How to write a successful screenplay: Five things to consider before you even begin

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Jack Lemmon asking Shirley MacLaine if she knows where this story is going. The Apartment (1960) Photo courtesy United Artists

Jack Lemmon asking Shirley MacLaine if she knows where this story is going. The Apartment (1960) Photo courtesy United Artists

Hollywood was once a very different place. In the 30s and 40s, the studios simply put screenwriters under contract and assigned them movies to write. In the 50s and 60s, writers were often independent but afforded a level of trust it’s hard to image today. Billy Wilder began The Apartment with only 26 pages of script, the film was written as it was shot. It’s impossible to imagine anyone, even a Spielberg or Tarantino, being allowed that freedom in the last thirty years.

These days, films can take a decade, sometimes more, to go from conception to completion. With such a long road in front of you, how do you make sure you make the right decisions from the start?

Here are five things to consider:

No. 1 — Write what you know

This is a bit of writing advice that instructors have been handing out forever. It is both wonderful advice, and terrible advice. If followed closely, entire genres would be wiped out. There would be no science fiction, no westerns, no fantasies. Romantic comedies could only be written by the happily married. Taken literally, it is a far too restrictive bit of advice for writers.

That said, if you’re dealing with Hollywood you have to understand that studio executives love nothing more than authenticity. They love hiring lawyers to write legal shows and doctors to write medical shows. Writing what you know can get you through the door. If you have an area of specialty, use it.

But what if you don’t really know that much? Research is the writer’s best friend—even when you’re well versed in a topic. However, don’t think you’re just going to walk into an executive’s office and say, “I researched my script,” and they’ll be impressed. They won’t be. Before your script even goes out, look for opportunities to blog about the subject. They’re looking for experts. Become an expert.

No. 2 — Be original 

One of the things I noticed in writing workshops was how hard new writers struggled to be original.

Unfortunately, there isn’t such a thing. Depending on whom you listen to there are seven, three, six, or thirty-six basic stories. What we can agree on is that there aren’t very many and they’ve all been told. What you can be, indeed what you should be, is fresh. Don’t try to re-invent the movie. But try and tell a story that hasn’t been told for a long time. Or, tell an old story in a new and interesting way.

No. 3 — Write to the market.

Given the long timeline between idea and film, chasing the market is never a good idea. When you get representation you manager or agent will talk to you about the current purchasing trends. “They’re looking for female-driven comedies.” “So-and-so wants a script for Brad Pitt.” “X (usually someone wildly inappropriate) wants to do an action movie.”

If you have good representation they’re hoping you have something like that in a drawer that you can cleanup and take out.

If your rep isn’t so great, they may actually want you to write to market. If you do try to write the kind of movie studios are looking for today, you can be sure they won’t be looking for that by the time you’re finished. And your rep will have forgotten he or she thought it was a good idea for you to spend three months, or six months, or nine months, writing something they now won’t submit.

Emily Blunt trying to find her way from bestseller to blockbuster in The Girl on the Train (2016) Photo courtesy Dreamworks SKG.

Emily Blunt trying to find her way from bestseller to blockbuster in The Girl on the Train (2016) Photo courtesy Dreamworks SKG.

No. 4 — Understand the market.

It is, however, important to know the market and how it works. You might look at the market and think, super hero movies always sell, why don’t I write my own? Or female driven thrillers are popular, I’ll try that. What you need to remember is that Hollywood makes movies about every hero in the Marvel canon because there’s a built-in audience. Hollywood isn’t looking for scripts like Gone Girl and The Girl on the Train—they’re looking for bestselling books that can be turned into those scripts.

One thing you have to understand is that the script you’re writing, no matter how good, may never get made. Which is depressing, I know. However, that script could become a calling card. A script that gets you meetings is worth writing. A script that gets you representation is worth writing. A script that gets you an assignment is gold.

No. 5 — Do you love it? Passion.

A piece of advice I like to give is, “write the movie you’d like to see.”

