"You've got to be able to hold a lot of contradictory ideas in your mind without going nuts. I feel like to do my job right, when I walk out onstage I've got to feel like it's the most important thing in the world. Also I've got to feel like, well, it's only rock and roll. Somehow you've got to believe both of those things." Bruce Springsteen
Sounds a little like, "Feel the fear and do it anyway". Too much fear will paralyse the creative mind, but in order to do anything memorable it has to born out of a deep love and dedication.
A reader's imagination is a powerful thing. A good filmmaker is aware of how their brain is distorting a script and tries to incorporate that imagination into the film.
A bad diredctor and or cast can take a good script and turn it into garbage as well as the reverse, a good director & cast turning a trash script into something good.
The one thing I like about this guys advice even though it's a bit all over the place is he didn't go down the route of saying "find out what sells and write that" he didn't go for the "learn how to write what the industry wants, cheesy romance and adventure flicks always sell". I like that it seems like he has integrity. He still writes to sell but he doesn't seem willing to compromise his integrity to do so.
1 minute in. What difference pro's from non pro's? Takes 10 minutes to come up with this answer: Pro's know what they are doing. They have a sharp and trained eye. Wanted to close, but your comment keeps me watching
The key is to persevere with the craft that is just simply "Telling your story" whatever that is. The are rules and then there are always exceptions to that rule. Learn the basics of what genre you love and then speak the passion through your writing. "We all think in pictures not words"... Only you can know the context of the power words can have specifically to you. Its your story so tell it and believe in it :) Some really great points in this video. Keep writing and dreaming big for your passion of the writing.
Most people can’t write because most people are not self critical. A good writer recognizes their own terrible writing and cut it. Bad writers think everything they touch is gold.
Exactly. Bad writers (like me) start with an idea and polish it. Good writers take that as a starting point. Getting that white heat that Kitchen talks about is the most difficult thing in the world. He's inspired me to take my best work and step it up a few levels.
I enjoy how he talks about the craft of storytelling as "bringing a hard structure to something messy and organic." I always like to refer to it as "trying to catch fog in a jar." It's completely possible to do, but requires some ingenuity and mechanical know-how in order to condense the fog in a way that it can be collected and stored.
Remember, every movie is made three times. First when it’s written. Second, when it’s produced. And third when it’s edited. It has to survive all three processes.
there are good films that are made with an average script. Dazed and Confused for example barely had a script -- and much of what Matthew M. did was improvised.
That's not a difficult thing to comprehend. 1% of scripts are readable. Maybe less than 10% actually get made. And perhaps of that tiny figure, only 1% manage to turn those films into good films. There are many amazing scripts that became average or poor films. The script is just one of many variables.
This ignores how large of a role nepotism plays in the film industry. Lots of screenplays get read and seen because of the writer's connections. Chess doesn't have nepotism so it's a false equivalency.
It's all bull. Some people have talent. Others think they can teach it. Others again think they can learn it. In fact,art can't be learned. You got it or don't.
1:35 That says a lot right there! I believe there are no geniuses in filmmaking... only grit, willpower, and the desire to improve your skills. Certainly, there's some level of raw talent, but the rest you build it as you go. And whether you make or not (and when you do it), really depends on many factors, some of which are totally out of your control. Btw, this guy is great!!
Hopefully' bullets over Broadway is wrong. I'm a newbie and, as I write, I'm causiosly optimistic. (60-40 ratio) that writing is a Craft not a talent, unlike acting at least for me. Writing is more democratic I believe because it doesn't matter what you look like or sound like. And you don't have to write in real time. You always get to select your best ' take'.
I do think what he says is valid. But I also recall that Pulp Fiction was considered unfilmable. And for years Hollywood generally looked down on superhero movies; they didn't believe The Avengers would succeed. It's not an excuse for lazy writing, but these examples should not be overlooked.
I learned very early that I couldn’t translate my thoughts into writing. Because I can’t figure out how to make someone feel the passion in my words when they’re just words on a page. Everything in my mind sounds better when I’m telling it vocally.
That's because you don't get semantics right: knowing the true measuring of a term is key to pin it into another persons mind. It's usually poetry and tautologies the resources that can catch emotional attention without being too obvious.
I read James Altucher Idea Machine and been writing 10 ideas a day for years. I've published 6 books under two pseudonyms with about 100K copies sold and sold two screenplays. Writing ideas every day let's you really keep that creative piece of you going. I think I've written or used maybe a total of 30 of my ideas and have been doing 10 ideas a day (maybe minus 30 days altogether) since Fall of 2018.
This guy talks like one of those artists that sketches his paintings and your like "what the F is that" until he turns it upside down and your like..."oh, its Bob Marley".
The moving parts in a story are quite complex. Subjectivity comes in play, so many times you can make a great movie with an average or a bad script because it’s improvisation and execution is upto the people making it. To create authentic art one has to be truthful with themselves and to be aware of being entertaining while being truthful. The most popular and loved films are truthful and a reflection of the world at that time in a direct or indirect way.
Sturgeon's law (or Sturgeon's revelation) is an adage that states that "ninety percent of everything is crap." The adage was coined by Theodore Sturgeon, an American science fiction author and critic. He meaning EVERYTHING on Earth. For something as hard and technical as screenwriting, 99.9 percent suck is conservative.
as an upstart screenwriter, i tell you getting coverage or feedback from other professional screenwriters granted they don't try to steal your idea is invaluable. I'm working on a feature since the last April and every 25 - 30 pages i would get some feedback. it helps to get an outside perspective which allows their perspective to help you get a better grasp on your writing. now I'm finally writing my last few lines and actions before doing a good proofread and print off and binding .. never give up, whether or not you get your scripts on-screen you still accomplished something great.
In art school, we were taught to copyright it. As though it goes without saying, and regardless of the fee, regardless that major changes made later need to be copyrighted again using the long form, regardless of the fact that no one can copyright an idea. Just always copyright it. I bought a couple of websites with phrases that one of my characters, an ad exec, uses in a bizarre ad campaign. I could sell them now for low four figures. (Who would have thought? So funny.) Hope this helps! But maybe you knew, as in, everyone knows. (The websites are funny, though. That occurred to me on my own.) Happy New Year! Best of lu. . . break a leg. :)
I can’t tell if film courage made this channel because they’re just genuinely passionate and want to pick brains, or if it’s like this small group of people who couldn’t break into the industry so they found a way to attempt to be a part of it by interviewing low to mid-level tier artists. I find the channel interesting, and I can tell from the comments that probly 90% of the people watching their vids are pretty clueless about how to approach the industry, whether in front of or behind the camera, so they have definitely found their audience. And then there is the 10% who actually work in the industry that just like watching for kicks. Some of it is informative but a lot of these guys make money by doing workshops etc. and you have to be careful of that. Myself, I’ve been acting full time for a while now. And I suppose with some down time I could offer ‘workshops’ but that would be ridiculous. But that’s what a lot of these guys do, they’re basically salesmen. If there’s one piece of advice I would give anyone trying to do anything in entertainment, it’s this: There are no rules. Do it your way.
