Sunday, 7 May 2017

Final Major Project - Script Research (The Cell)

Buried (2010) is a thriller film starring Ryan Reynolds about an American civilian truck driver based in Iraq, who after being attacked, finds himself buried in a wooden coffin.

Buried is a great and strong storyline, and a beneficial read for research from a scriptwriter’s point of view, as the entire film takes place in one location, inside the coffin. As a scriptwriter this must have been quite challenging, only writing for one location, and having that location so confined with very few options to choose from. I choose to look into the script for Buried due to The Cell primarily taking place all in one location as well. If I can see how Buried was wrote and structured, it may give me a better understanding of how to complete my script for The Cell.

The script is very heavy on words and description as so much of the film is actions. The main character has very little opportunity to speak that so much of the script is describing what he’s doing instead of dialogue. In many ways, the script reads like a novel, and I know you don’t ever want to have so much writing on a page for a script but when it’s a case such as this one, your options are limited and it’s interesting to see how a professional scriptwriter has approached this challenge. Later on throughout the script, the story opens up more and the writer has given the character more room for dialogue and discussion with introducing a phone for him to contact people on. Something along the lines of this would work well for The Cell, so the main character is not completely alone.

Reading through the script for Buried has been very beneficial for me and for the script for The Cell. To understand the writing structure for a script set only in one location, and with very minimal characters, gives me a better understanding of how to restructure and approach the latest draft of The Cell. I can now make additions to the script that will help move the story along faster, and also new characters that should give our main character more interaction with.


                                                                                                                                                                      

Birdman (2014) is a black comedy film starring Michael Keaton about a faded Hollywood actor struggling to break away from his previous work and mount a Broadway adaptation of a short story by Raymond Carver.

Birdman is a critically acclaimed film and winner of the Academy Awards Best Picture, but perhaps most well known for how it appears to be filmed as a single shot. With Birdman looking like its been filmed as a single shot, there are many challenges that the writer had to overcome to keep the audience entertained. There’s no cutting away to action or to a new scene, the writer had to be smart about what would happen next and which characters would interact at different times. This is something I’m interested in researching in the hopes it can help me develop my own writing style and maybe result in smarter writing and story structure for my script The Cell.

The structure and layout of the script is all continuous so everything leads into each other. Every time there’s a new scene it’s where the cut will hide for the filmmakers, but the story is still continuing. The script is very heavy on dialogue and interaction with other characters. There is rarely a page where there is no dialogue at all, and in fact the conversations are what drives the film throughout. With our main character being stuck in a cell for the majority of the film, it would be good to have some of the film be driven with dialogue and conversations he’s having with other characters. If I could maybe dot realizations or hidden meanings within conversations with characters, this could make our film more intriguing and give the characters on screen more of something to do, instead of actions. Although show don’t tell is a major part of how we want our reveal, it would be better for people to connect the dots if they heard something that they can call back to later on if it gets brought back up again.

Reading through the script to Birdman has been a real insight because now the script for The Cell can now maybe expand. With new interesting interactions, and giving the flow of the film more of a smooth ride and not staggered, I can develop a script that should translate well onto the screen, and look interesting and fun, and not having pauses or moments that bore the audience.

                                                                                                                                                                        

Ex Machina (2015) is a science fiction psychological thriller starring Alicia Vikander about an intelligent humanoid robot that goes through the Turing test.

Ex Machina is very well critically acclaimed and loved upon it’s audience which may wander into cult status in the years to come. The script for Ex Machina is a must to research as The Cell is inspired by parts of the concept from the film. The script has to deal with the interaction of a human and a robot and needs to give a detailed display of how they are similar and how they are different. This is something the script for The Cell could benefit from, as our main character is robotic artificial intelligence but the audience doesn’t know this till the end. This gives room for teasing and laying the ground work down so the reveal is so much more realistic when it comes to the closing.

To find a balance between my human characters and robotic characters will have a profound effect on the script and story, as the audience will pick certain aspects up as it goes along and start to understand what separates them from the humans. The script for Ex Machina is very fast paced and wastes no time when it comes to getting to the story. The introduction to the robot Ava in the script is very clever at making her seem mysterious and gives the audience something to question and find odd before smoothly adjusting into giving her emotions and sympathy.

The characters in the film that are human are quite different from each other. The main character is coming from a point of view of that of the audience, who is always questioning and trying to find out answers, trying to understand what the situation is. The other human is quite mysterious also, always seeming like he’s in the know and has all the power, which slowly makes him an enemy to the audience.

Reading through the script to Ex Machina has been real helpful in understanding how to write smart and really translate the technology side of the script to the screen. To give a real understanding of how to differentiate between human and robotic characters, and give me a few ideas of how maybe to hide certain facts that we don’t want the audience to know just yet in The Cell.      

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