Oh thanks. I still love my spec a lot. And hey, if it's the last script I ever write, it was a nice note to go out on. A sort of little love letter to my hometown.
The Great Write Way
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Does it have to be the last script you write?
I don't know the background, but, well - does it?
Eh. It doesn't have to be. I mean, it's not like someone's gonna try and break my fingers if I sat down to write. But, yeah, it probably is the last one.
I haven't had the drive to write a script in...oh...close to two years now. Right around the time that I came to the realization that I didn't have the personality to make it as a screenwriter. Then I lost my job and ended up completely out of the industry. So even if I suddenly had the desire to write a dozen specs, I don't have any contacts in the TV world to show them to.
I wouldn't go as far as to say that I regret the attempt to break into the business but I would say it wasn't one of my smarter ideas. *snerk*
Are you set, completely, on screenwriting? Why not fiction, or drama?
I'm not sure if that question is dumbassed, or out of line. It's just that as a writer, I hate seeing other writers not get their shot, especially if the stuff is good.
Oh I suck at writing narrative. I could drown you in dialogue but ask me to write a descriptive paragraph and I'm like a deer in headlights. That's how I ended up in screenwriting. Because if I wanted Jane to pick up a pencil, all I had to say was, "Jane picks up a pencil."
Sadly, "Jane picks up a pencil," makes for a very boring read.
Sadly, "Jane picks up a pencil," makes for a very boring read.
In fiction, possibly so. But in drama? Playwright in the making, perhaps? Or does that particular journey not feel right?
Or comic books -- the pencil details are completely someone else's problem.
Hey, if Mister Ayelet Waldman can write the next Spiderman movie script? I am damned if I see why our own Ms. K can't collaborate with a drawing type person and craft a whole new comics gestalt.
I mean, I wish to hell somebody would. Someone who is not male, or eighteen, or in love with Laura Croft.
Mister Ayelet Waldman
Heh. I trust you'll be seeing the movie, Deb?
Yes indeedy. Michael Chabon writing it? Oh, you dambetcha.
I'm hoping he comes along with Ayelet at our big Delancey Street group reading in January. Although reading with him in the audience? Yike.