It’s also what I need to do now. I’ve long had a drawerful
of reasonably developed ideas for film and/or television (even if they’re just
a paragraph or so), only now, to my consternation, they’ve all been picked up. That
doesn’t mean I’ve been given much, or any money for the majority of them, sadly, but
they’re all spoken for, one way or the other. So this applies to anyone who needs to restart the engine as much as a work out what to do when they've finished their first piece of work.
START WRITING SOMETHING NEW. Don’t panic, you don’t have to
pile into a new script straight away – but you need to start narrowing down
what your script is going to be about.
Easy way to get started on this:
1.
Make a list of ten concepts for films you’d like
to see. Any genre, any budget, just one or two sentences. Don’t refine any of
them until you’ve got to ten.
2.
Of those ten, pick five to do a brief paragraph
each on the first, second and third acts. If you can’t pick three, pitch those ten
ideas to your friends and ask which they’d like to see as a film, and why.
3.
Of those five, pick three and develop them
further: make a little bio for each character, think of a character that makes
his or her first appearance in the second act, another who might only appear in
the third act. Start thinking about actors who might play those roles.
4.
Of those three, decide on one you’re going to
develop as a script.
5.
Work out most important forty scenes for that
story, then start writing it as a script.
WHY DO THIS?
Because if you pile straight into one script, you’ll almost
certainly come unstuck and/or bored a third of the way through, and feel like
you want to start another one to get that fresh, enthusiastic feeling. Bad
news: every script comes unstuck a third of the way though, you have to push
through it, and that’s the point where writing no longer feels like fun, it
feels like work.
This way, if you do come genuinely unstuck, you have a
number of other thought-through ideas to fall back on. Or you might realise that idea three and idea eight aren't strong enough to work on their own, but if you put them together, you might have an intriguing start for idea eleven. Also, it’s a good idea
to have a number of concepts in your back pocket for a tricky pitch meeting
where your best (or favourite) idea is shot down almost straight away.
This happened a few months ago, and I was reduced to pitching an idea I had thought up about five years and not pushed again because the first person I had mentioned it to had laughed. The people I pitched it to at that moment not only didn't laugh (well, they laughed in the right places, at least), they immediately commissioned me to write a treatment, and it's just been rejected by Sky Television! Notice how I put an exclamation mark on the end of that for an upbeat feel. Don't worry, they're taking it to other places as well.
Also, DON'T BE AFRAID OF THE STUPID IDEA. If an idea appeals to you, however ridiculous it sounds, there's got to be something in it, so pursue it, chase it around with a stick until it gives up its gooey secrets. Conversely, an idea might not sound like a zinger ('frustrated Englishman runs a hotel in Torquay'), but if there's something in there you keep coming back to, stick with it.
I have to finish here because my son is hitting me with a Richard Scarry book.