Roger you make some great points...The “workshop” People remind me of the people that make all their money teaching people how to make money. You Definitely have to watch out for scammers. My brother Used to say that those who don’t know how to do something well enough become critics of the people who do. Like movie critics who couldn’t make it as actors. Sometimes They also become paid instructors.
A beautiful script to study is The Crying Game. It is a perfectly written masterpiece of screen writing. 6 Academy Award noms, including a win for screenwriting.
In summary, raw talent does not equal quality writing. The raw talent can have great ideas but conveying that idea in words is where the professional and the non-pros/untrained diverge
Just like a great screenplay on its first draft, Jeff has wonderful things to say, but those things need to be mulled over in the brain once or twice to concretely solidify the concept of it.
Thank you for submitting your screenplay for consideration. Unfortunately, your application has not been successful this time but we wish you all the best in your future endeavours. Please send an A4 sized envelope with postage stamp affixed if you wish to have your screenplay returned. Yours faithfully, from random movie executive's 14 year old on 2 week work placement.
It’s so fricken difficult to make any movie,much less a great one. All the parts must line up in great fashion,which includes the public. What makes a great film is not as crystal clear as some want to believe,yet at the same time,all great movies have common denominators every time,without failure
Exactly. If this guy is right,there would be only excellent movies.The contrary is the case. So the really good scripts are forgotten somewhere and never get made into movies. Sad.
I was kind of pushed into writing a feature film screenplay by and for an Oscar winning director. A friend and I wrote a book, Freezing People is (Not) Easy, about his days as a pioneer in the cryonics movement. He froze people in the 60's and early 70's, but had to do some crazy, and some unethical things to keep his frozen patients frozen, and failed in the end. It's an insanely good story. It got a lot of exposure before it was published because the NPR show This American Life did a feature, which went out to 500 stations. Errol Morris and Steve Zaillian too kit to Mandate pictures, which picked up the option. Zaillian purchased the option From Mandate and fired Errol, wanting to direct it first. Zaillian sat on it for ten years. After my friend passed away I took over the project. I ended up selling the option to Errol Morris. Errol had already paid one screenwriter to pen the screenplay when he was with Zaillian. After Errol got the option he hired another writer because he hated the first screenplay. It turns out he hated the second screenplay too. I wrote an alternative beginning and rewrote one of the critical scenes in the hope of convincing Errol that we can fix the screenplay and move forward. Instead he asked me to write it. I told him that I'm not a screenwriter, and that I'm not pretending to be one, but he insisted. What Jeff says about most screenplays being unreadable, I can attest to. I've been involved with this story, in one form or another for twenty years now. I had fooled myself into believing that I could do a good job. Well... I found out. I started with well over 220 pages. I had written some good scenes, but that's not enough. Over the next ten months I did everything I could to learn the craft while I wrote. I'm down to 112 pages after haven written at least 300. I had help with identifying Most of the BS that could be pulled out, along with some of which I thought was pretty cool. I got an experienced screenwriter to look at it, and he chewed it up like cheap bubblegum, which is what I needed. After addressing some of the flaws that were pointed out, I sent what I had to Errol. I put out a decent effort, but I know that it still needed some structural work. I know that it's as good as I can offer with my limited experience, I've read some other screenplays that I think aren't as good as what I've done, but I'm not fooling anyone. Hopefully Errol will like it and get me a good consultant to help me finish it right. I don't care how good an idea is, or how good a writer you think you are, turning a good story into a good film is a specialty all its own. BTW, I'm still waiting for Errol to read it and get back to me. Yes, I'm nervous.
She asked him a very important question and he wanted to provide a very precise answer, not leaving anything to interpretation. The clearer the answer, the more helpful it would be for the listeners. His book btw, is very useful and insightful.
So, how should a script be written so that your script doesn't fall in to the shit category? Does it need to be written in a short fiction format, or is adapting your story into a boring he says, she says script the problem?
Want to hear a true story? way back in 2004 i wrote a stage play, i had never been to the theatre before, ever, i had never seen the text of a play before or even knew how they were written or formatted, i just wrote how i 'felt' it should be. I sent the play off to a top London theatre, this theatre receives about 12,000 spec scripts a year. About 3 months after i had sent it i got a phone call out of the blue to say that they were going to produce it, which they did and it won 1 award. So there, right out of the box and straight into a top London theatre and won awards with absolutely no guidance from anyone, a rank amateur who had never written a single word before.
It’s hard to watch, sure, fore various reasons. But stick with it til the end. The attention/ intention analogy is the juice bits😇 (deliberate practice)
I don't believe a movie needs to tell a story as its most basic requirement. A story is basically any narrative with a beginning, a middle and an end. So, a story is structure. In my view the basic requirement for a movie is to offer the viewer an emotional experience. And then, because feature films run for between 90 mins and two hours on average, one needs a series of acts - a dramatic structure - as a vehicle to effectively deliver the emotional experience.
Also important to note is that they refer to the US.tradition of movie writing. The world is bigger than the States. Check out weirdo French movies from the 60s or some dark hopeless shit from Eastern Germany from the 70s. The range of storytelling is endless. I hate that "I tell you how to....." attitude here.
"non professionals don't have the ability to critique their material at a professional level". NO SHIT SHERLOCK!!!! that's why they're not professionals!!!
The process of making a movie magical is an alchemical process in which the cook blends the elusive ingredients together turning an emulsion we call film into gold. All the stars need to align!
@@robertchristensen5493 -- Wow. Okay. Not often the author themselves will chime in. No offense intended, Mr Christensen. I can't DO Kindle enough to read an entire book. I can read an article on screen and my attention level is very inconsistent even with that. I'm an old school guy that needs an 'actual' book to work with. Maybe considering its growing rarity, (used copies are up to $75 now) it's time for a second printing...?
Take every piece of advice with a pinch of salt. Use it as caution but otherwise its not law and everything is circumstantial so do what you love and don't listen to anything that will discourage you from getting that script finished
If %99 of screenplays submitted are unreadable and of what does get made only a small percent is well received what does that say about this industry of storytelling?
Great input. Small note: at minute 22:27 he talks about mastering small isolated skills that combine to create mastery in a craft. He says "yeah it's boring and every else..." But then he goes on to say how they make the practice an "addictive game" which allows the practitioner to stay engaged with intention and attention. That seems inconsistent. Addictive games aren't boring. I think he means to say that mastery requires the practitioner finds ways to make all components of a craft an addictive game and hence not at all boring.
