Rachel (
kleenexwoman) wrote2009-10-02 04:39 am
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Summer of '84
I think I want to adapt things to screenplays for a living. I like writing, but I'm so shit at creating truly original characters, and adapting things to screenplays can give you a lot of leeway to fiddle with characters and dialogue and plot without having to spend the effort building your own stuff up from scratch. It's like fanfic, in a way.
The next project I want to tackle is turning 1984 into a romantic comedy. I THINK IT CAN BE DONE.
The next project I want to tackle is turning 1984 into a romantic comedy. I THINK IT CAN BE DONE.
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The question, it has answered itself.
I learned a lot about style and ideas from the writers I find inspiring, but I also learned a lot about construction and editing from the FC...as well as what not to do and what I don't want to write about. They were a good mix of transcendent, competent, and terrible writers, and I got to see a lot of variance. Editing and development has always been the hardest thing for me to do, and while I can learn a lot from just reading, it's very hard to learn the writing and editing process from reading the finished product. Writing about thinly-disguised real people may be a good exercise, but it always seems to me to be a transitional phase; finished characters are composites of real people blended to create one. I am trying to experiment and write what I want to and what I find right; at the moment, I don't feel comfortable writing about real people, and I have very little desire to write anything as delicate and evocative as poetry. That may change, as it often has.
A very good attitude it is, and I'm glad you've found a process and peer group that works for you. I miss the Fiction Collective and their input, and the Poetry Collective and their playfulness, but I'm slowly finding other people who I'm on the same wavelength with and whose input I can trust. :)
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