions and all that. You've got exactly one first sentence and one last sentence to spend. Hell yes, you should fret over them. They're the doorknobs leading the reader in and out of your story. Be extra diligent polishing those suckers.
If ever there's an appropriate moment to plunge your thumbs into the rubbery meat of your reader's eyeball sacks and wiggle toward their nucleus accumbens using a combination of firm circular motion and insistent flexing of the knuckles, I'd argue this is it. Prosecuting attorneys argue there's no 'appropriate' time for this maneuver. Judges tend to agree. Win some, lose some.
So. BURST comes out swinging and that gets everyone's attention. RUNS galumphs into the ring and immediately takes a hit -- from its inhaler.
Another minor point: Movies have us trained to believe the first person on screen is a significant character, be they on the side of good or bad. Here, the clerk is just a pawn sacrificed in establishing location and situation. We're also trained to assume the narrator is a major player. So in this opening sequence we guess the V.O. person (as yet unnamed for the audience) is a major player who will probably make a physical appearance soon.
Remember, the reader (and the audience) is adrift until you tie them to a main character. Generally, you want to connect the two asap and start firmly towing the reader in one direction.
Let's take a moment to consider why we need MALE CLERK at all. In the plus column: It eases us into the police confrontation and creates immediate intrigue. It gives us strong visual movement. It quickly establishes where we are: outside a shopping mall.
What happens if we lose CLERK (as an editor might consider doing) and instead open on the next bit: the faces of the crowd lollygagging at the spectacle. Something like...
-----
FADE IN:
DANI (V.O.)
(slight Southern twang)
Have you ever drawn up a list of
your top ten shittiest days ever?
Behind sawhorse security barriers, a hushed crowd jostles for a glimpse at --
EXT. MUNGER SAVINGS AND LOAN - DAY
-- a small neighborhood bank. Looks closed. Shades drawn. Unstirring.
Except for the circle of police cars and armed cops blockading it.
-----
That would be a different opening. A quiet tension primed by Dani's VO. Cutting on the anxious faces peering. Making us wait for the reverse shot revealing the bank frontage and our first clue to what's happening. This quieter opening would lend more weight to the first instance of extended visual movement: Dani's mother coming out. Presumably Carol shuffles out slowly, real careful not to panic the cops. (Notwithstanding the logline, we end page 1 not knowing if Carol's a victim or perpetrator, which is very cool -- a guaranteed page-turner. Second gold star for Todd!) If something really jolting happens on page 2, this quiet opening would nicely set up that abrupt narrative shock.
BUT... I also like Todd's opening with the clerk, for the reasons already noted. All I'm doing here is thinking with my editor hat on. When you're writing, you should too. Question everything. Make every scene sweat. Every sentence. Nothing's exempt from justifying it's place on the page.
2.Casting will work out the specifics of "a crowd" but you could throw me a bone here and help me paint the picture in my head. You can see I colored between the lines a little with the alternate opening scene earlier: "a hushed crowd...". Or how about "a crowd of shoppers" to easily picture folks of all ages, some carrying shopping bags. Just a li'l somethin' somethin' to lift it above a narratively flat, generic crowd.
I don't usually comment on dialogue when 10PTT'ing, but I make exceptions when I spot something curious.
"Have you ever sat down and drawn up a list of your top ten shittiest days ever?"
Two minor things of note:
(a) "... sat down and drawn up..." The proximity of "down" and "up" jars the ear a little. It calls attention to itself, like "Turn left right here." The cyclic nature of such juxtaposition suits a deliberate use like, "Sit down and shut up." In a moment I'll make my case for trimming this sentence.
(b) "Have you ever... shittiest days ever?" Repetition of "ever" which is no big deal. But do we need the repetition? Let's leave it there for now.
I'm thinking we can easily lose the "drawn up" because it's not important to the sentence idea.
"Have you ever sat down to list your top ten shittiest days ever?"
Hmm. Is the "sat down" figure of speech needed? What if:
"Have you ever stopped to list your top ten shittiest days ever?"
Do we even need the notion of stopping to take the time to make the list?
"Ever make a list of your top ten shittest days ever?"
17 words down to 11.
Now the repetition of "ever" is stark and plain. Let's tackle it.
"Ever make a list of your top ten shittest days?"
Feels like too much got shaved off the context. It has to be about the 10 shittiest days you've experienced in your entire life. So let's put that emphasis back in while still avoiding the repetition:
"Ever make a list of the top ten shittiest days of your life?"
13 words compared with the original's 17, but more importantly it reads (to me) like natural dialogue and punches home the "shittiest days of your life" angle.
