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| Mad Mountain Man | I will not read your f*****g script! I came across this today and thought it might make salutory reading (warning there's quite a lot of that 'f' word in it): http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runnin...l_not_read.php It is an article by screenwriter Josh Olsen (A History of Violence) complaining about the no win situation of being a writer and being asked to read aspiring writers' scripts all the time. Essentially he is left looking bad either because he says no up front or because he does read it and then feels obliged to give truly honest feedback (usually involving telling the aspiring writer to either give up or go get proper training as a writer). Here's a couple of extracts: Quote:
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Shropshire
Posts: 4,124
| Re: I will not read your f*****g script! Nothing wrong with him saying 'no' upfront, in my opinion. But there are ways and ways of saying 'no'. BTW I wonder if he ever asked someone to crit a piece when he was starting out? |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Smell your own dam finger Join Date: Feb 2012 Location: Greater Manchester
Posts: 146
| Re: I will not read your f*****g script! His first break? Well... If he's a Hollywood script writer working in America, chances are his dad/brother/cousin/uncle gave him a job... Jammill |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2011 Location: Greater London
Posts: 991
| Re: I will not read your f*****g script! Liked the article Vertigo, hardline but plenty to commend in his fair and truthful stance. Sometimes you have to cruel to be kind. The other thing that stirs in me is that uneasy feeling that despite the few critiques I've forced on friends, those that I recieved because I was part of a course and the one that I paid for in a competition (out of curiosity), that I'm still in the dark regarding my craft and 'talent'. Perhaps I am that ar**hole he describes ![]() That will only be partially allayed if I actually sell something in the market. With regards to Mr Olsen - do you think he will now get flooded by a wave of terrible scripts after writing this article? Those kidz on the interweb love a bit of irony. |
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| Mad Mountain Man | Re: I will not read your f*****g script! Well I came across the article from a link on the Sclazi blog site where Scalzi was talking about how he had posted a picture of his cat with a piece of bacon taped to it's back (don't ask) and now he seems to have every bit of trivia about bacon posted on the web forwarded to him! So quite possibly! But, yes, I thought it an honest article and to be fair he probably got his break by going through the more normal cycle of writers' groups and studying writing at college/university and agents. I do sympathise with him. How many people here have professions like doctor, lawyer, computer IT etc, and get totally fed up with being asked about someone's favourite illness, legal injustice or how to fix their computer. It's really just the same, as he points out in the article, and yet for some reason many people do seem to think that professional writers have some kind of duty to critique aspiring writers work. |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Cumbria
Posts: 1,603
| Re: I will not read your f*****g script! Great link, Vertigo. He's right, too. I've noticed a creeping tendency amongst those seeking critiques to wish to prescribe precisely how the critique must be delivered - notably, that the critiquer is under some sort of obligation not to upset the writer and must therefore find one or more nice things to say. To me, this has always seemed akin to asking someone to give you a fiver and then getting upset because they won't bring it round to your house for you. I suspect that problems arise because some (perhaps even many) aspiring writers secretly think their stuff is great. Modesty forbids them saying that, of course, so when they do the self depracating thing and ask for honesty, they do so thinking that honesty for them will equate to fulsome praise. When it doesn't, they get upset, angry or both. I imagine that successful authors get it far worse, in that some of those who ask them to read their stuff are also perhaps hoping that the author thinks "Wow - this is so good that I must now go out of my way to pull a few strings with my agent/publisher to get this into print". The only criticism worth asking for is honest criticism from someone who's opinion you trust and who ideally has some sort of knowledge, be that of publishing specifically or literature more generally. If an aspiring writer wants encouragement rather than criticism, can they please just say so? Regards, Peter |
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| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Shropshire
Posts: 4,124
| Re: I will not read your f*****g script! Quote:
Doctor: I had someone at the bridge club ask me about a pain in his back, I recommended some pain killers and exercises. Later I sent him a bill for £25 and he's refusing to pay. What do you think I should do? Solicitor: I think it sounds like a stern letter followed up with a summons to the Small Claims Court should do the trick. Doctor: Thank you. Solicitor: Not at all. That will be £50. | |
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| Dramatically tremendous | Re: I will not read your f*****g script! Quote:
![]() Interesting article, and more about etiquette than critiquing I think. And reasons to go find some bluntly honest people. (nice is good, though - polite, bluntly honest people...) | |
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| | #12 (permalink) | |
| Loves semi-colons Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Cornwall
Posts: 310
| Re: I will not read your f*****g script! Quote:
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| | #13 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: Apr 2012 Location: Sweden
Posts: 252
| Re: I will not read your f*****g script! I can understand where the guy is coming from, and perhaps even sympathize with him. It can not be fun to be asked to read the works of others for free, over and over, and be severely handcuffed in how you may respond to it. A lot of people will write stuff that is sub par, but as he points out, they will only want the pretense of honesty. They will not see their own work objectively. That is probably a human bias, and it will take training to compensate for that. He took his time to critique something he found really bad, and he only got labeled an a**hole for his time. That is not particularly thankful work. Quote:
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| | #14 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Hertfordshire
Posts: 1,215
| Re: I will not read your f*****g script! Quote:
First up, why does so much writing on the internet, even articles on sophisticated sites, seem to read like a Joss Whedon character's internal monologue? Anyhow, he makes a point. But perhaps people want him to read their scripts because this business is tough. Getting into writing is a pig, and once you're inside - properly inside, that is, as in making a living from it - it's probably rather easy to forget that you were once one of the dunces banging on the window. Any angle that puts you ahead of the competition is good, as is any opportunity to learn how to improve. So that's why people desperate to get somewhere take any opportunity that they can get, and that's why his acquaintances bother him. I suspect it comes with the territory. As for critique, there are people who take a lot of pleasure in being very blunt, and they are usually a-holes. Sorry, but if I got a critique saying, in few more words "This is sh*t, don't bother me again", I wouldn't have the respect for the critiquer to trust his opinion. If it came back to the effect that it had its moments - almost everything does - but needed a hell of a lot of work, or that I needed to improve a lot as a writer, I'd pay that some attention. I have a feeling our writer may have chosen Option 1. It's definitely true that there is a tension between pointing out flaws and being encouraging, and I find it very difficult, especially when (as I thought about a piece recently) "This would be much better if you cut out the purple prose that you clearly worked hard on". That said, I can remember the first bit of serious critique I received, in a writing group. A rather stern lady asked whether my fantasy novel was for children "because children like over-writing". This seems pretty harsh but not downright offensive, and although I was annoyed by it, I did take it on board. Peter has a good point that many people do want to be congratulated rather than advised (me included). As someone once told me, first you have to learn to listen to critique, and then you have to learn to decide what to do with it. Over the last year, I have seen one story here that needed to be thrown in the bin and forgotten about, with the recommendation that its author take up another hobby (almost certainly nobody reading this). Almost everything could do with improvement (lucky I've not posted for critique, because my stuff could too!) but that's different. I suppose I am basically working towards the point that there's no need to be rude, but I'd put it more forcefully than that: if you don't have the basic decency to be polite, either in seeking or giving critique, why should anyone give a toss what you think? | |
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| | #15 (permalink) | |
| Loves semi-colons Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Cornwall
Posts: 310
| Re: I will not read your f*****g script! Quote:
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