I have to agree...Beeblebrox said:I think it's very important to treat it like a job. And you don't wait around for inspiration to do your job. Schedule a regular time and place to sit down and write and make yourself do it. Discipline is a major part of screenwriting, especially if you want to do it for a living.
I personally find it too difficult to write at home. Way too many distractions so I go to a local coffee shop and spend at least 3 hours a day there. It's almost like my office now... LOL. I wrote my last script there.
Try taking 30minutes a day thinking about it. Do 15 in the morning, and then 15 at night, when your mind has had a chance to take the morning's ideas and evolve them.
clive said:I do that as well. Thank God for laptops![]()
I agree with Filmy and Bebblebrox, having regular time to write is the only way to get it done. The only difference between what they do and what I do is that I set myself the task of turning out so many pages per day, rather than having a set block of time. I'd agree though that three hours is about the optimum amount of time needed because it's actually the first thirty to forty minutes that are the hardest, when I'm getting back into the story and not much is happening. After that, I've usually got about two hours when it really just flows, providing I don't get any interuptions. The problem with interuptions is it then takes me twenty to thirty minutes to get back into the story again. I think this is the reason I try to get out of the house to do it.
One confession though, for some reason I only really get motivated to write when I've got a pressing deadline. Lots of writers seem to have this problem, I know Douglas Adam was famous for putting stuff off until the last minute. In my case, I was funded to rewrite one of my feature scripts and they gave me a year to work on it, so I of course haven't looked at it since (7 months now). Now if they told me they now needed it this Thursday I wouldn't have any problems, it would get written. I think the thing I've really taken from this thread is just that reminder that I need more discipline in my writing time. I've actually got two feature scripts that I could easily finish with a few weeks work, both of them are commercially viable, I just need to put hte time in every day.
Good thread guys.
FilmJumper said:Just remember... Even though your girlfriend will be gone for a year, always bring the people you love into the plan. If you don't, they will make the process horrific. Bring them in and get their support and before you know it, you're writing guilt-free.
Exactly... and you're correct. I didn't mean bring anyone on as a writing partner... Just let anyone who might be able to make you feel guilty know this is your passion and you have to do it. Makes things a hell of a lot easier in the long run.Nique Zoolio said:Good advice Filmy. Writing can be such a solitary existence, I still feel guilty when I write almost anything because it feels too self-involved. I agree with bringing the people you love in on it completely. I (and I don't think filmy did) don't mean get them as equal partners, but let them know that you its a passion for you - thats its your ambition and your future. This way they will always want you to work at it, and it feels less like you are doing it for the internal-gazing, but more towards a social goal so that the ones you love may love you more and that others may actually gain something from your life's work.
John Kennedy Toole was a young man when he killed himself after failing to get his second book published. His mother (a loved one) dedicated herself to it, because she knew how much it meant to him, and eventually the book became a bestseller, a modern Penguin classic and i believe they were/are making a film of it starring that Elf bloke (the confederacy of dunces). Bringing loved ones in saved his life's work.
(thats was quite a pointless story, but I quite fancy ending every post now with an irrelevant anecdote...)
I hear ya... You have to find what works best for you... For me, it's just the opposite. There's so many distractions for me at home that for me, it's just too difficult to sit down and write hence, I go to the coffee shop.pinkkingdom said:Personally i prefer to write at home (even if i could get to a coffe shop i wouldn't). i find public placles to busy, and i easily get distracted. i get the creative juices flowing best at home, listening to Pink Floyd. I just put a CD in, turn on the comp. and start writing. without distractions, i write pretty fast (yesterday i wrote about twenty pages in one hour) because i'm not looking at what other people are doing, just writing.