Ringu said:
Why I am asking all this is that I really want to work more in this area, and I have ideas, but as soon as I start writing them down, I end up with 5-10 pages of text and can't move further. Especially it's hard for me to write realistic dialogues.
What can you suggest?
Also, I think, maybe someone would be interested in starting a project where we work on a story and make it a script. Of a movie, christian or not, but with good morals etc. What do you all think? We'd just come up with a theme and then work on it together as a work group. Input our thoughts and mold it into a good script.
There is more than one way to do this. I've done less on script-writing but since I've had to do some recently for short skits I've found in one sense it's more immediate and easy to write than say a story. I suppose it's similar to writing a story. You still have characters, you still have a setting and a problem or tension that needs to be resolved.
If I remember, writers tend to fall into two camps. There are those that plan the whole story out and structure it from start to end, then start writing. Then there's the other camp who prefer to make up a bunch of characters, put them all into a bag and watch them resolve their relationships and reach a conclusion of some sort. The first option may bring about a neater story, but unless you do it well enough some of the situations and character behaviour may become too contrived just to satisfy the way of the plot. The second method may give you more realistic characters, but the plot may come out more accidental in nature if not worked on enough. A good balance needs to be made between a credible enough plot and good, believable characters.
If you want to work on something, you can try either method. It's probably important to have a theme in mind right at the beginning of this process, then think of different characters who might in different ways have a problem to solve in light of this problem, e.g. If the script was about finding fulfilment and purpose, you could have: an executive who has reached the top but quits when he is dissatisfied with life at the top; a church worker who has suffered burnout; a woman whose marriage has grown cold and distant and wishing for something more; a teenage girl who contemplates suicide. Involve them somehow in one story, see how they relate. You may need to add some people who will have some wisdom to share to these characters; a boy whose simple life's fulfilment is playing with Dad; a dog who is content just to be an animal and has no need to find fulfilment; a missionary worker on the streets facing danger every day but couldn't eb happier. Imagine if the first group of people came across people from the second group. How would they interact? How would they react to what the other has to say? These "what ifs" could become the basis for different scenes and develop into a plot.
You could add events that happen that throw a spanner in the works for these characters. The problems the first group encounter could be linked somehow, e.g. the teenage girl is a case that the christian worker couldn't handle, she runs away and it leads to his burnout and the girl's suicide thoughts. The girl is about to jump off a bridge when she encounters a dog drowning in the river and she goes to save it. This alters her perception of life as a result. Meanwhile the christian worker hits rock bottom, backslides and gets drunk when he comes across the street missionary and they have a dialogue in the bar.
Think of an endpoint you hope to see the first group reach. You wish to see the burnt-out christian worker have a time of refreshing spiritually and come back to his ministry a new man. You want to see the teenage girl love life again and maybe help the street missionary. You want to see the dog live and be happy with its master.
You need a bigger picture for the storyline, or you need to be aware of how different characters interact and change as a result of these encounters. Either way, things may start to form once you see things in one or both ways.
cheers,
RF

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