Setting.

Hobbity Bobbity

44 pages

Posted
März 19, 2008 - 8:38am

Setting.

So, is anyone being like me and setting their Script in Boston? ::Grins::.

I'm so uncreative and unoriginal it hurts.

Also, this may sound strange but since we all live in and around the Boston area and I'm sure at least a handful of people ride the T etc, what line do people seem to act the strangest on?

Like, is there a certain line on the MBTA, blue, green, red etc, etc, etc, where there seems to be more people muttering to themselves or just acting generally "weird" than others? It may help me figure out the first scene of my script :).

But, happy Scripting guys, woo!

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tkphotog

38 pages

Posted
März 19, 2008 - 8:52am

RE: Setting.

My play is set in a lobby in a swank Boston apartment building and populated by some atypically entertaining Bostonians.

As for T lines, try the Orange Line around midnight outbound to Forest Hills. It's not crowded but there's the drunk professor, the middle-aged guy in hospital scrubs and a haircut right from the mid-eighties, and at Forest Hills Station, the same kid (late teens, mid-20s maybe) who goes around trying to scam people out of money again and again. Not weirdness, per se, but it could be entertaining if it wasn't happening to you. :-)

-----
Municipal Liaison, Boston.

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Chester.Copperpot

117 pages

Posted
März 19, 2008 - 3:36pm

RE: Setting.

I'm probably going to set my script in Boston, but there's still time to change my mind. I set my NaNo novel in Boston last year and it made writing it a whole lot easier (knowing the area and all).
I ride the green line every day and there are occasional weirdoes, but it's tough to pinpoint a specific time that they're on it (and I ride the B, C, and D lines), but I'm not sure which line would be the weirdest. You might check out stories on the T section of Universal Hub or some of the past stories on BadTransit.com to see which line would be worth trying first.

Immortal_Writers

116 pages

Posted
März 21, 2008 - 9:48am

RE: Setting.

I have no idea where mines going to take place.... Maybe boston summer.... but definatly a cemetary/dunguney place in a small town.... still working out the minor kinks...

"You know, there are times when we're dirt broke, hungry and freezing, and i ask myself, 'why the heck am i still living here?' And then THEY call and i remember" :)
-Mark Cohen, Rent, the movie

LadyUranus

40 pages

Posted
März 24, 2008 - 2:32pm

RE: Setting.

Well, if you feel Boston is too typical you can always invent a city. This actually helps production, as it means they aren't restricted to one area. My screenplay is set in general-city, an amalgamation of my hometown and Boston.

Tommyg62

Posted
April 3, 2008 - 7:01pm

RE: Setting.

It is important to do a setting you have some familiarity with... I'm going into this one cold.. haven't written a full script yet, but plenty of bits and skits.. nothing long form - just co-authored one novel.

I'm thinking of forming a show based on a TV show outline I've been working on..

JohnG.

117 pages

Posted
April 4, 2008 - 4:41am

RE: Setting.

Not as much as you might think!
This is one area where a SCREENPLAY is very different from a novel.
Your experience with your novel, no doubt, has taught you that long and detailed desriptions about your location adds to the story. In fact, novelists like James Mitchner could make the detail descriptions of location the whole STORY of his novels.

I see screenwriting as being more subtle. First: Formatting prevents long detailed description of settings. That is customarily left to people like Production Designers, Set Designers, Wardrobe/Costume Designers and most importantly THE DIRECTOR.

I see the SCREENWRITER'S job is to reflect that setting through the emotions and dialogue of his characters. For example a man coming out of a chilly rain is likely to be cranky. His answers are likely to be short, perhaps even sarcastic. That is an example of a character reflecting his setting.
A novelist might have three pages of description of how his character is walking in a swirling rain on a chilly night. In fact for those three pages the setting becomes BIGGER than the character.

I think the screenwriter MUST possess an understanding of his setting but I believe it is nowhere nearly as important to creating a good story as it is for the novelist. There are movies made where the setting is paramount.

The 2007 movie: ATONEMENT for EXAMPLE. In this case, I'm sure that the novel on which that movie was based was used by THE DIRECTOR to present those vivid settings. It is likely why so many good movies made today are made about novels. There is so much more information in a novel, that cannot be fit into a traditionally formatted screenplay.
I suspect once the decision to make the movie was made by The Producers and a Diredtor is chosen then the detail in the novel becomes an additional resource,
The novelist has license to ramble where the screenwriter is constrained by formatting.
JUST MY OPINION ~ GOOD LUCK! ~ WRITE ON!

"It's never too late to become what you might have been."
- George Eliot