H W D S: Ow To Rite A Ocumentary Cript A M
H W D S: Ow To Rite A Ocumentary Cript A M
H W D S: Ow To Rite A Ocumentary Cript A M
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TRISHA DAS
‘How to Write a Documentary Script’
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
- REFERENCES PAGE 52
‘How to Write a Documentary Script’
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INTRODUCTION
Gene Fowler once said that writing is easy, just a matter of staring at a blank page until
your forehead bleeds. Well, if anything will draw blood from your forehead, it’s writing a
brilliant documentary script!
Often in our real lives, ideas and emotions, mind and passion, revolve in different spheres
altogether. On film, if we see a dead body, we react immediately with emotion, perhaps
even pondering the waste of life and questioning our own existence. However, if we were
to see a dead body on a street as we drove by, our immediate reaction may be shock, even
revulsion. Emotion may enter the picture long after the experience has ended. In real life,
experiences become meaningful with reflection in time. In reel life, they are meaningful
the moment they happen. A well-written film script is an instrument through which you
can create emotion and epiphany at will. That is one reason why it is possibly the most
critical aspect of the filmmaking procedure.
The script is also, often, the most underrated aspect of the documentary process. A school
of thought suggests that the documentary-making process should be fluid and organic,
whereby the filmmaker experiences the film as he makes it. Many filmmakers write a
‘paper-edit’ after shooting in place of a script. This process has and does work with many
types of films. Especially when the filmmaker is recording events beyond his control like
political rallies, events, natural disasters, riots and demonstrations etc. However, in most
films, the filmmaker will find himself asking the question, “What should I shoot?” Here,
it is imperative to start out with a well-written script, whether or not things change
during
the shooting process. Often preparing a script beforehand can make the difference
between a bad film and a good film. Or, at best, a good film and a great film.
A pre-shoot or shooting script is like carrying a map when you set out on a road trip.
You may stumble across many unseen barriers or unexpected surprises. You may
discover wonderful, uncharted areas off the beaten track. You may decide to go in one
direction or the next or perhaps even a third. A map helps you on your way and prevents
you from getting lost. A shooting script is a conceptual map for your shooting journey. It
consolidates research and outlines the film’s story, providing a visual guideline for the
shoot. It uses the same format and elements as a post-shoot script and can be as
comprehensive or generic depending on the information available to the scriptwriter at
that stage.
A shooting script should not be confused with a shot list. A shot list is a production tool
which contains shot numbers, descriptions and transitions along with production details.
Even though some director-scriptwriters often combine the shooting script and shot list,
the two are separate entities. A shooting script rarely delves into detailed aspects of
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production unless integral to the story. It is more conceptual in nature; descriptive, but
leaving room for interpretation.
The post-shoot script is the final version of the shooting script. This is often a modified
or re-written version of the shooting script and is created between the shooting and
editing processes of the documentary. The post-shoot script combines conceptual
elements along with audiovisual information gathered at the production stage and may
also include any new knowledge gathered along the way. It then weaves it all together
into a cinematic story, which is used by the filmmaker to edit the documentary. The post-
shoot script often includes descriptions of shots and actions and is quite comprehensive.
Again, the post-shoot script should not be confused with a paper-edit, which contains
detailed shot and production information. Even though the two are often combined by
director-scriptwriters, they are separate entities. The paper-edit is a tool for the editor to
cut the footage and includes elements like time-counters, tape numbers, shot in-points
and out-points etc. The script is conceptual and descriptive of action but should leave
some room for creative interpretation at the editing stage.
Both the pre-shoot and post-shoot scripts are time-specific versions of the same entity.
The same elements and technique can be used to create both depending on the amount of
information available at that time.
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WRITING FOR FILM AND WHY DOCUMENTARIES ARE DIFFERENT
Writing for film, fiction or non-fiction, is quite different from writing for print. There are
a few unique features of film that a screenwriter must consider:
Film is visual. The words that a screenwriter writes will never be read by anyone.
They will only be seen and heard as images on a screen. The most important skill
of a screenwriter is that he must be able to write visually. Theorizing or
explaining a concept in a script is pointless; if the audience can’t ‘look’ at the
theory, it’s not worth writing. A screenwriter must think, ‘Is what I’m about to
write visual in nature? If not, then how can I make it visual?”
