Monday, 30 November 2015

Screenwiting: turning a novel into a 15-minute screenplay

I've been trying my hand at screenwriting in preparation for a big annual Christmas Watford Writers competition: The Writer's Block.

I decided to turn my 93,000 word novel into a 15 minute screenplay. Tricky, you might think. You are not wrong. Here is what it has involved so far:
  • Simplifying everything
  • Showing, not telling
  • Cutting characters that were not crucial to the story
  • Cutting scenes were not core to the plot
Now I know why films are never true to their original texts! But it's actually pretty good advice for any aspiring writer. After all, if something is in your story, it must add value or move the story on in some way.

An added complication is that my novel is set across two generations. That's two lots of characters to get to know in 15 minutes. I looked at films that have done this, and the common themes were:
  • Narrator in present day looks back at an episode in their past (Saving Mr Banks, Life of Pi, Titanic, or the book The Poison Tree that was turned into a 2-part drama)
  • People in different time periods or places whose stories inter-relate in some way (The Hours, Love Actually)
But in my novel, there are no characters that appear in both the present and the past. Still, with such a visual medium, so much can be put across with a look, a juxtaposition of two frames. I am attempting show likeness between the present day protagonist and her war-time Grandmother in the similarity of physical positions, of facial expressions and reactions when placed next to each other.

Whether I can pull it off remains to be seen. It's tough, but enjoyable, and there will be things I can take back to my normal medium of writing. I would recommend this as an exercise to other writers!

Monday, 23 November 2015

Writing rocks! Editing is boring!


Does anyone else find editing boring?
 
I watched a TED talk from Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Positive Psychologist, on Flow – the secret of happiness

Flow is the state you get in when you're really happy. Everything just clicks, you lose yourself, hours pass like minutes. One poet describes it as “opening a door that floats in the sky”. It’s when what you are doing becomes worth doing for its own sake.

It reminded me of why I love writing. But this state feels like almost a “magical” thing – how can we recreate it at will?

Mihaly did some research to work out what is going on when people are in flow. He found out that people in flow are facing higher than normal challenges, and feel they have higher than normal skills to deal with them.

So – how does this help with editing?

Well. According to Mihaly and the diagram, I must either think the challenge of editing is too easy, or I don’t feel I have the skills to deal with it.

Well… surely I’m not so arrogant to think it’s easy?

So, tomorrow night I’ll be reading up on how to edit a novel.

Ciao for now.

Monday, 16 November 2015

Building Believable Characters



A month ago I received my first rejection from a literary agent.


“You write with charm but the story seems rather rambling, and you need a greater depth of characterisation.”

Thankfully I was more excited to hear something back from an agent than to be too disheartened. OK, I thought. This I can use.


So where did it go wrong?


  • Inconsistencies in physical appearance (or rather, in my case, I didn’t have enough description to help the reader sketch out the protagonist)
  • Telling not showing (over-reliance on internal monologue. There is a time and a place for it, but let the reader see and interpret action rather than getting stuck in a characters head for too long)
  • Characters sound the same (why were two characters always saying ‘of course’? This was my voice, not theirs)


Putting it right
 


No one wants to spend an extended amount of time with characters who are flat, so how do you achieve greater depth of characterisation?

1) Biography: This is a simple one, but make sure you know:
Name
Age
Occupation
Siblings & extended family
Religion
Nationality

2) Physical appearance: Make a list of your characters defining features. You won’t use all of this, but you need to know. External features say something about the person underneath – for example, my main character Katharine is tall and spends her time hunched, as though trying to make herself smaller so she doesn’t stand out, apologising to the world for taking up that extra space. What mannerisms do your characters have?

3) Personality profiling: The Myers Briggs personality profile can be a useful tool to help pin specific traits on your character. For example, are they introverted or extroverted? Are they more likely to react to situations logically or emotionally? I have found this helpful when dealing with several characters as it really helps identify areas of difference.

4) Defining moments in their past: Did they have a difficult childhood? What makes them hate public speaking? Why are they afraid of cows?

5) Hopes and fears: What do they want from life? What are they most scared of and why? Being alone? Spiders?

6) Flaws: No one is perfect, and we believe in the character that has weaknesses just like us. We admire the one that accepts their flaws and takes a journey to make the best of them.



Our histories are full with all the characters we will ever need, you just need to borrow some traits from one person and fuse them with the disassembled parts of someone else.

I recommend doing the above for a character you know from a TV show or book, or for someone you know (but never let them see it!). You’ll soon see that there are so many differences between people, and all you need to do is let your imagination (and memory) run wild.


A final word of warning:
Going through the analysis and creation of a character involves the process of reflecting and understanding yourself, so be prepared to face some home truths!