You’re going to be spending a lot of time with your script, possibly years, so it needs to matter to you. That doesn’t mean every script has to be about global warming or the plight of indigenous people. If you love light fluffy romantic comedies, then that’s your passion. Write to that. Write a story you love. If you don’t love your story it will be almost impossible to make other people love it.

The thing to remember, and the reason to think strategically, is that films cost huge amounts of money to make—and even when they don’t they cost huge amounts of money to market. That means what you write has to be commercial. And that holds true whether you’re writing something small and independent or something that might hit the top of the charts.

A lot of writers hate the idea of being commercial. Here’s the way you need to think about it: you’re looking for the intersection of what’s in your heart and what the market will buy. You can find it. It’s there.

What else do you consider before beginning to write? We want to hear from you.

author-avatar

Marshall Thornton has an MFA from UCLA in screenwriting. He spent ten years writing spec scripts and has been a semi-finalist or better in the Nicholl, Samuel Goldwyn, American Accolades, One-In-Ten and Austin Film Festival contests. As a novelist, he writes the Lambda Award-winning Boystown Mysteries. The eight book series follows the cases of a gay detective in turbulent 1980s Chicago. Marshall has also been known to write the occasional romantic comedy. You can find him online at marshallthorntonauthor.com. You can follow him on Twitter: @mrshllthornton

8 Replies to "How to write a successful screenplay: Five things to consider before you even begin"

  • comment-avatar
    Daniel Colmerauer September 13, 2016 (1:31 pm)

    “This is a bit of writing advice that instructors have been handing out forever. It is both wonderful advice, and terrible advice. If followed closely, entire genres would be wiped out. There would be no science fiction, no westerns, no fantasies.” I must disagree with this statement. You can write what “you know” in any genre — sci fi — western — romcom — fantasy, etc. The original Star Trek, for example, was very often reflective of the social concerns of its time although set hundreds of years in the future.

  • comment-avatar
    Bill Hartin September 13, 2016 (1:32 pm)

    Marshall – Thanks for the great article and insight about what things to consider on the way to developing a screenwriting mindset. Wish I’d seen this 25 years ago.

    Anyway, to the point – with all due attribution, may I use this article as a handout for a Learning Session at our next FIFO (Fade In/Fade Out) meeting? We are a non-profit filmmaking consortium dedicated to supporting, cultivating and developing filmmakers and filmmaking. With your permission, it will be used to introduce our members to the origins of all films – the story; the screenplay.

    Thanks in advance for your consideration. All the best…

    Bill Hartin

    • comment-avatar
      Marshall Thornton September 13, 2016 (3:39 pm)

      Spoke with the editor and she’s says it we be awesome if you want to do that. Just please mention ScreenwritingU Magazine. 🙂

  • comment-avatar
    Marshall Thornton September 13, 2016 (1:38 pm)

    Absolutely. You’re taking the advice to write what you know in the right way. If Roddenberry had taken the advice literally then he couldn’t have written about space because he’d never been there. But it shouldn’t be taken literally. The best stories join what you already know to what you’ve found out or invented.

  • comment-avatar
    Robbert Smit September 16, 2016 (1:16 am)

    Research any subject and write. Do more research on the subject and write…walk away for a month. Read what you wrote aloud and write again. The research takes second place and a story will emerge!!

  • comment-avatar
    Jenny September 20, 2016 (10:44 am)

    Are you an American adviser? We British are much more understated and have more nuanced approaches. Presumably this counts us out from success in the American market where things seem to have to be spelled out? (For instance, with us, a particular look needs no interpretation, but an American would have to have someone saying ‘I love you.’) If British understatement is not understood, then I’m holed beneath the waterline.

    • comment-avatar
      Marshall Thornton September 20, 2016 (12:18 pm)

      Yes, I am American. Did you look at my Winning the Read article? I would say you’re more than welcome to describe that look and not put it into dialogue. I also remember one of my professors at UCLA reminding us that it was okay to write “I love you.” Writers tend to avoid it as being to ordinary.

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