I’m sure Jeff Kitchen is sincere and he knows what he’s talking about. However, like other writers interviewed on this channel he emphasizes the importance of proper training and like them he’s selling said training via another writing course. Nothing wrong with that. He has bills to pay I’m sure and his course may be great and worth the money. The problem, for me at least, is these course are expensive (even with discounts) and way out of my budget range. That can be discouraging. Then I remember the internet offers several ways to learn how to write and discipline, time, and hard work do make a difference. Also, Kubrick, Hitchcock, and Wilder didn’t take any courses. Some did go to college. Patty Chayefsky went to City College of New York, earned a degree in social sciences and Herman Mankiewics went to Columbia university. Yet they didn’t take screenplay courses or go to film school. They didn’t have any of the resources we take for granted today. No internet and not a multitude of screenplay writing books (film schools did exist but they didn’t take off until the 60s and early 70’s). Again, Nothing wrong with screenplay writing courses or film school or Jeff Kitchen. My point is writing courses may have value, but if you can’t afford it then remember writing courses(even the best ones) are Not Necessary to learning and excelling in the craft.
INT. DARK INTERVIEW ROOM - mid afternoon/golden hour/sunrise... (😐) JEFF was despondent about the state of screenwriting in 2021 JEFF KITCHEN Prodigies, those people dont exist, you hear about them, but its not true A LONELY ARTIST emerges from under a mossy rock LONELY ARTIST Hmm. Guess they left this stone unturned. .... lonely artist returns to underside of rock, turns into a starfish and befriends a yellow sponge named Bob. "Are you ready kids!"
Seemingly contradictory points I hear are “you have to put in the work” but also “don’t be precious just spit it all out” You do have to put it out quickly but also be willing to edit it down to its bare essentials
I interpret that as meaning don't censor yourself, don't analyze too much, just get the ideas down. Then the craft is sifting though the raw material or direction and weaving it into the story in a meaningful way. Also be willing to revise and polish it, get feedback and repeat.
First of all, saying something is unreadable is purely a matter of a opinion. I think it’s incredibly arrogant to say that. I’m going to say something rather controversial, but I don’t have respect for most writing teachers. If these people were truly successful in the areas they’re talking about, they wouldn’t have to make a living teaching. Of course, this goes for teachers in almost any field.
Depends on your definition of 'successful'. ; if you're just referring to being famous and rich, which in this industry like the music industry is generally the commonly accepted benchmark for success, then this would be the cause of your comment that they would not have to teach to make a living IF they were successful. The problem with this statement is that there just isn't enough room for everyone who writes scripts or songs to be 'successful' enough to make a living (financially) from. There are thousands and thousands of highly professional artists who've honed their craft and have 20 years experience in the industry that need to have a sideline business/job to pay the bills. Teaching isn't the bottom of the barrel for an artist either, and to suggest they HAAVe to do it is kind of insulting as it's an extremely rewarding career, full of enriching possibilities and this attitude also denies the fact that a lot of people love sharing their craft and seeing others do well in it. Teaching is one of the last things someone would do for money if they had no inclination for it. I can tell you that from first hand experience. We all know how much is suxks to try and learn from someone whose heart just isn't in the teaching process. So, I would ask you to rethink your statement and beliefs there pls.
@@lilledrum I have of all people understand that financial success isn’t a measure of talent or ability, but many teachers claim that if you follow their advice, you’ll be successful, which is rarely the case. Someone could be very talented, but that doesn’t mean they have any business giving advice to others. In my experience, most teachers are uncreative, set in their ways, and lack imagination. They spew whatever is the currently accepted dogma in their fields. I’m not criticizing all teachers, of course, but most of them match the description that I described.
@@batman5224 Great, but you're still equating success with money, which is what I'm trying to point out is the problem. Maybe I'm not explaining myself clearly. ( Have I got that point wrong?) What I mean is that to be a successful writer also means that you do a damn good job at it; you write compelling plots, your characters are believable and the timeline makes sense etc etc etc , even if no one ever makes your script into a movie which becomes well known and you become rich and famous. I think talent and ability definitely go towards your success, not as much as hard work and networking and being able to work with directors though. I know plenty of brilliant musicians that will never become famous for writing film scores simply because they have no collaboration skills which are vital for working with a director. Are you saying though that these teachers are telling their students that they will become financially successful scriptwriters by following their advice? That's very shady and completely manipulative ( plenty of other expletives come to mind as well ). I agree that these people are the weeds in the garden.
@@lilledrum I’m saying that the quality of a writer’s work can’t be objectively measured, while financial success can be measured objectively. Part of a teacher’s job is to make sure that their students succeed in their profession, and if they can’t do that, they’re not doing their job right. When it comes to subjective criticism, a writer can certainly tell other people what has worked for them, but they should never act like their opinion is law, which the guy in the video most certainly did. By saying that a script is unreadable, he is basically saying that the script will never be accepted by the industry, but he doesn’t have the experience to say that. He can say that he doesn’t like it, but not that it’s entirely unreadable.
I got to be honest. This is my concept of "they must be writting random shit on two different wheel of fortune wheels and spinning." Ok we spun sharks and we spun tornados....lets go!
"Professional screenwriters have the ability to evaluate what they are creating..." So often not the case as to make the person stating it look delusional, naive, or clowny.
I know why there are prodigies in so many fields but not in screenwriting. It’s the same reason it is impossible to be an expert in the TH-cam algorithm. The TH-cam algorithm is constantly evolving, so it is impossible to work within a consistent set of rules. Although you can get accurate results from your work quickly and easily, the rules are always changing. The case with screenwriting is even worse. While the deep, underlying principles are always more or less the same, as you compare the best films from each decade, or even years for that matter, there are very strong differences in taste. Furthermore, it is EXTREMELY difficult for a nobody screenwriter to get any hint of how good his/her work really is. It’s sort of like how do you engineer and improve on a car design if you’re not even able to show it to anyone or put it on the road until it’s super great? You will never know the effects of the changes you are making. There is no quick feedback. In chess, piano, math, science, etc, it is extremely easy to get instant feedback, whether by seeing if the math works or by listening to your piano playing or by seeing if you win or lose games. And in all of those fields the rules stay exactly the same across decades of time. Such simply is not the case with screenwriting. That is why 99% of scripts duck suck and why the only people who are able to come out of left field and succeed are the people who have worked their buts off for years. It’s too hard because the rules are constantly changing and because it is too hard to get reliable feedback.
And luck plays such a role, too! People forget that current events affect how someone reads your script or views your movie, but it might have been written 5 or 15 years before it was greenlit. Sometimes you just get lucky that your script hits the right notes for what people want at the moment. Or get unlucky and it hits wrong like a comedy about kids and guns the day after a school shooting or it feels like a copy because someone picked the same era/theme/style/inspiration as you did and you had no way of knowing.
I'm sure it is. Sturgeon's law (or Sturgeon's revelation) is an adage that states that "ninety percent of everything is crap." The adage was coined by Theodore Sturgeon, an American science fiction author and critic. He mean 90 percent of EVERYTHING on Earth, including people.
I have two feature length movies so far that I've adapted from books I've written. Currently, I'm working on a short story of mine that I'm adapting into a mini screenplay.
