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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: kill your darlings
- Message-ID: <1992Nov9.230713.2223@gacvx2.gac.edu>
- From: bthomas@dumaine.gac.edu (Barbara L Thomas)
- Date: 9 Nov 92 23:07:12 -0600
- References: <BxF9p5.E2v@well.sf.ca.us>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: dumaine.gac.edu
- Lines: 35
-
- In article <BxF9p5.E2v@well.sf.ca.us> writes:
- >
- > a common screenplay saying is "kill your darlings," which means,
- eliminate
- > anything in your script that is not essential to the plot.
- > Aren't there some great films that have scenes that are not essential?
- > What do you think of these:
- > In Star Wars, there is a scene where Luke and Leia are separated from
- > Han and Chewie, so that Luke swings over the bridge and Han runs around
- > shooting. The thing is, afterwards, aren't they right back to where they
- > started? Don't these scenes not make the story progress?
- >
- > In the Godfather, what about the horse's head scene? Does that move
- > the story forward? or is it necessary to develop characters?
- >
- > did you know that a great scene was cut from Annie Hall because it
- > wasn't essential? it was Woody making friends with some guys in jail.
- > --
- > Robert Chao
- > Oakland, California
- "Killing Darlings" is one of the hardest things to do. No matter how much
- I tell myself that I need to be ruthless and cut a part out, I will
- usually find some excuse to leave it in. I have an unusually cruel
- proofreader (my mother) :) who will finally tell me that it has to go.
- Even then, I will definitely complain about it. Sometimes I'm really
- tempted by thoughts of "so what if it doesn't fit the storyline" or "it
- doesn't really confuse the reader, does it?" just because I think it is
- such a cleverly written little spot . . . I don't think that there is
- anyway to get over this and I think that most writers run into this
- problem. At least, I hope that they do . . . I'd hate to feel all alone
- in this. :)
- --
- Barbara L. Thomas
- "The World may never know."
- bthomas@nic.gac.edu
-