Joss Whedon on Writing
Writing Advice from a Living Legend
Joss Whedon is most famous for creating
Buffy the Vampire Slayer, its spin-off Angel and the short-lived but
much-loved Firefly series. But the writer and director of The Avengers has also worked
unseen as a script doctor on movies ranging from Speed to Toy Story.
Here, he shares his tips on the art of screenwriting.
1. FINISH IT
2. STRUCTURE
Structure means knowing where you’re going; making sure
you don’t meander about. Some great films have been made by meandering
people, like Terrence Malick and Robert Altman, but it’s not as well
done today and I don’t recommend it. I’m a structure nut. I actually make charts. Where are the jokes? The thrills? The romance? Who knows
what, and when? You need these things to happen at the right times,
and that’s what you build your structure around: the way you want your
audience to feel. Charts, graphs, colored pens, anything that means you
don’t go in blind is useful.
3. HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY
This really should be number one. Even if you’re writing
a Die Hard rip-off, have something to say about Die Hard rip-offs. The
number of movies that are not about what they purport to be about is
staggering. It’s rare, especially in genres, to find a movie with an
idea and not just, ‘This’ll lead to many fine set-pieces’. The Island
evolves into a car-chase movie, and the moments of joy are when they
have clone moments and you say, ‘ What does it feel like to be those
guys?’
4. EVERYBODY HAS A REASON TO LIVE
Everybody has a perspective. Everybody in your scene, including the thug flanking your bad guy, has a reason. They have their own voice, their own identity, their own history. If anyone speaks in such a way that they’re just setting up the next person’s lines, then you don’t get dialogue: you get soundbites. Not everybody has to be funny; not everybody has to be cute; not everybody has to be delightful, and not everybody has to speak, but if you don’t know who everybody is and why they’re there, why they’re feeling what they’re feeling and why they’re doing what they’re doing, then you’re in trouble.
5. CUT WHAT YOU LOVE
Here’s one trick that I learned early on. If something
isn’t working, if you have a story that you’ve built and it’s blocked
and you can’t figure it out, take your favorite scene, or your very
best idea or set-piece, and cut it. It’s brutal, but sometimes
inevitable. That thing may find its way back in, but cutting it is
usually an enormously freeing exercise.
6. LISTEN
When I’ve been hired as a script doctor, it’s usually
because someone else can’t get it through to the next level. It’s true
that writers are replaced when executives don’t know what else to do,
and that’s terrible, but the fact of the matter is that for most of the
screenplays I’ve worked on, I’ve been needed , whether or not I’ve been
allowed to do anything good. Often someone’s just got locked, they’ve
ossified, they’re so stuck in their heads that they can’t see the people
around them . It’s very important to know when to stick to your guns,
but it’s also very important to listen to absolutely everybody. The
stupidest person in the room might have the best idea.
7. TRACK THE AUDIENCE MOOD
You have one goal: to connect with your audience.
Therefore, you must track what your audience is feeling at all times.
One of the biggest problems I face when watching other people’s movies
is I’ll say, ‘This part confuses me’, or whatever, and they’ll say,
‘What I’m intending to say is this’, and they’ll go on about their
intentions. None of this has anything to do with my experience as an
audience member. Think in terms of what audiences think. They go to the
theater, and they either notice that their butts are numb, or they
don’t. If you’re doing your job right, they don’t. People think of
studio test screenings as terrible, and that’s because a lot of studios
are pretty stupid about it. They panic and re-shoot, or they go, ‘ Gee,
Brazil can’t have an unhappy ending,’ and that’s the horror story. But
it can make a lot of sense.
8. WRITE LIKE A MOVIE
Write the movie as much as you can. If something is lush
and extensive, you can describe it glowingly; if something isn’t that
important, just get past it tersely. Let the read feel like the movie;
it does a lot of the work for you, for the director, and for the
executives who go, ‘What will this be like when we put it on its feet?’
9. DON’T LISTEN
Having given the advice about listening, I have to give
the opposite advice, because ultimately the best work comes when
somebody’s fucked the system; done the unexpected and let their own
personal voice into the machine that is moviemaking. Choose your
battles. You wouldn’t get Paul Thomas Anderson, or Wes Anderson, or any
of these guys if all moviemaking was completely cookie-cutter. But the
process drives you in that direction; it’s a homogenising process, and
you have to fight that a bit. There was a point while we were making
Firefly when I asked the network not to pick it up: they’d started
talking about a different show.
10. DON’T SELL OUT
The first penny I ever earned, I saved. Then I made sure
that I never had to take a job just because I needed to. I still needed
jobs of course, but I was able to take ones that I loved. When I say
that includes Waterworld, people scratch their heads, but it’s a
wonderful idea for a movie. Anything can be good. Even Last Action Hero
could’ve been good. There’s an idea somewhere in almost any movie: if
you can find something that you love, then you can do it. If you can’t,
it doesn’t matter how skilful you are: that’s called whoring.”
Keep writing!
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