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The Bus Ride by Mitchell Gray - Short, Drama - A man overwhelmed by the social world finds his blissful daydream brush against reality when he makes an unwitting connection with his seatmate on the bus. 8 pages - pdf format
Hey Mitchell, welcome to SS. I saw your post on Zack's thread and thought I'd give this a read...and I did, start to finish.
I guess it's "cute". Mattson is a strange dude with a strange name, but he too is "cute", and you cna't help but root for him.
Writing-wise, this is pretty clean, but there are some issues I'll bring up that hopefully will help going forward.
First of all, don't include your title on the opening page and you should left align your FADE IN.
You have an awful lot of POV's thrown in here. Understand that a POV is really nothing special at all, unless the actual POV is different or unique - from behind a mask, under something, up high, through non-human eyes, etc. So, basically, there's no need for you to use POV as a writer, as it really just wastes space. Also, only include exactly what is being seen from the POV, nothing else.
Somewhat on the same subject, you have alot of instances where you say someone sees something. This is usually a mistake in screenwriting, or it's just a downright space waster. Think about it...if someone is in the vicinity of anything or anyone, they will be able to see whatever it is...and they most likely will see it...it goes without saying. But, when you actually write something like, "Hannah sees Mattson.", what are you intending to show up on screen? It's a shot of Hannah, first of all, looking at Mattson, then, it's a shot of Mattson (what she actually sees), and in a roundabout way, it's a POV, that doesn't need to be labeled a POV, because there's nothing unique about the view to warrant using a POV.
You have an awful lot of passive verbiage going on throughout the script, both in action and description. The more you write (and the more you read), you'll start to see why this is an issue, and how to make it read better.
On Page 3, you go to a very long 3 page scene, that you call "MATTSON'S IMAGINATION". Understand hat no one will know what this is in a filmed version. People may believe it's a Flashback. Whatever it is, it's way too long and detailed, and has nothing to do with what's going on. It's 1/3 of the entire script! All the stuff about hiking and names of characters we do not know make it seem strange.
IMO, 8 1/2 pages is a bit long winded for what takes place here, as there's very little dialogue other than the dream scene, and last page and a half. But, somehow it works as you intended, overall, and got me to care for the 2 characters.
Gave this a read last night. Drama usually isn't my thing, but I must say I enjoyed this. I even smiled at the end. Good stuff.
The writing was pretty much on point, although I agree with Jeff that you could cut most of, if not all of, the P.O.V. shots. I use them a lot in my scripts, but I use them to build tension. Here it just came off as camera angles.
Not much else to say other than great job here. I look forward to reading some more of your work.
Zack
Don't get it right. Get it written.
"If you can't handle people not liking what you do, you shouldn't be in the business." - Rob Bowman
Hi Zack, Thanks very much for taking a look at The Bus Ride. I'm happy to hear it resonated with you. And thanks for the suggestion about the POV. That makes good sense. Looking forward to chatting more in the future! Cheers, Mitchell
Hey Mitchell, I got your PM. Decided to respond here so anyone else reading can get some insight as well.
You asked about passive verbiage. Passive verbiage is when your main verb in the sentence is "passive" - meaning using is or a contraction involving is.
For example...
He is
She is
She's
He's
Tom is
Tom's )not possessive).
Mayne peeps will say or think that passive writing involves using verbs that end in "ing". And that is true most of the time, but it's using "is" as the main verb that causes this, not the verb ending in "ing".
Further to this, passive writing is when the subject is acted upon by the verb or object.
The air is blown by a fan = Passive voice. The fan blows the air = Active voice.
A scathing email is being written by John = Passive voice. John writes a scathing email = Active voice.
This is where the terrible advice "never use the word 'is'" comes from. "Is" is a good indicator for passive voice, but sometimes you just need to use it.
Hi Dreamscale and Rene, Thank you for your insights! I can already tell this is a great community of writers. I have a question re: passive verbs... At the start of a scene is a passive verb okay? For example, at the start of a new scene I might say "Mattson is sitting on the sofa" instead of "Mattson sits on the sofa" to show that his is already sitting as the scene begins, rather than we see him go from standing to sitting. Thanks! Cheers, Mitchell
Hi Dreamscale and Rene, Thank you for your insights! I can already tell this is a great community of writers. I have a question re: passive verbs... At the start of a scene is a passive verb okay? For example, at the start of a new scene I might say "Mattson is sitting on the sofa" instead of "Mattson sits on the sofa" to show that his is already sitting as the scene begins, rather than we see him go from standing to sitting. Thanks! Cheers, Mitchell
That's a prime example of passive writing and should be avoided. If you think that makes it unclear, write it differently.
"On the sofa, Mattson" does something. "Mattson lounges on the sofa." "Mattson looks perfectly at home on the sofa as he" does something.
Hi Dreamscale and Rene, Thank you for your insights! I can already tell this is a great community of writers. I have a question re: passive verbs... At the start of a scene is a passive verb okay? For example, at the start of a new scene I might say "Mattson is sitting on the sofa" instead of "Mattson sits on the sofa" to show that his is already sitting as the scene begins, rather than we see him go from standing to sitting. Thanks! Cheers, Mitchell
Common misconception (hey...I had this misconception as well, when I first started) is worrying about if someone or something "is running" when the scene starts, or if they start running.
Bottom line, don't worry about that, and if you need to, write it so that it is perfectly clear - "Mitchell takes off running." "Mitchell starts off slowly, breaks into a full sprint."
Make sense?
And, don't listen to anyone who tells you something to the effect, "too many "ing" words being used". It's not the "ing verbs", it's the use of "is or the like.
Hi Rene and Dreamscale, Thank you so much for the tips and your explanations. Always something new to learn! Best of luck with your writing! Cheers, Mitchell
I won't repeat the comments above - I do agree with them.
Quoted Text
TEEN GUY ONE and TEEN GUY TWO are behind him in line.
I don't care for the generic one and two in scripts as it's hard to keep track of who's who the deeper you go into the script. If you're not going to name them, I would give them different descriptions so they stand out. Just spitballing, but something like:
HUSKY TEEN SCRAWNY TEEN
Whatever is in your head basically - just use a generic that is more descriptive than one and two.
Cute story. Think it could be trimmed a couple of pages. Nice effort
Hi Mitchell, I think you're finding out that there are some pretty fantastic people here that will give you top notch tips and suggestions. Everything I noted about your short (and more) has already been addressed by others and don't need repeating except that I concur.
Overall, it's a nice short that could be trimmed up by a page or so. Like Jeff mentioned, the dream sequence(?) was kind of odd in that the line "I don't think that I'm that out of shape" was uttered as he was waiting in line for the bus. Was the sequence a blending of Hannah into an actual event? A flashback of him alone that he inserted Hannah?
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