ElectricBlue
Joined 11 Years Ago
- Joined
- May 10, 2014
- Posts
- 19,277
Looks like few are interested in how prose flows.
The long vignette written about Stanley Kubrick and the writing of Eyes Wide Shut, by the writer of the screenplay (Frederic Raphael), is interesting in the way they're constantly talking about the "beat" of the film, its pace. Kubrick made Raphael work and rework the words, and only then did he start filming.
That makes sense, Kubrick naturally thought in terms of seconds and minutes of screen time, and the visual editing flow. EWS is a very wordy film, and it's noteworthy also that Kubrick made Cruise and Kidman both deliver their lines slower and slower as the filming went on. The choice of soundtrack, too, is vital.
Writing has to be the same, the writer should be controlling the rhythm of the words, keeping the flow easy for the reader, or breaking it up to generate tension. A good test is to read it out loud.
Several people here mention the music they listen to as they write. I wonder how much that influences their writing? In my case, I tend to blank the music out, when I'm really on a roll.