Discovering the Great Movie Idea for Your Next Screenplay
I am lucky. I have no problems coming up with very good ideas
for movies. If I never had another idea for the rest of my life,
I would not make a sizable dent in the ones I already have.
Screenwriters who struggle with coming up with an idea tend to
be visibly annoyed when I tell them this. I think I'm
comfortable sharing this with others because I know movie ideas
really mean nothing and please nobody in and of themselves, so
there's not much to brag about. I guess you can get lucky and
sell an idea, but in terms of what's important, a motion picture
screened in front of people, a great idea is simply a member of
the orchestra that achieves that vision.
I'm not sure where all the ideas come from, but I can tell you
where I was, and by telling you this, perhaps this will help you
come up with your idea. First, you should know what you want to
write. A feature? For the studios? For yourself to direct? Maybe
a low budget script for someone else to direct. Will it be shot
on film or digital video? Are you looking for an idea for a
short film? Perhaps you have a particular genre in mind.
Parameters are excellent tools for creativity. The irony is
restriction spawns wonderfully imaginative ideas. If you can
write about anything or anybody, with absolutely no conditions,
it becomes harder to settle and find that jewel of an idea. So
determine your conditions, every one, and embrace them, because
there you will find the frame of your idea. In other words,
knowing your movie has to be shot on digital video in four weeks
with two Asian women in their thirties at an antiques store will
narrow your thinking and concentrate your imaginative power.
Is it necessary to have parameters before we come up with an
idea? Of course not. You can always find a very special idea and
that idea will determine it's own boundaries. But if you have
needs for your screenplay, determine those needs, and it will
help.
So after you have determined the conditions for your screenplay,
or if you have not, now you can come up with your idea. What's a
good place to start? The newspaper. Read a thick newspaper. Read
through all sections. Read the obituaries. This is our world.
Artists look at the world and become moved to express
themselves. I read the newspaper anyway, but many times I find
something, even one line, which is highly inspiring. By looking
through the newspaper with fresh eyes, we become open again to
what affects us. I also find the newspaper will confirm
instincts I might already have about an idea.
And make sure you read the section you normally never read at
breakfast. Trust me.
Okay, you're reading the newspaper, and you might find something
interesting. Documentaries can also be great reservoirs for
inspiration. Awesome documentaries abound these days and they
often contain imagery, facts, and revelations that may provoke
an idea out of left field. Now don't run out and rent 20 docs
and lean into your DVD waiting for the logline to come out of
the screen and hit you over the head. Just watch what is
interesting and forget about what you need.
Walk where you would normally drive. Take the train to work if
you don't. Get on a public bus, or go rent a car and drive.
Spend the day at the airport. Take a different way to work each
day for a week. Make a list of ten stores you would never for
the life of you visit for any reason at all, go to all ten and
browse for 20 minutes each. These disruptions in your
environment will open your eyes. You'll be able to take in more
of your world, and it will effect you and make you think.
We've run out of ideas because we are bored by what we see.
You're shut down. You don't need to get on a plane or visit a
foreign country to clear your head and help you focus. Your
distant planet is down the street, walking distance.
Another inspiring action is to take the day and go to a series
of garage sales. The homes, the neighborhoods, the people and
the stuff they're trying to sell you will definitely make you
think. There are a million stories in what people pick up and
keep as belongings in their lives. Try an estate sale. I have
left estate sales feeling as if I knew the personal habits and
longings of the recently deceased, simply by the possessions
they kept until their death. It's not difficult to find these
sales, they happen every weekend and right close by.
Take up a new sport. Enroll in a language class. Sign up for a
course at the Red Cross. I picked up a basketball one day and
start playing after many years and I felt like I had a new movie
in my head every time I stepped on the court. Getting an
education in something new gets us humble and that humility
keeps us open to new information and this makes us creative. If
we feel like a master, we've run out of ideas. As students, we
accept there's more out there, and that attitude will spawn
discovery and fresh perspective.
Finally, when I don't know what I should write about, I ask
myself what's troubling me. If you take a second to pause and
get quiet with your heart, you will find you desperately what to
say something very important. Let that something speak.
One more thing. Please don't write about you know, like they
always say. Let somebody else do that, and you, you write what
you want.
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