Film shows motion. Most of the images you see on screen have action. It’s what
separates moving images from photographs. Stories for film must be translated by
a screenwriter into active images.
Film reveals what the eye often can’t see. A tiny cell in our bodies, a country
we’ve never been to, details that we would normally miss. The screenwriter must
bring things to life for the audience who may have never before experienced what
they see on screen.
Film transcends time and space. A film doesn’t adhere to our dimensions of time
and space. Once made, it continues to exist in a little bubble of its own,
transcending the limits of our present lives. A screenwriter must understand that
writing for a film means creating a being that should have a life of its own long
after the writer has moved on from it.
Film chooses audience. The screenwriter must always keep in mind that each
film chooses its own audience depending on how he chooses to tell the story. By
varying a script, he may be showing the film to very different people in the end.
Film may have colour and audio elements. It’s not only about moving images.
Most films, unless the filmmaker chooses not to use them, have the elements of
sound and colour. These elements are always, if present, incorporated into the
script.
When it comes to documentaries in particular, there are a few more things to be kept in
mind before starting to write a script. Documentary scripts do share many common
elements with scripts for fiction films, shorts and features alike. However, they also have
their own specific considerations:
Documentary deals with fact, not fiction. Most importantly, documentaries delve
into a non-fictional world with real events, real issues, real conflict, real people
and real emotions. Everything seen and heard on screen is grounded in accuracy
and has no element of fiction.
These factors contribute significantly to the nature of the script for the simple reason that,
at the end of the day, film like any other art is a product. Artistry must go hand in hand
with practicality, production technicalities and, of course, economics. You may ask
yourself, “What difference does a film’s budget make to a script?” The answer is,
enormous. It would be easy to write a powerful scene about an ancient battle in a foreign
country but the reality of it is that the film crew would have to fly there, hire hundreds of
men, use elaborate costumes and props and perhaps even hire trained horses for
authenticity. There would even be the additional costs of transport, food etc. This could
be an expense the budget does not allow. The scriptwriter will probably have to write a
‘cheaper’ version of the same scene, which might be to shoot abstract visuals of a few
men’s feet running, weapons clashing, bloody faces etc and supplement them with the
voice of an historian talking about the battle in question and what happened in it. Less
elaborate? Certainly. Less powerful? Not necessarily.
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SHORT INTRODUCTION TO DOCUMENTARY STYLES
Over the years, several documentary styles evolved that came and went from fashion.
These styles ranged from newsreel to realist to romantic to propaganda and many more.
However, three emerged as the most popular and encompassed most of the documentary
films made well up to the 1990’s.
Classical Cinema
This is the most structured and traditional form of documentary. It gives great
importance to clarity of narrative and images. Characters drive the plots, and
continuity editing ensures the seamless progression of events. These kinds of
documentaries often made extensive use of didactic narration, as was seen in the most
famous documentary in this style, Night Mail by John Grierson, which showed, in
dramatised detail, how mail was transported by train overnight. The sequences were
tightly controlled and the ‘feel’ was quite formal. The element of ‘realism’ was often
interfered with by the filmmaker, who interspersed on-location shots with studio shots
and sound dubbing to show real events and make them more ‘filmable’.
This style of documentary originated in the late 1950’s and reached new heights of
popularity in the 1960’s. It was, much like the generation that pioneered it, a rebel
with a cause. This style was spurred on with the advancement of film technology,
including portable cameras with mobile sound. Cinéma Vérité, meaning ‘True
Cinema’ in French, aimed for an extreme naturalism, using non-professional actors,
non-intrusive filming techniques, a hand-held camera, genuine locations rather than
sound stages, and naturalistic sound without post-production or voiceovers. The
camera was a ‘fly on the wall’ and took in everything that went on before it. This
broke all the rules put into practice by the classical tradition. Direct Cinema and
Cinéma Vérité are often used interchangeably, although there are opinions that make
distinctions by the degree of camera involvement. The fundamentals of style,
however, are very similar between the two. Famous cinéma vérité/direct cinema films
include Showman, Salesman, The Children Were Watching, Primary, Behind a
Presidential Crisis, and Grey Gardens.