I don't agree with the fact that professional writers can eyeball their material at a critque level. I get a lot of script submissions and some of those are written by WGA writers. Guess what? Some of them are pure garbage and some of them need a lot of work. Even screenplay gods like John August or Aaron Sorkin's work gets rejected. Professional writers though, know their clients very well and they have a good understanding of what that specific director/producer/studio/production company wants from them. But anytime they write a spec to get it produced, their quality of work is not very different from other people who are not even in the industry. But I do agree with the fact that 99% of screenplays are unreadable. Because at the end of the day, almost all writers are delusional about their work.
Don’t underestimate yourself. Perhaps you should seek a writing partner, meet up and crack your heads together. I’m positive you’ll find the goods erry’time! As for me I have to resort to punchin myself in the face for my ideas. Qué Será Será
I usually enjoy these videos but this one wanders and doesn't make clear, actionable points.... it's so boring and incoherent. I haven't seen a worse interview on this channel.
Summary: Regularly challenge yourself to generate ideas and return to ones that might be interesting. Combine them with other ideas. Be bold with your concept and message (not derivative, not conforming, not weak), but use craft to make it work for the audience as a story (not be a mess). The writing can elevate the depth and impact of the idea, and safe writing can ruin a wild/exciting premise. In short, consider the intention of what you’re writing and the best way to write for that intention. Writers need awareness of their own writing in order to fix things that don’t work, and finding the most exciting ways to advance the plot. His example of Being John Malkovich makes his point quite clearly. An unusual premise, that could have been a boring and safe movie, but makes bold choices in execution, character and the ending. It wasn’t just the premise that made it great, but equally, it also had a great idea to be begin with. Kaufman even said the screenplay came from combining two ideas he was working on, one about a man who loved someone other than his wife, and one about the portal into someone else’s head. I think the answer in the writing process is to continually challenge and “destroy” the ideas you’ve written, knowing that most of what you write isn’t the best idea you can have. For example, brainstorming everything that could happen in the ending, rather than writing one ending you think of, and then polishing it and calling it finished.
thanx for calling him out on the hypocrisy of thinking outside the box, but then not being able to write like you've been in the box your whole life. This is why I don't read screenwriting books anymore (and why everything you watch seems the same - must be a write it like your in the box cult/club thing).
Jeff eventually gets the English Creative Writing job , but has to grow on my protagonist, BENJI, late teens , who's skeptical of the new professors credentials .📝📌 sticky note
"They'll get excited about an idea they have, and it can be too derivative, where's been used in way too many movies or tv shows". Was he talking about producers of haunted house horror films or amateur writers?
99%, where have I heard that before? Another book? You've got to be kidding. Screenwriting for the amateur is like that movie National Treasure. Another clue, another clue. Keep buying books, keep paying for script consultancy (which i never will) I've read enough books on writing. It's a cottage industry. I did enjoy William Goldman's book Adventures in the Screen Trade. And many others but no more. Enough is a bloody nuff.
"You've got to be able to hold a lot of contradictory ideas in your mind without going nuts. I feel like to do my job right, when I walk out onstage I've got to feel like it's the most important thing in the world. Also I've got to feel like, well, it's only rock and roll. Somehow you've got to believe both of those things." Bruce Springsteen
Sounds a little like, "Feel the fear and do it anyway". Too much fear will paralyse the creative mind, but in order to do anything memorable it has to born out of a deep love and dedication.
“As above, so below”. Balance
There's a part of this that confuses me: what they classify as "good scripts," still turn out to be bad movies the majority of the time.
A reader's imagination is a powerful thing. A good filmmaker is aware of how their brain is distorting a script and tries to incorporate that imagination into the film.
It's like a good painting. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
Most of the time it's because of rewrites, studio interference, incompetent directors, conflicting visions, etc.
It's in the execution, if you get a shite director even with a good script it can dump the movie.
A bad diredctor and or cast can take a good script and turn it into garbage as well as the reverse, a good director & cast turning a trash script into something good.
The one thing I like about this guys advice even though it's a bit all over the place is he didn't go down the route of saying "find out what sells and write that" he didn't go for the "learn how to write what the industry wants, cheesy romance and adventure flicks always sell". I like that it seems like he has integrity. He still writes to sell but he doesn't seem willing to compromise his integrity to do so.
Integrity doesn't pay the bills.
Neither does being an unoriginal sell out
@@franjes9999 From the shit movies I've seen, unoriginal sells very well.
I don't think romances do sell very well
I wasn't really feeling this guy when the video started, but by the end it was incredibly insightful - one of the best yet!
1 minute in. What difference pro's from non pro's? Takes 10 minutes to come up with this answer: Pro's know what they are doing. They have a sharp and trained eye. Wanted to close, but your comment keeps me watching
@@tothepast stay the course, he dropped a few nuggets towards the end
The key is to persevere with the craft that is just simply "Telling your story" whatever that is. The are rules and then there are always exceptions to that rule. Learn the basics of what genre you love and then speak the passion through your writing. "We all think in pictures not words"... Only you can know the context of the power words can have specifically to you. Its your story so tell it and believe in it :)
Some really great points in this video. Keep writing and dreaming big for your passion of the writing.
Most people can’t write because most people are not self critical. A good writer recognizes their own terrible writing and cut it. Bad writers think everything they touch is gold.
The bigger problem with most writers: It's a good idea that you have actually read a book before you try to write a book.
Exactly. Bad writers (like me) start with an idea and polish it. Good writers take that as a starting point. Getting that white heat that Kitchen talks about is the most difficult thing in the world. He's inspired me to take my best work and step it up a few levels.
“Most people aren’t self critical”, well hello, what planet have you arrived from?
@@Spiderstan727 🎉🎉🎉 so funny wow!! 😮🎉😂
@Jan Scott it's true and extremely frustrating to see in action.
‘Star beast’ was pretty much unreadable and it became Alien. Nobody knows what’s going to work.
This is the case for every script ever made
How dare you impugn the artistic merit of Star Beast??
@@noisepuppet i know its a masterpiece.
@@RobinJohnstonphotography in fact I have changed the word to "masterbeast" now!
Reader imagination. Exactly. If a reader doesn't have vision, they shouldn't be reading.
I enjoy how he talks about the craft of storytelling as "bringing a hard structure to something messy and organic." I always like to refer to it as "trying to catch fog in a jar." It's completely possible to do, but requires some ingenuity and mechanical know-how in order to condense the fog in a way that it can be collected and stored.
Some of us fell through the cracks, and kept growing.
We will have our time in the Sun.
amem to that
If only 1% of screenplays are readable, why are 99% of films produced crap?
because in 90+% of the cases people who have no idea about story telling get a say on how the movie should look
Remember, every movie is made three times. First when it’s written. Second, when it’s produced. And third when it’s edited. It has to survive all three processes.
there are good films that are made with an average script. Dazed and Confused for example barely had a script -- and much of what Matthew M. did was improvised.
That's not a difficult thing to comprehend. 1% of scripts are readable. Maybe less than 10% actually get made. And perhaps of that tiny figure, only 1% manage to turn those films into good films. There are many amazing scripts that became average or poor films. The script is just one of many variables.