And for her follow-up I'd argue for a simple: "I have."
Again, what I'm doing is making every word fight for its existence. If Todd's done this already and settled on the dialogue as it stands then that's how it needs to be, because the author's the one to decide what's right for the page and what's right for the story. No sentence on the page gets a free pass is all I'm asking.
3.Uh-oh. I'm gonna whine about this crowd thing again. I promise this is the last time.
Using "crowd" twice piles nondescript upon vagueness. And this second reference reinforces the lack of concrete description, through passive construction: "The crowd are behind sawhorse barriers." Not a terrible declarative sentence, but it demands nothing of us. Good sentences demand our participation. Sure, the crowd is nothing more than scene dressing, but why let the narrative go flatline anywhere on the page? Also, I would argue the correct grammar is "The crowd is behind..." because it's singular. How many crowds are we talking about? One. Singular. But there's a competing argument for "crowd" refering to the individuals collectively -- "they", not "it", as in "The firing squad raised their rifles" rather than "raised its rifles," in which case "are" is fine. I'm a single-unit grammar guy, but what sounds right is a personal-preference and case-by-case thing.
"Behind sawhorse security barriers, the spectators jostle to see what's going on..."
I chose to anchor the sentence spatially at the beginning, and avoid the reuse of "crowd" by swapping in "spectators." Had I left in "They crane their necks" then "spectators" would amplify that nicely. But I'm not fond of "crane their necks," because it's a roundabout way of saying the crowd "gawks." Use as few words as possible (good words!) to say what you need to say.
4.This is purely a personal style thing, but we can shrink this sentence and have it slightly punchier: "The small neighborhood bank looks closed. Shades drawn. But the sign says OPEN." Which sits better in your ear: "The 'Open' sign is visible" or "The sign says OPEN." For me it's the second, because the first reads limp, passive, and coldly clinical. SOMETHING IS SOMETHING requires no cognitive attention. It's just accepting a fact as fact and filing it away. Overuse this kind of spoon feeding and you risk your reader's brain going into energy savings mode.
Eighteen words down to thirteen. A twenty-eight percent saving. (It's called pedantry, people! There's a twelve-step program to recovery, but mostly we spend our meetings arguing about how to word the charter.) These small readability wins do matter! Drive your story down a clean, straight road. Don't litter the street with unnecessary words and overstretched thoughts.
5.Here's a perennial favorite: naming or tagging your bit players.
You have four choices for writing minor characters. Let's start with the one to avoid.
* COP #1 holds a megaphone...
Nothing shouts lazy screenwriter like numerical character names. If I have to explain why... Just don't do it. If your bit part requires dialogue then probably this character's going in the credits. Don't let your credits read like they were drafted by an accountant.
Which leaves you three good alternatives.
* A name just for the hell of it
Give this character a name for no reason other than to avoid numerical tagging. Any name will do. TONY. SALLY. CHEESE MCTAVISH — you'll go with plain CHEESE in the character slugs, or MCTAVISH if you've already got a firstname character CHEESE or if McTavish is the bad guy and you want to maintain the reader's emotional distance. How you present your character slug is a whole other article in waiting.
* Descriptive tags
Like Todd's BEARDED COP. That tag isn't ideal, for reasons I'll explain in a moment. By tagging your bit player with a distinctive feature you've burned a face into the reader's head. It's probably not the face you, the writer, imagined, but you know one thing for sure: you and the reader both see a cop with a beard. My question to you is: why is it important this cop has a beard? If you tag a character descriptively then you're narrowing the casting. There must be a reason you want a specific look or you're simply making arbitrary, limiting choices.
But certainly Todd did the right thing here abjuring COP #1.
* Personality-type tags
I believe this is the best of the lot when done right. Instead of tagging your bit part with a physical characteristic, you tag with a more general personality type. Let's improve on Todd's BEARDED COP then talk about why I think it's better. Let's make this guy NERVOUS COP.
Okay. Blank your mind.
CUT TO wide shot: police cruisers fanned out across the parking lot, cherries strobing blue and red. No sirens though. Cops snug behind open car doors, crouched behind bumpers. Every gun drawn and zeroed on the bank.
Now...
CLOSE ON BEARDED COP with a megaphone.
And... FREEZE FRAME.
Consider Bearded Cop. What's he doing right now in that frozen moment? What's the look on his face (behind the beard)? What's his body language saying? Can you predict how he'll use the megaphone? What kind of tone he'll take with the perps? No. A generic bearded guy tells us nothing.
Let's do that again with our replacement actor.
CUT TO wide shot: police cruisers fanned out across the parking lot...
CLOSE ON NERVOUS COP with a megaphone.
