First off, this article isn't meant to throw anyone specific
under the Bus of Bad Writing, as most
of these mistakes have been made by multiple writers. Having said that,
sometimes, as a reader, you find yourself facing words on a page whose mere
existence simply defy all sane reason and logic in this Universe, and, as a
cautionary tale to those playing fast and loose with the writing rules, feel
the need to share those bizarre anomalies. If you've ever made any of these
mistakes, don't worry, we're here to help - grab a cup of cocoa and a blanket
and go sit in the corner for a while. We'll be right with you.
10) Giving The
Audience A Full Page Of Text To Read
When was the last time you remember reading something on
screen, either in a Film or TV Show, aside from Titles and Credits? Doesn't
happen often, does it? You may have to read a threatening note consisting of a
few words, like "I'm watching you", "Look behind you", or
"You left the fridge door open". Or the camera will focus on a
few words as part of a larger document. At the most, a Sci Fi will give you a
few sentences of backstory. But stopping the film halfway through for the
audience to read a full letter or note, unaccompanied by voice over, is just
straight up lazy.
9) 41 Missing
Question Marks
At first, I thought I'd try to avoid including spelling and
grammatical errors on this list, because, sadly, it's becoming harrowingly
apparent to me that the vast majority of aspiring "writers" struggle
with a basic grasp of either. However, this phenomenon was just too
unbelievable to pass up. Yes, I counted them - there comes a stage when you
just have to. 41 questions missing that defining marker. There could have been
more that I missed - it would stand to reason, given how utterly scrambled my
brain was by the end of reading.
8) Seeing The Exact Same
Flashback Multiple Times
That doesn't sound particularly shocking - a lot of great
films repeat the same turning point at different crucial points in the
narrative, giving new context and insight into the events unfolding. The
airport scene in 12 Monkeys, the
events unfolding on the boat in The Usual
Suspects, uhhh... Groundhog Day? The
difference here is that the scene in question was completely unnecessary to the
unfolding plot - rather just one step on the journey being shown again and
again, as if we had forgotten. There were no new insights. No new context. No
new experiences to be had.
7) Describing All The
Characters The Exact Same Way
Detailing the physical appearance of characters is the most
under-appreciated shorthand in a writer's arsenal. You can say so much about
someone's personality by the manner in which they present themselves, without
implictly having to tell us their character traits. Which is why this instance
broke my heart a little. All the characters (who, in the worst example of this
error, all happened to be women) become carbon copies of one another, with no
defining attributes to set them apart. Honestly, if that really is the case,
just make them all one person, and spare my heart from breaking.
6) Arbitrarily Making
The First Hour Of A Film Into A TV Pilot
Film and TV aren't only different in length, y'know? Story
structure for TV depends a great deal on broadcast channel (give us mini
cliff-hangers before the advert breaks, people), as well as balancing numerous
continuing serial strands that run the course of the series with the "story
of the week". Films, unless you've somehow bagged a deal for writing in a
franchise, need to be contained, with each "Act" generally containing
more meat and immediate purpose. Cutting off the first 60 pages of a 180 page movie
does not a pilot make. It makes for a first Act and bit, dangling loose in the
wind.
5) No Understanding Of Basic Medical Logic
This comes up so often that I've started working on a theory
that the part of the brain associated with storytelling must be in direct
opposition with processing facts about the human body. They just don't go hand
in hand. My three personal favourites? Someone checking for a pulse in a
character who has been shot twice in the head. A character grabbing an active
chainsaw by the blade end and being shocked at the result. And, the best one by
far, a pair of EMTs using a defibrillator on someone who is choking. CHOKING.
4) Characters Watch
Another Film In The Space Of One Scene
Is the passage of time no longer sacred to you people?! I'm
all for montage, time lapse, cutting to later, and other timey-wimey nonsense,
but too often the characters seem to be moving at a completely different pace
to the action. Let me break it down - a character sticks a movie on (let's say Taken for the sake of argument), the
characters talk a little, next thing you know, that iconic scene comes on (yep, he's on the phone already), the
characters chat a little more, and then, THE MOVIE HAS FINISHED?!?! Maybe I'm
over-reacting. Perhaps it was just a 2 minute cut of the film.
3) Taunting Producers
With "Production Notes"
This goes beyond biting the hand that feeds you to the point
where you're spitting your breakfast into their poor, unsuspecting palm, and
then trying to eat it back up again. Look, I'm not saying you should be
worshipping producers or readers or whoever you're subjecting your spec to. I'm
just saying, show a touch of class and respect, for Pete's sake. I recently
read a script that took delight in including "production notes" in
brackets, often following long passages of intangible, non-visual description, sarcastically
wishing the poor suckers good luck shooting what they had just written.
2) The Same Script
Twice In One Document
In an ideal world, I'd like to imagine this was just a
strange oversight, rather than the disturbing reality that this was a conscious
decision on the writer's part. Picture this, I'm reading a 70 page TV script. I
get to page 33 and it just... ends? What followed were two totally blank pages,
sending my mind reeling ("are there
37 blank pages?"), before the horror struck me... The script started
over again from the beginning. I cross-referenced the two versions, and found
tiny differences separating the two drafts. Which one was I to feed back on? Tell
me, what would you do in that
situation? Worth it for Triple Neeson, though.
1) Forgetting Which
Main Character Died
My brain gets a little bit sad whenever I think about this
one. Knowing your characters inside out is important in crafting a story, but,
at the very least you should be able to remember what has happened to them. I
found this script admirable at first for having the stones to off their main
character at the midpoint of the story. The problem arose when they seemed to
be alive and well about 10 pages later, and the character who had discovered
them to be dead had taken the corpse's place. This wasn't a parallel universe
story. This wasn't a manipulation of reality. This was an error.
An error that still haunts me.
James Cottle, a
Scriptwriting Mega-Scholar™, is now a real world Freelance Writer, in between
intense bouts of Script Reading. Follow him on Twitter @Jxmxsc,
"like" the Anti-Scriptwriting page on Facebook, and share this blog
if you want his opinions on your work to be completely unbiased.
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