Because 99% of that 1% is still not good enough... This shit is harder than you think.
This ignores how large of a role nepotism plays in the film industry. Lots of screenplays get read and seen because of the writer's connections. Chess doesn't have nepotism so it's a false equivalency.
“Nobody can be a good writer without any formal training. It’s been proven. That’s why you should join my 2-year screenwriting training program!” 🙄
It's all bull. Some people have talent. Others think they can teach it. Others again think they can learn it. In fact,art can't be learned. You got it or don't.
1:35 That says a lot right there! I believe there are no geniuses in filmmaking... only grit, willpower, and the desire to improve your skills. Certainly, there's some level of raw talent, but the rest you build it as you go. And whether you make or not (and when you do it), really depends on many factors, some of which are totally out of your control. Btw, this guy is great!!
Thank you for watching and for the comment, Daniel. Many more amazing insights from Jeff Kitchen coming soon!
Hopefully' bullets over Broadway is wrong. I'm a newbie and, as I write, I'm causiosly optimistic. (60-40 ratio) that writing is a Craft not a talent, unlike acting at least for me. Writing is more democratic I believe because it doesn't matter what you look like or sound like. And you don't have to write in real time. You always get to select your best ' take'.
No prodigy exists? BS. Most PRODUCED screenwriters aren't trained.
I do think what he says is valid. But I also recall that Pulp Fiction was considered unfilmable. And for years Hollywood generally looked down on superhero movies; they didn't believe The Avengers would succeed. It's not an excuse for lazy writing, but these examples should not be overlooked.
I learned very early that I couldn’t translate my thoughts into writing. Because I can’t figure out how to make someone feel the passion in my words when they’re just words on a page. Everything in my mind sounds better when I’m telling it vocally.
That's because you don't get semantics right: knowing the true measuring of a term is key to pin it into another persons mind. It's usually poetry and tautologies the resources that can catch emotional attention without being too obvious.
@@TheGrmany69 Um, no. It’s more like everything sounds more cringy when I right it down and read it back. I get semantics.
Then record yourself and then type it out
I read James Altucher Idea Machine and been writing 10 ideas a day for years. I've published 6 books under two pseudonyms with about 100K copies sold and sold two screenplays. Writing ideas every day let's you really keep that creative piece of you going. I think I've written or used maybe a total of 30 of my ideas and have been doing 10 ideas a day (maybe minus 30 days altogether) since Fall of 2018.
"Nobody Knows Anything" -- William Goldman
"I know everything" -- Jeff Kitchen
This guy talks like one of those artists that sketches his paintings and your like "what the F is that" until he turns it upside down and your like..."oh, its Bob Marley".
De Trout Spinners . . .
The moving parts in a story are quite complex. Subjectivity comes in play, so many times you can make a great movie with an average or a bad script because it’s improvisation and execution is upto the people making it. To create authentic art one has to be truthful with themselves and to be aware of being entertaining while being truthful. The most popular and loved films are truthful and a reflection of the world at that time in a direct or indirect way.
Sturgeon's law (or Sturgeon's revelation) is an adage that states that "ninety percent of everything is crap." The adage was coined by Theodore Sturgeon, an American science fiction author and critic. He meaning EVERYTHING on Earth. For something as hard and technical as screenwriting, 99.9 percent suck is conservative.
Thank you for the comment. Appreciate you mentioning this adage.
Cheer up.
as an upstart screenwriter, i tell you getting coverage or feedback from other professional screenwriters granted they don't try to steal your idea is invaluable. I'm working on a feature since the last April and every 25 - 30 pages i would get some feedback. it helps to get an outside perspective which allows their perspective to help you get a better grasp on your writing. now I'm finally writing my last few lines and actions before doing a good proofread and print off and binding .. never give up, whether or not you get your scripts on-screen you still accomplished something great.
In art school, we were taught to copyright it. As though it goes without saying, and regardless of the fee, regardless that major changes made later need to be copyrighted again using the long form, regardless of the fact that no one can copyright an idea. Just always copyright it.
I bought a couple of websites with phrases that one of my characters, an ad exec, uses in a bizarre ad campaign. I could sell them now for low four figures. (Who would have thought? So funny.)
Hope this helps! But maybe you knew, as in, everyone knows. (The websites are funny, though. That occurred to me on my own.)
Happy New Year! Best of lu. . . break a leg. :)
How did it go?
I can’t tell if film courage made this channel because they’re just genuinely passionate and want to pick brains, or if it’s like this small group of people who couldn’t break into the industry so they found a way to attempt to be a part of it by interviewing low to mid-level tier artists.
I find the channel interesting, and I can tell from the comments that probly 90% of the
people watching their vids are pretty clueless about how to approach the industry, whether in front of or behind the camera, so they have definitely found their audience. And then there is the 10% who actually work in the industry that just like watching for kicks. Some of it is informative but a lot of these guys make money by doing workshops etc. and you have to be careful of that.
Myself, I’ve been acting full time for a while now. And I suppose with some down time I could offer ‘workshops’ but that would be ridiculous. But that’s what a lot of these guys do, they’re basically salesmen.
If there’s one piece of advice I would give anyone trying to do anything in entertainment, it’s this: There are no rules. Do it your way.
Wise words, man.
You're an actor so, you know, learn your lines and try not to bump into anything.
Roger you make some great points...The “workshop” People remind me of the people that make all their money teaching people how to make money. You Definitely have to watch out for scammers. My brother Used to say that those who don’t know how to do something well enough become critics of the people who do. Like movie critics who couldn’t make it as actors. Sometimes They also become paid instructors.
@@jimmybalantyne5545 And he's also a human, learn some respect.
You are just as smug and unbearable as we all expect white men to be at this point.
so he says people cant write, so here's my book. Ok fella
A beautiful script to study is The Crying Game. It is a perfectly written masterpiece of screen writing. 6 Academy Award noms, including a win for screenwriting.
In summary, raw talent does not equal quality writing. The raw talent can have great ideas but conveying that idea in words is where the professional and the non-pros/untrained diverge
Just like a great screenplay on its first draft, Jeff has wonderful things to say, but those things need to be mulled over in the brain once or twice to concretely solidify the concept of it.
Hahaha
Thank you for submitting your screenplay for consideration. Unfortunately, your application has not been successful this time but we wish you all the best in your future endeavours. Please send an A4 sized envelope with postage stamp affixed if you wish to have your screenplay returned.
Yours faithfully, from random movie executive's 14 year old on 2 week work placement.
Title: why 99% of screenplays suck
4:59 "maybe it's brilliant and often they are"
Skeletor: *Wat*
It’s so fricken difficult to make any movie,much less a great one. All the parts must line up in great fashion,which includes the public. What makes a great film is not as crystal clear as some want to believe,yet at the same time,all great movies have common denominators every time,without failure
"The real problem is that most scripts suck. Seriously." LMAO!
Don't forget how he says don't let people tell you what to do, in a video where he's telling people what to do.