Now we're starting to paint a picture. We gave the reader a little nudge. The reader can ignore it or roll with it, do the heavy lifting for us. A twitchy cop is not a cop you want in a hostage situation. Twitchy cops make bad choices in the heat of the moment. Now we have tension built into this character.
Again, let's examine the frozen moment with Nervous Cop up there on screen. What's he doing right now? Well, he's got the megaphone so that's a position of responsibility. They don't let rookie cops communicate with the bad guys. Maybe our nervous cop is glancing around, hoping somebody more senior will arrive and take this disastrous fucking responsibility off his shoulders. Maybe he's holding that Glock in his other hand like he's never fired it and he knows the time's come. Maybe he's sweating, hyperventilating.
Perhaps he's nervous for other reasons. Maybe this is his chance to prove himself. He's desperate to do it right. By the book. He asked for this responsibility. His commander's counting on him. Don't fuck this up.
Point is, you planted the seed. The audience sees this cop is nervous, and naturally they're curious why. I can tell you right now, they'll never know. This is a bit part! The fact that Todd didn't name this cop tells us the character's gone in a blink, this page or the next.
But at least you opened the door for the guy playing this small part. Believe it or not, extras like to act. And you've given the director a jumping-off point for how this megaphone cop does his bit. I know I'd prefer to tell my buddies, "Yeah, I'm in that movie. I'm Nervous Cop," instead of, "Yeah, I'm, ummm, Cop #2."
NERVOUS COP. Sure, exactly NONE of that might make it on screen. Our nervous cop might end up as nondescript as the rest. But it wasn't your fault. You worked your ass off to make it zing on the page.
Wow. Really? All that discussion about BEARDED COP versus NERVOUS COP? Wish I could swap this behavior for something more OCD acceptible: say, the need to lace and unlace my shoes exactly twenty-six times before walking outside to check the mailbox. Twenty-six times! That's crazy, right? Nine maybe ten tops — you're done.
Ah jeez. I have no idea where we are in this 10PTT. Hold on a sec. Lemme check. OH GOOD. STILL ON PAGE ONE. You should probably go get a sandwich.
6."... brings the megaphone to his mouth..." is unnecessary and downright wordy. We might reel in a line here if we're lucky. Or we can let context do the work for us: "Bearded Cop raises his megaphone." Or "Bearded Cop announces through his megaphone:" It's clear from his next dialogue he's addressing his colleagues. Hell, we already established the megaphone, so how about we kill that whole bit and go directly from "... flicks the door shade up and down" to:
BEARDED COP
(megaphone)
Okay, everybody, she's coming out.
Hold your fire.
Stripping it back makes the reader work a little to connect the dots. No following the lines on autopilot. And like I said, making the reader work here and there is a great way to keep them engaged. And awake.
7.Minor and personal preference: the two
and's step on each others toes. Interrupts the flow on the page.
8."... exits the bank..." tells us nothing about HOW she emerges. Fast? Slow? Is she defiant? Timid? In shock? Relieved? Maybe a clue's coming next page. Regardless, "exits" is a horribly featureless verb. It not only fails to pull its weight but actively sucks life from this sentence.
9."... her hands in the air." — i.e. "hands up", "hands raised", "hands high." If we want her hands to be the first thing we see then: "Hands way up, CAROL ANN LOMBARDI (mid 20s) eases out the door. There's blood spatter on her purple polka-dot dress and a nasty bruise pinching her face."
Are we there yet are we there yet are we are we? Finally. We've reached THE END OF PAGE ONE! That seem like a long trip to you? Definitely for me. I had fun. Todd's writing is solid. He's doing the proverbial workman-like job, but next time I want him to put his sentences through boot camp, not summer camp. Instead of coming home relaxed and affable and asking to walk the dog, I want those sentences to come home sweaty and tense and demanding to wrestle a bear. Ready to stare down anyone (me, for example) who dares to Fuck With. Because they've proven themselves and earned the right to be all UP IN YO' UGLY FACE and they know it. And you know they know it and you know they know you know you haven't earned it. And then, if you're like me, you pee yourself as you back away, so you walk directly into a nearby lawn sprinkler and pretend like:
Who the fuck turned on that sprinkler? Just look at my soaked shorts. I have to go home now, but I'll deal with you later, and maybe I'll wrestle a fucking bear too, if I feel like it. Kaythanksbye.Story-wise, I like where we are at the end of page 1. It's a great meet-cute with our lead, Dani. One page might be excessive to set up the simple reveal with Dani's mother and the bank, but that doesn't concern me. What's important is, I'm excited to find out what's next.
One down, nine to go.