Years ago I published a monthly column in a now defunct British writing magazine. I also mailed these columns in a newsletters Wise Words on Writing to about 3,000 different writers. Here's one of them
A Strange Writing Lesson
THEORY
I
was
curled up on my Parisian friend's couch. Rain splattered the windows,
making staying in the best possible alternative. I'd spent the last
three hours writing, which fulfilled one childhood fantasy of writing in
a garret in Paris (although this was nicer than my fantasy.)
I
watched Marina's DVD ON THE ROAD TO PERDITION then I listened to the
bonus: the director talked about how he made his creative decisions. It
was one of the best writing lessons I've had. The DVD is available on http://www.amazon.com/ for as little $2.99 used, but be careful of the different zones.
Rather
than explain that Paul Newman was the surrogate father and loved his
surrogate son Tom Hanks, at a wake, Newman sits at a piano and plays a
song with one hand. Hanks joins him and plays the harmony, also, with
one hand. The look they exchange and Newman's pat on the back tells
everything.
In the background we see Newman's biological son's
face reflecting hatred and jealousy. The camera angles down so only the
son's legs show, effectively cutting him out of the relationship.
In
another scene Hanks' son has seen him kill a man. Hanks and he talk
about it in their Model T. They make no eye contact until the last
moment of the scene. There is another separation that the director did
deliberately. He shot the scene in such a way that the bar of the
driver's door separates father and son. It is so subtle that no one
would say, "Oh look at the bar of the driver's door emphasizing the
separation between the father and son." Yet visually and psychologically
it is there.
Whenever there is a death, water is involved.
Sometimes it is rain, another time it is water in a bath tub. Repeated
symbolism can be effective. The more subtle it is, the more effective.
To show Hanks' son as slightly alienated, the boy is bicycling in the opposite direction of people going home from work.
The director uses light and dark and many other techniques to show the action of his movie.
Scene by scene he covers the little details that show what he wants us to see.
As
writers we need to think as carefully as that director on how to work
the details to convey the message we want to our readers.
When I
went back to my writing, I rewrote the chapter I thought I had finished,
using the director's message. We learn from the strangest places.
EXAMPLES
"If
any man wish to write in a clear style, let him be first clear in his
thoughts; and if any would write in a noble style, let him first possess
a noble soul. " Joan Didion
"Say all you have to say in the
fewest possible words, or your reader will be sure to skip them; and in
the plainest possible words or he will certainly misunderstand them."
John Ruskin
"I've always thought of writing as active
thoughtfulness thinking taken to a physical level made manifest on
paper, where the thinker is able to account for his thoughts, reflect on
them, question them, revise them, and ultimately, communicate those
thoughts to others." Mary LaChappel, talking at Sarah Lawrence
College in Jan/Feb 2005 Poets & Writers
EXERCISE
Watch your favorite movie. (Mine is LION IN WINTER http://www.lioninwinter.com/)
And watch it through. Then go through scene by scene without the sound
to see what you notice in sets, color, props and any other details.
NOTES
Although
the American Library in Geneva is a warm friendly place that keeps me
in reading matter, it was a real joy to be in the Boston Public Library
with its hundreds of thousands of books.
I met Louisa May Alcott when
I was in Boston. No I do not need to be committed. Jan Hutchinson, who
is the curator of Orchard House Museum, the house where Alcott lived and
used as a model for LITTLE WOMEN did a one-woman show as Louisa May.
She totally transformed the small theatre at the Boston Public Library,
with her tales of nursing during the Civil War. She "confessed" that
when people stopped to meet her because of her fame as a writer, she put
on an apron, covered her hands with flour and pretended to be the maid.
Orchard House as many small museums, could use help with funding. https://louisamayalcott.org/
This was a terrific post. It really gives me a lot to think about.
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