@@uanime1 yes, so you can't help but doing what he tells you, whatever your choice is.
You have to wonder how bad are those 99% of scripts when those 1% that are made into movies are 99% terrible lol
Exactly. If this guy is right,there would be only excellent movies.The contrary is the case. So the really good scripts are forgotten somewhere and never get made into movies. Sad.
"99% Of All Screenplays Submitted Are Unreadable": And still, they are getting made. Cuz we are having A LOT of crap these days.
Even Mozart had teachers.
I was kind of pushed into writing a feature film screenplay by and for an Oscar winning director. A friend and I wrote a book, Freezing People is (Not) Easy, about his days as a pioneer in the cryonics movement. He froze people in the 60's and early 70's, but had to do some crazy, and some unethical things to keep his frozen patients frozen, and failed in the end. It's an insanely good story. It got a lot of exposure before it was published because the NPR show This American Life did a feature, which went out to 500 stations. Errol Morris and Steve Zaillian too kit to Mandate pictures, which picked up the option. Zaillian purchased the option From Mandate and fired Errol, wanting to direct it first. Zaillian sat on it for ten years. After my friend passed away I took over the project. I ended up selling the option to Errol Morris. Errol had already paid one screenwriter to pen the screenplay when he was with Zaillian. After Errol got the option he hired another writer because he hated the first screenplay. It turns out he hated the second screenplay too. I wrote an alternative beginning and rewrote one of the critical scenes in the hope of convincing Errol that we can fix the screenplay and move forward. Instead he asked me to write it. I told him that I'm not a screenwriter, and that I'm not pretending to be one, but he insisted.
What Jeff says about most screenplays being unreadable, I can attest to. I've been involved with this story, in one form or another for twenty years now. I had fooled myself into believing that I could do a good job. Well... I found out. I started with well over 220 pages. I had written some good scenes, but that's not enough. Over the next ten months I did everything I could to learn the craft while I wrote. I'm down to 112 pages after haven written at least 300. I had help with identifying Most of the BS that could be pulled out, along with some of which I thought was pretty cool. I got an experienced screenwriter to look at it, and he chewed it up like cheap bubblegum, which is what I needed. After addressing some of the flaws that were pointed out, I sent what I had to Errol. I put out a decent effort, but I know that it still needed some structural work. I know that it's as good as I can offer with my limited experience, I've read some other screenplays that I think aren't as good as what I've done, but I'm not fooling anyone. Hopefully Errol will like it and get me a good consultant to help me finish it right. I don't care how good an idea is, or how good a writer you think you are, turning a good story into a good film is a specialty all its own. BTW, I'm still waiting for Errol to read it and get back to me. Yes, I'm nervous.
At 5:40 Fondly Farenheit by Alfred Bester is a really great story. You can find it online, would recommend it.
Someone buy a friggin' VOWEL get a friggin' CLUE and give this man his next thought which he spends eternity looking for!!!!!
Spit. It. Out!
She asked him a very important question and he wanted to provide a very precise answer, not leaving anything to interpretation. The clearer the answer, the more helpful it would be for the listeners. His book btw, is very useful and insightful.
Thanks for this comment. Made me switch it onto x1.75 speed. Was great to listen to.
As a script reader I can confirm this is true.
So, how should a script be written so that your script doesn't fall in to the shit category? Does it need to be written in a short fiction format, or is adapting your story into a boring he says, she says script the problem?
I seem to learn even more from the commentaries as from the featured writer. Amazing insights.
Alright I'm gonna apply this 99% rule to this video.
He couldn't grab my attention in the first one minute, so bye.
Want to hear a true story? way back in 2004 i wrote a stage play, i had never been to the theatre before, ever, i had never seen the text of a play before or even knew how they were written or formatted, i just wrote how i 'felt' it should be. I sent the play off to a top London theatre, this theatre receives about 12,000 spec scripts a year. About 3 months after i had sent it i got a phone call out of the blue to say that they were going to produce it, which they did and it won 1 award. So there, right out of the box and straight into a top London theatre and won awards with absolutely no guidance from anyone, a rank amateur who had never written a single word before.
Wow, probs to you, man! What is the name of the play if I may ask?
@@erik-sr9bj 'Come in Number 10 Your Time is Up!' i later rebranded it as 'The Wires are Down'.
@@erik-sr9bj I also have an even crazier story about the first screenplay i ever wrote!!
@@TheJuzi do tell, your stage play story was great 👌🏾
If anything that proves his point; they must have got thousands of scripts that were either unreadable or derivative, and yours stood out.
It’s hard to watch, sure, fore various reasons. But stick with it til the end. The attention/ intention analogy is the juice bits😇 (deliberate practice)
I don't believe a movie needs to tell a story as its most basic requirement. A story is basically any narrative with a beginning, a middle and an end. So, a story is structure. In my view the basic requirement for a movie is to offer the viewer an emotional experience. And then, because feature films run for between 90 mins and two hours on average, one needs a series of acts - a dramatic structure - as a vehicle to effectively deliver the emotional experience.
Also important to note is that they refer to the US.tradition of movie writing. The world is bigger than the States. Check out weirdo French movies from the 60s or some dark hopeless shit from Eastern Germany from the 70s. The range of storytelling is endless. I hate that "I tell you how to....." attitude here.
I can tell you wen to film school from your terminology.
Who are these people with these opinions 😂 2021 no one knows anything about the industry.
"non professionals don't have the ability to critique their material at a professional level". NO SHIT SHERLOCK!!!! that's why they're not professionals!!!
The process of making a movie magical is an alchemical process in which the cook blends the elusive ingredients together turning an emulsion we call film into gold. All the stars need to align!
This guy has the goods. What a teacher.
Jeff Kitchen is a highly skilled teacher. I'm learning more about him but so far his teachings been very helpful. Once again great video.
Great to hear Tariq! We start taking it to another level with Jeff Kitchen's teachings in his next video. Keep an eye out.
Amazon wants $50 for a used copy of this guy's book... not a chance.
Hi Chuck, we thought we saw new copies were around $21 or $22. Maybe those have temporarily sold out. Hopefully they will be back in stock soon.
The Kindle version is $9.99.
@@robertchristensen5493 -- Wow. Okay. Not often the author themselves will chime in. No offense intended, Mr Christensen. I can't DO Kindle enough to read an entire book. I can read an article on screen and my attention level is very inconsistent even with that. I'm an old school guy that needs an 'actual' book to work with. Maybe considering its growing rarity, (used copies are up to $75 now) it's time for a second printing...?
This guy is one of the very best at talking with his hands.
Oh man, yeah! It's like he's doing a combination of sign language, shadow puppets and working a marionette.
Take every piece of advice with a pinch of salt. Use it as caution but otherwise its not law and everything is circumstantial so do what you love and don't listen to anything that will discourage you from getting that script finished
If %99 of screenplays submitted are unreadable and of what does get made only a small percent is well received what does that say about this industry of storytelling?