Documentary Drama
This style mixes the techniques of drama and the factual elements of documentary.
Real events are acted out by professional actors in controlled settings in an obviously
constructed style. This theatrical retelling of facts began in the early days of
broadcasting when practical concerns and unwieldy equipment made it difficult to
shoot live events. However, it is used even today. Most modern documentaries
include some form of event recreation. The popular UK television show, Coronation
Street, was originally thought of as a drama documentary.
These days, with the advent of documentary films into the worldwide commercial film
arena as well as their ever-expanding production in most countries of the world, most
generic classifications of style have been put to rest. New stylistic elements are
experimented with every year and the lines between genres have been crossed so many
times that specific categories are impossible to define. Reality TV, for example, has
stormed the world of television, taking direct cinema to new levels of voyeurism.
Whether they are wobbly, out-of-focus home video diaries or the ‘making-of-a-feature’
promotional films included in DVD packs, they have all served to broaden our definition
of the traditional documentary.
So how does all this concern the scriptwriter of a documentary film? This evolution,
leading to the overlap of styles and genres, has placed far more overt, interpretive control
in the hands of the filmmaker and, consequently, in the hands of the scriptwriter. Before
embarking on the writing process, it is important to know the various stylistic options
available to you as a scriptwriter. It is also important to recognize the contribution of
various traditional styles to modern ones, even if their only use is as a guide to finding a
style and ‘voice’ of your own.
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RESEARCH, RESEARCH, RESEARCH: YOU CAN’T SAY IT ENOUGH!
Every film, especially a documentary, has a ‘value’. This could be social, political,
historical, philosophical, artistic or of some other kind. The amount of research a
scriptwriter puts in is directly related to the ‘value’ of the film.
In the rush to get started, many people often skim over the research process. Especially in
films that involve subjects of a personal nature; for example: a person’s journey within
his own family to explore social dynamics. A scriptwriter could be instructed to write a
script on a live event that was shot some time ago, like a riot, or for a film on the thoughts
and feelings of a celebrity already captured in detail on camera. He might ask himself,
“How can I possibly add anything more to the subject information?” Even in films that
seem straightforward and detailed information has already been given to the scriptwriter,
there is always room for more research. There are simply no shortcuts that will provide
the quality of a well-researched film.
Suppose a scriptwriter has the footage of a live riot, shot by the filmmaker, along with a
detailed log of the events that took place before, during and afterwards, the filmmaker’s
personal thoughts about his experience and on-camera interviews with people on both
sides about their views. He may think he has enough information to write a fairly
comprehensive script and he would be right. However, what if he did a little study on the
political, historical and social reasons why that riot may have taken place for some extra
context, or if he spoke to a few more people who were involved on that day and who may
have seen something he didn’t know about. Perhaps he could visit the riot site, or meet an
expert on riots and get his perspective on what happened and even collect the newspaper
coverage of that riot and think about the role of media in that event. He could even go so
far as to place himself in the middle of a riot (highly unadvisable) to get a first-hand
perspective on the experience. In the end, he may or may not use any of the so-called
‘extra’ information he gathered, but his in-depth knowledge on the subject would be
extremely valuable in creating an insightful and engaging script.
Curiosity
The best research is done when there is a genuine desire on the part of the scriptwriter to
learn more about the subject of his documentary. This is easier said than done, especially
when you get that dreaded call about writing a script on the inner components of a diesel
generator, but inspiration and curiosity go a long way in helping a scriptwriter. After all,
if you’re not excited about it, how on earth are you going to make hundreds, thousands or
even millions of people excited? Therefore, the first step in the research process would be
to develop a healthy interest and curiosity about the subject of the film. The scriptwriter
must ask himself some important questions:
Quantity Vs Quality
One of the more important questions that scriptwriters have is, “How much research is
enough?” The quality of research is far more important than the quantity. After all, if you
were a writing a script for a film on the First World War, you could spend a lifetime
studying the subject and never meet that script deadline. One of the more important skills
of the scriptwriter is to segregate relevant information from the irrelevant. This can be
done by having detailed and on-going communication with the filmmaker at all times.
