By
Laura P. Valtorta
The
best thing about filmmaking is the collaboration it requires. Shooting a scene
correctly requires an experienced crew – director, cinematographer, lighting
specialist, and sound person. Without those elements, the production values
suffer. The audience notices distracting mistakes.
Screenwriting
is also a team effort. “Workshopping” a screenplay can help, but the best thing
is to write with a partner. Clabber and I work well together on screenwriting
because we are so different. He has solid ideas. Mine are crazy. He prefers a
polished effect. I like to take risks. The differences between us never end.
Clabber
worships GOD and DOG. I’m an atheist who can’t abide animals in the house.
Clabber
is short; I’m tall.
Clabber
loves horror films; I can barely deal with Alfred Hitchcock.
Clabber
takes five years to write his horror scripts. I take five months.
Recently
Clabber and I sat down to make changes to Quiet
on the Set. We only had 90 minutes. Everybody is busy. And Clabber had
brought in a co-worker to give a third perspective on the script. Or maybe John
was there to protect us from killing each other.
Either
way, the meeting went well. I sat back and listened to Clabber’s specific ideas
and John’s general thoughts on changing the script. Before that meeting, I was
convinced the screenplay was finished. Now I realize that I need to edit. The
polishing may take some time.
We’re
headed in the right direction.
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