Yeah i stopped watching midway. It seems like an advertising for a screen writing class
A two-year course of study! The grift is strong with this one.
The idea is key. The perfection of the script is the studio putting slave burden on everyone else
Yeah, you need a solid idea. A story to tell. The script simply adds meat to the bone. Without that idea/story, you have a bunch of jumbled thoughts.
4:04 to 5:12 Put the work in (i.e. learn craft).
Great input. Small note: at minute 22:27 he talks about mastering small isolated skills that combine to create mastery in a craft. He says "yeah it's boring and every else..." But then he goes on to say how they make the practice an "addictive game" which allows the practitioner to stay engaged with intention and attention. That seems inconsistent. Addictive games aren't boring. I think he means to say that mastery requires the practitioner finds ways to make all components of a craft an addictive game and hence not at all boring.
I’m sure Jeff Kitchen is sincere and he knows what he’s talking about. However, like other writers interviewed on this channel he emphasizes the importance of proper training and like them he’s selling said training via another writing course.
Nothing wrong with that. He has bills to pay I’m sure and his course may be great and worth the money. The problem, for me at least, is these course are expensive (even with discounts) and way out of my budget range. That can be discouraging. Then I remember the internet offers several ways to learn how to write and discipline, time, and hard work do make a difference.
Also, Kubrick, Hitchcock, and Wilder didn’t take any courses. Some did go to college. Patty Chayefsky went to City College of New York, earned a degree in social sciences and Herman Mankiewics went to Columbia university. Yet they didn’t take screenplay courses or go to film school. They didn’t have any of the resources we take for granted today. No internet and not a multitude of screenplay writing books (film schools did exist but they didn’t take off until the 60s and early 70’s).
Again, Nothing wrong with screenplay writing courses or film school or Jeff Kitchen. My point is writing courses may have value, but if you can’t afford it then remember writing courses(even the best ones) are Not Necessary to learning and excelling in the craft.
INT. DARK INTERVIEW ROOM - mid afternoon/golden hour/sunrise... (😐)
JEFF was despondent about the state of screenwriting in 2021
JEFF KITCHEN
Prodigies, those people dont exist, you hear about them, but its not true
A LONELY ARTIST emerges from under a mossy rock
LONELY ARTIST
Hmm. Guess they left this stone unturned.
.... lonely artist returns to underside of rock, turns into a starfish and befriends a yellow sponge named Bob.
"Are you ready kids!"
Jeff is a damn genius, love this guy!
Perhaps he could explain what a robut is
Just like 99% of films these days are unwatchable.
has to be one of the best videos on screenwriting out there if not the best
Seemingly contradictory points I hear are “you have to put in the work” but also “don’t be precious just spit it all out”
You do have to put it out quickly but also be willing to edit it down to its bare essentials
I interpret that as meaning don't censor yourself, don't analyze too much, just get the ideas down. Then the craft is sifting though the raw material or direction and weaving it into the story in a meaningful way. Also be willing to revise and polish it, get feedback and repeat.
First of all, saying something is unreadable is purely a matter of a opinion. I think it’s incredibly arrogant to say that. I’m going to say something rather controversial, but I don’t have respect for most writing teachers. If these people were truly successful in the areas they’re talking about, they wouldn’t have to make a living teaching. Of course, this goes for teachers in almost any field.
Depends on your definition of 'successful'. ; if you're just referring to being famous and rich, which in this industry like the music industry is generally the commonly accepted benchmark for success, then this would be the cause of your comment that they would not have to teach to make a living IF they were successful.
The problem with this statement is that there just isn't enough room for everyone who writes scripts or songs to be 'successful' enough to make a living (financially) from. There are thousands and thousands of highly professional artists who've honed their craft and have 20 years experience in the industry that need to have a sideline business/job to pay the bills.
Teaching isn't the bottom of the barrel for an artist either, and to suggest they HAAVe to do it is kind of insulting as it's an extremely rewarding career, full of enriching possibilities and this attitude also denies the fact that a lot of people love sharing their craft and seeing others do well in it.
Teaching is one of the last things someone would do for money if they had no inclination for it. I can tell you that from first hand experience. We all know how much is suxks to try and learn from someone whose heart just isn't in the teaching process.
So, I would ask you to rethink your statement and beliefs there pls.
@@lilledrum I have of all people understand that financial success isn’t a measure of talent or ability, but many teachers claim that if you follow their advice, you’ll be successful, which is rarely the case. Someone could be very talented, but that doesn’t mean they have any business giving advice to others. In my experience, most teachers are uncreative, set in their ways, and lack imagination. They spew whatever is the currently accepted dogma in their fields. I’m not criticizing all teachers, of course, but most of them match the description that I described.
@@batman5224
Great, but you're still equating success with money, which is what I'm trying to point out is the problem. Maybe I'm not explaining myself clearly. ( Have I got that point wrong?)
What I mean is that to be a successful writer also means that you do a damn good job at it; you write compelling plots, your characters are believable and the timeline makes sense etc etc etc , even if no one ever makes your script into a movie which becomes well known and you become rich and famous.
I think talent and ability definitely go towards your success, not as much as hard work and networking and being able to work with directors though. I know plenty of brilliant musicians that will never become famous for writing film scores simply because they have no collaboration skills which are vital for working with a director.
Are you saying though that these teachers are telling their students that they will become financially successful scriptwriters by following their advice? That's very shady and completely manipulative ( plenty of other expletives come to mind as well ). I agree that these people are the weeds in the garden.
I'd like to read some of his plays or scripts, to see if he really knows his craft, but I can't find any.
@@lilledrum I’m saying that the quality of a writer’s work can’t be objectively measured, while financial success can be measured objectively. Part of a teacher’s job is to make sure that their students succeed in their profession, and if they can’t do that, they’re not doing their job right. When it comes to subjective criticism, a writer can certainly tell other people what has worked for them, but they should never act like their opinion is law, which the guy in the video most certainly did. By saying that a script is unreadable, he is basically saying that the script will never be accepted by the industry, but he doesn’t have the experience to say that. He can say that he doesn’t like it, but not that it’s entirely unreadable.
I got to be honest. This is my concept of "they must be writting random shit on two different wheel of fortune wheels and spinning." Ok we spun sharks and we spun tornados....lets go!
"Professional screenwriters have the ability to evaluate what they are creating..." So often not the case as to make the person stating it look delusional, naive, or clowny.
Playback speed 1.75. Dude is a slow talker.
I just made it to the semi-finals in the LA international screenplay awards.
