All screenplays on the simplyscripts.com and simplyscripts.net domain are copyrighted to their respective authors. All rights reserved. This screenplaymay not be used or reproduced for any purpose including educational purposes without the expressed written permission of the author.
Sure, action works if there is action, and one should always write action instead of the nebulous beat. But what about all those times when there is just a notable pause? Happens all the time in real conversation. Two people are talking about something and they hit some point where nothing happens. There is no action. They don't do anything, but that break in everything is absolutely necessary. What do you suggest in those instances?
Nothing happens for a few seconds?
Beat seems to be the best and shortest way to write such a thing. Stick it in a parenthetical, and you further notate that the focus never left the speaker, but for just a second, the whole world stopped to consider what was just said. If you hate reading the word "beat," perhaps you should consider a new line of work, since that's a really odd vice for an actor. And that word will always be with us for the very reason I described above.
There are times when it is lazy writing. There are times when it can be used as a crutch when something else would be far more effective. But like so many other "despised" screenwriting "taboos" (like the dreaded "we see"), they have their time and place once in a while. There are some very specific circumstances in which this is the singular best way to tell a scene. If it isn't done on every page and isn't done when something else is clearly better, then it works. Hence, I advocate the better alternatives every time, but I would never cut it out entirely.
There will always be a place where some of these taboos are the absolute best and shortest way to write something.
I don't have a deep history of writing, in other words the underlying reasons for why things exist within protocols, so i write as how i see it played out...but seek to learn as i go along.
So my rules, until altered are;
I use...for a short mid conversation pause. Someone reflects, a short pause.
i use (BEAT), rarely, when i want a line to hang. In other words, for there to be a moment beyond the last sentence and then the same character carries on. Not always, as there could just be a split in the dialogue, but on occasions i feel this is more appropriate.
i use -- for when a character is cut off mid sentence.
I am also happy to change my rules, but thats what i use at the moment.
I am no actor. Never have been or tried, so I don't think in the same way. But i wonder why you have such an issue over a hint of direction, when a script is usually full of direction as to how the writer thought a scene would develop.
The Elevator Most Belonging To Alice - Semi Final Bluecat, Runner Up Nashville Inner Journey - Page Awards Finalist - Bluecat semi final Grieving Spell - winner - London Film Awards. Third - Honolulu Ultimate Weapon - Fresh Voices - second place IMDb link... http://www.imdb.com/name/nm7062725/?ref_=tt_ov_wr
I'm saying this with a smile, so don't take it as hostile, AB. Just messing around!
(beat)
Who gives a rat's... what the actor thinks? Whoever writes the shooting script can deal with that. We're writing for readers...people who will hopefully be interested in the script. The actor is not our problem. Unless he's buying the script!
What is important to us is that the reader read the story the way we want him to.
That said, yeah, too many of these is annoying.
AB, hope you know I'm kinda teasing. Kinda. Have a good one!