
NOTES
11.That parenthetical should be on its own indented line.
12."Come on, Julie! Me, you, him and his friend -- this is perfect."
or
"Come on, Julie! Me, you, him and his friend. This is perfect."
Although -- and I say this grudgingly -- I'm sorta warming to the teen rapidfire no-punktuation thing. First Julie, now Lola. So long as this is a deliberate style choice, not a lack of grammar fundamentals on the writer's part, my arm could be twisted. I won't bother to mark up these from here on.
13.Out of nowhere and therefore disorienting. Plus, the sentence is confusing for anyone who doesn't immediately intuit the oblique reference to the NY subway system. I don't live in a city with a pervasive undergrain transport system like NY. It took me a moment to figure out the intended meaning. At first I assumed it meant they feel through their feet the vibrations of a nearby train -- not a subway train, a regular train.
Which brings us to the other issue with this paragraph: "They all feel it."
Okay, but how do you show this? What visual/aural elements combine to explain what's going on? Let's roll the scene in our heads, figure out exactly how this plays out:
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The girls walk and talk. We see the subway entrance ahead. We hear the rumble and screech of an approaching subway train. (And we probably feel it in the theater bass subwoofer.) Interrupted, the girls scramble to get to the platform in time.
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Maybe we don't see the subway entrance until later -- if we're going for a more moody, mysterious feel:
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The girls walk and talk. We hear the rumble and screech of some underground behemoth. Interrupted, the girls run to the entrance of: 66th St. Train Station.
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Converting the first scenario into scriptwriting:
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JULIE: Take her. She actually wants to go --
Subway station entrance ahead. The ground RUMBLES -- a train's coming.
LOLA: Let's go, come on!
INT. 66TH ST. SUBWAY STATION
Lola and Chris butt-slide down the silver handrail.
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No confusion there for non-NY readers, once we add the word "subway" to connect the dots.
We dropped "They all feel it" because: (a) of course they feel it, we SEE them reacting; and (b) it's an instantaneous thing: Oh shit, train's here, let's GO!
SITUATION/CONTEXT -> DEVELOPMENT -> REACTION
Situation: They want to catch a train.
Development: Train arriving.
Reaction: Let's go! Come on!
Note how you can stop reading after any beat and everything up to that point still makes sense.
Stray from that sequence at your peril.
Straying: Example 1
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Development: Train approaching.
Situation: They want to catch a train.
Reaction: Let's go! Come on!
JULIE: Take her. She actually wants to go --
The ground RUMBLES -- a train's coming.
Subway station entrance ahead.
LOLA: Let's go, come on!
INT. 66TH ST. SUBWAY STATION
Lola and Chris butt-slide down the silver handrail.
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Keep in mind, we still have no idea they're headed for the subway -- notwithstanding that NY readers will intuit this immediately. So, abruptly mentioning a train will catch some readers off guard.
Straying: Example 2
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Reaction: Let's go! Come on!
Development: Train approaching.
Situation: They want to catch a train.
JULIE: Take her. She actually wants to go --
LOLA: Let's go, come on!
The ground RUMBLES -- a train's coming.
Subway station entrance ahead.
INT. 66TH ST. SUBWAY STATION
Lola and Chris butt-slide down the silver handrail.
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If we stop reading after Lola's line, we have no idea what Lola's talking about:
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JULIE: Take her. She actually wants to go --
LOLA: Let's go, come on!
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So, like SUBJECT -> VERB -> OBJECT is the baseline for sentences, keep your thoughts linear, one building logically upon the other: SITUATION -> DEVELOPMENT -> REACTION.
Yes, you will stray on occasion. But you'll do so deliberately and for dramatic effect.
Start with the simple basics. Build layer upon layer. With your sentences and story captured in your first draft in a clear and linear way, now you get to be creative and clever in later drafts.
14.I'm not a fan of using ellipses for bridging scenes. It's a personal preference thing. I'd rather use em-dashes (--). Ems/dashes indicate an abrupt break, a sudden change. Ellipses indicate a pause, a lull in proceedings.
Here we want to convey the urgency and motion bridging the scenes. Using ellipses has the opposite effect -- for me, anyway.
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LOLA: Come on, come on!
They CHARGE into --
INT. 66TH ST. TRAIN STATION
Lola and Chris BUTT-SLIDE down the silver handrail while Julie ROCKETS down the adjoining stairs in three-step strides.
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I reckon that's all we need. Just one dash to hook us into the kinetic motion of the next scene. We didn't rely too much on punctuation; we set up the feeling of speed with our word choices: charge, slide, rocket, stride.
15.Italicising "jumps" is, as the saying goes, putting lipstick on a pig. "Jumps" is a bland verb. Italicising, underlining, or capitalizing is wasted effort. If you want to make "jump" stand out, swap in a stronger verb.
"Lola hurdles the turnstile."
"Lola surfs over the turnstile."
"Lola leaps the turnstile."
"Lola vaults over the turnstile."
I see we have the same problem with "goes under."
"Chris slips under it."
"Chris skids under it."
"Chris slides under it."
"Chris ducks under it."
"Chris weaves under it."
"Chris darts under it."
"Chris scrambles under it."
And so on. Save "goes" for when you need to move people/things around with minimum fuss, minimum attention.
"Jack goes to the window. Lets the sunlight warm his face. He smiles. For a moment he imagines he's not about to die."
But here, we're revelling in the furious movement on screen, so "goes" will not do, not at all.
16.If the announcement comes from a speaker somewhere around the platform then yes, I suppose it's O.S.
If it comes from a speaker in, say, the ceiling of the train carriage then I'd argue the sound source is in the scene and therefore we need no O.S. tag.
I don't know the details for how the NY subway system operates, so I can't guess which is more likely.
17.Lotsa punctuation issues so far. Errant capitalization, run-on sentences, missing commas. It's not disturbing the flow too much so far, but it's a concern. If every page is like this, we have a serious problem.
Now: the repetition of "Lola holds the door." If we must repeat an action, at least vary the writing to disguise it.
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Inside the train, Lola holds the door for Julie.
CHRIS: Come on hurry up!
TRANSIT RECORDING:
PLEASE CLEAR THE CLOSING DOORS.
Lola fights the door.
LOLA: Come on! Come on!
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