I know why there are prodigies in so many fields but not in screenwriting. It’s the same reason it is impossible to be an expert in the TH-cam algorithm. The TH-cam algorithm is constantly evolving, so it is impossible to work within a consistent set of rules. Although you can get accurate results from your work quickly and easily, the rules are always changing. The case with screenwriting is even worse. While the deep, underlying principles are always more or less the same, as you compare the best films from each decade, or even years for that matter, there are very strong differences in taste. Furthermore, it is EXTREMELY difficult for a nobody screenwriter to get any hint of how good his/her work really is. It’s sort of like how do you engineer and improve on a car design if you’re not even able to show it to anyone or put it on the road until it’s super great? You will never know the effects of the changes you are making. There is no quick feedback. In chess, piano, math, science, etc, it is extremely easy to get instant feedback, whether by seeing if the math works or by listening to your piano playing or by seeing if you win or lose games. And in all of those fields the rules stay exactly the same across decades of time. Such simply is not the case with screenwriting. That is why 99% of scripts duck suck and why the only people who are able to come out of left field and succeed are the people who have worked their buts off for years. It’s too hard because the rules are constantly changing and because it is too hard to get reliable feedback.
And luck plays such a role, too! People forget that current events affect how someone reads your script or views your movie, but it might have been written 5 or 15 years before it was greenlit. Sometimes you just get lucky that your script hits the right notes for what people want at the moment. Or get unlucky and it hits wrong like a comedy about kids and guns the day after a school shooting or it feels like a copy because someone picked the same era/theme/style/inspiration as you did and you had no way of knowing.
21:24 - GREAT analogy.
WOW - that is one hell of a shocking opener. 99.9% ? Is that based on actual statistical analysis? Would love to know how accurate that is.
I'm sure it is. Sturgeon's law (or Sturgeon's revelation) is an adage that states that "ninety percent of everything is crap." The adage was coined by Theodore Sturgeon, an American science fiction author and critic. He mean 90 percent of EVERYTHING on Earth, including people.
@@tranzco1173 thanks for the reply, that's a motto to live by I guess!
How many screenplays have you written that other people say are professional?
I am going to start writing my first ever screenplay in April I will try my best for my idea
3
@@risinggamer7423 Come back and let us know when you've finished it!
I have two feature length movies so far that I've adapted from books I've written. Currently, I'm working on a short story of mine that I'm adapting into a mini screenplay.
@@insanejughead ok bro
Who is this guy? How many screenplays has he written have been made into feature films?
many of these interviews come across as "you suck, but you might make it ..... if you BUY MY BOOK"
Such a good interview!
Just because he mentioned Pulp Fiction the script was supposedly three random stories combined…
I don't agree with the fact that professional writers can eyeball their material at a critque level. I get a lot of script submissions and some of those are written by WGA writers. Guess what? Some of them are pure garbage and some of them need a lot of work. Even screenplay gods like John August or Aaron Sorkin's work gets rejected.
Professional writers though, know their clients very well and they have a good understanding of what that specific director/producer/studio/production company wants from them. But anytime they write a spec to get it produced, their quality of work is not very different from other people who are not even in the industry. But I do agree with the fact that 99% of screenplays are unreadable. Because at the end of the day, almost all writers are delusional about their work.
Wow, needed to hear this one
No such thing as a bad idea. Just single ideas that haven’t been head smashed together yet (2 heads are better than 1)
Nah G, there are some bad ideas lol
Don’t underestimate yourself.
Perhaps you should seek a writing partner, meet up and crack your heads together.
I’m positive you’ll find the goods erry’time!
As for me I have to resort to punchin myself in the face for my ideas.
Qué Será Será
@@elgonzo5 appreciate you man. Same goes to you
@@TheMainMan364 I’m gravy on potatoes, I got ideas to spare if you need them. See ya on the interwebs!
Talent without training is nothing
Where could I read his plays and scripts?
What scripts? He has one credit on Imdb, it´s a "thank you". But hey you can buy his book. Like with all the other dudes talking on this channel.
@@lenieagle4158 LOL. EXACTLY.
The title of this reminded me of the episode of _Seinfeld_ when Jerry tells Elaine that 95% of the population is undateable. Undateable!
Remember , less is best . (Description/dialogue )
This dude is awesome.
We start going deeper into Jeff's teachings in our next video with him. Stay tuned.
@@filmcourage Always ;)
I usually enjoy these videos but this one wanders and doesn't make clear, actionable points.... it's so boring and incoherent. I haven't seen a worse interview on this channel.
Summary:
Regularly challenge yourself to generate ideas and return to ones that might be interesting. Combine them with other ideas.
Be bold with your concept and message (not derivative, not conforming, not weak), but use craft to make it work for the audience as a story (not be a mess). The writing can elevate the depth and impact of the idea, and safe writing can ruin a wild/exciting premise. In short, consider the intention of what you’re writing and the best way to write for that intention. Writers need awareness of their own writing in order to fix things that don’t work, and finding the most exciting ways to advance the plot.
His example of Being John Malkovich makes his point quite clearly. An unusual premise, that could have been a boring and safe movie, but makes bold choices in execution, character and the ending. It wasn’t just the premise that made it great, but equally, it also had a great idea to be begin with. Kaufman even said the screenplay came from combining two ideas he was working on, one about a man who loved someone other than his wife, and one about the portal into someone else’s head.
I think the answer in the writing process is to continually challenge and “destroy” the ideas you’ve written, knowing that most of what you write isn’t the best idea you can have. For example, brainstorming everything that could happen in the ending, rather than writing one ending you think of, and then polishing it and calling it finished.
Excellent comment!
Maybe it's the reader sometimes . We're talking about literature , we're talking about reading and comprehension .
So, he's blaming the writers?
99% of all movies today are garbage because writers are bad?
It’s pronounced robot not robutt. I don’t trust people that can’t pronounce robot.
Interviewer did great.
Ah yes.
If this was actually the case there wouldn’t be so many garbage movies in Hollywood
Can this course be done online?
the attack of a storyteller... WOW cool and well said.
Honest and helpful
Can I just say, I think he was on to something with the first Robot story. I imagine Of Mice and Men, but Lenny is a Robot.
thanx for calling him out on the hypocrisy of thinking outside the box, but then not being able to write like you've been in the box your whole life. This is why I don't read screenwriting books anymore (and why everything you watch seems the same - must be a write it like your in the box cult/club thing).
Jeff eventually gets the English Creative Writing job , but has to grow on my protagonist, BENJI, late teens , who's skeptical of the new professors credentials .📝📌 sticky note
"They'll get excited about an idea they have, and it can be too derivative, where's been used in way too many movies or tv shows". Was he talking about producers of haunted house horror films or amateur writers?
99%, where have I heard that before? Another book? You've got to be kidding. Screenwriting for the amateur is like that movie National Treasure. Another clue, another clue. Keep buying books, keep paying for script consultancy (which i never will) I've read enough books on writing. It's a cottage industry. I did enjoy William Goldman's book Adventures in the Screen Trade. And many others but no more. Enough is a bloody nuff.
Well! I guess I don't have a chance in hell with my scripts! According to this guy!
So you’re saying I have a chance...
I'm sure that if you give to this man (telling him that is yours) Lars Von Trier's script "Dancing in the dark", he's gonna say that's unreadable
Oh, I get it... writing is being an oncologist, but 99% of my writing is the "embodiment" of crap.
No one mentions Troy Duffy anymore.