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Ode to Blue Valentine: Ryan Gosling by Kyle Smead - Short, Drama - An actor's Script: James, an isolated greaser, goes through steps of the the method to prepare for a love scene. 5 pages - pdf, format
Repeating dialogue for effect is one thing, but the actions are also maddeningly repetitive. They would likely appear comical if played out as written.
Despite all of that, there is something oddly compelling going on here.
I do hope Mr. Smead joins us. He's got some 'splainin to do.
For what this is, I'm kinda thinking that it's well-paced and would probably be fun to watch. There's something interesting about the idea of a scripted presentation of an improvisational form, though I wonder if this would play well or seem really rigid if you actually shot it.
The script covers layering through lines and sense recal in beats between the performance, and is intended to protect the private areas of both actors. It comes off like a vagina monologue for a man, giving him the opportunity to separate his penis from his balls, and penis from balls to stomach. An exercise I have been doing while studying drug topics for a method actor.
With respect to the art of film, and, as a director’s script, it can really be interputed however the director chooses. Reading with tears in order to hold them back.
All in all, I wrote it down while doing characterizations for a feature length script that I wrote in November about a man who works in the women’s underware department of a sporting good store when he falls in love with a woman diagnosed HIV Positive.
I wanted to expand on the relationship between the male lead and female lead, when I realized that I wasn’t putting enough stres on the importance of beats, and single written lines. In the script it reads:
“Bob and Erica make love.”
When in fact the line is so late into the script that both characters, metaphorically, already made love, and has a much deeper context.
Again, I am thankful for your comments, and hope that this answers some of the questions.
Sorry for being late – etched down a couple shorts for grad school assignments.
JAMES, 20’s, jeans, belt buckle, white shirt, cigarettes rolled in the sleeve.”
- Perhaps I’m being pedantic here but this seems contradictory. In the first line you say the room is empty before going on to describe James’s presence in said room.
“Spicket” is spelt “spicate”
Possibly one of the oddest scripts I’ve read on here and dare I say pointless too.
Not much to add except it could have been shortened to 3 pages by tightening the prose with less breaking up the action lines…and warming up for a love scene is a rather curious process!