The focus of the film and the subject matter it is dealing with must be kept in mind at all
times. Any information gathered or lead followed must first be put through a ‘relevancy
test’. The scriptwriter must ask himself:
The ‘Strategy’
Almost every scriptwriter starts off with a research strategy. After all, it’s extremely
inconvenient to be in the middle of writing a script when a new piece of information
crops up. It’s important to think about and list down every approach and every source you
will use to gather information needed for research. The all-important question that
usually crops up is, “Where do I look?”
Each scriptwriter has his own sources and approaches for gathering information and
many use the same tried and tested ways throughout their careers. A few places to start
are:
Print Research :
Unless your film is about something extremely specific, chances are you’ll have a
stack of a hundred relevant publications lying in your house waiting to be read.
Chances also are you’ll probably not have enough time to read all of them. The art
of scouring through large amounts of print material quickly can only be picked up
over time, however a novice scriptwriter should try and train his eye to skim over
words and stop to read bits of text which occur to him as something he could put
in his script or which sounds interesting and should be kept aside. It also helps to
keep a look out for ‘keywords’ or words that strike a chord because of their
meaning. These words can be used later on in the script, if you are going to write
narration. In addition, you may be exploring the idea of including visuals of print
material in your film as well, in which case you must select and isolate this
material carefully for filming later.
Field Research :
Once the writer reaches a location, it is important to look out for things which
might be relevant to the script. You could track events as they happened or look
for clues that could reveal facts much like a detective. How to gather field
material when on location is subjective to the film, but the scriptwriter must keep
a look out for all things visual that can be incorporated as images within the
script. The culture of the area should be learnt, the people met, the details noted.
Once you gather this knowledge, you must keep it aside for future reference. It
also helps when on a shooting location, to note things like where the sunlight
comes from at what time and what the sounds are heard around the area. These
little details will help you design the script in a more artistic and insightful way.
Interview Research :
Nine times out of ten, a scriptwriter will be called upon to write a script about
something he knows nothing about. Factual knowledge can usually be easily
attained from print and field research; however the scriptwriter must also gather
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perspective. Not one but many. The best way to gain perspective is to speak to
people directly and indirectly connected with the subject. Films are a medium for
people, by people and therefore a human perspective is imperative for any film.
Interview research, which is basically meeting people and asking them questions,
is a must for every film.
The scriptwriter must first decide whom to speak to and what to ask them.
Normally, the first person or people to seek out are the experts on the subject at
hand. They can provide the scriptwriter with not only knowledge but the benefit
of their experience. If there are specific events in the film, then the scriptwriter
can speak to people who were involved with the events, directly and indirectly.
The selection of people should be varied to get different, even opposing, types of
information from each. The questions to ask them should cover a range of ideas
and should typically include factual and emotional elements as well as opinions
and insights. These conversations should be recorded carefully and relevant points
should be kept aside. It always helps to listen to any ideas they may have about
how you can ‘treat’ the film conceptually, irrespective of whether you incorporate
their opinions into the script or not. Who knows? Somebody may give you a gem
of an idea.
Every scriptwriter wants to write a brilliant script and it’s a well known fact that some
profound investigation needs to be done for this to be accomplished. So what exactly is
digging deep and going beyond the facts? What exactly is the scriptwriter looking for and
how can it be defined? There are a few ways of looking at these concerns. Suppose a
scriptwriter is researching a film on the migratory killer whales or Orcas off the New
Zealand coast. Here is an example of the kinds of research material he might look for:
The top of the issue includes the facts; killer whales and their appearance,
migratory patterns and when they go, where are they spotted, their behavior, their
sounds, activities, intelligence. The scriptwriter could delve into scientific
research being done on the whales by interviewing two marine researchers, lets
call them Ted and Sue, a couple who live and work on the New Zealand coast.
The writer could find out the history of the Orcas and the role that humans played
in it. Ted and Sue could even take the scriptwriter on a whale observing
expedition, where he would experience the whales first hand and also get an idea
of what could be shot for the film.
The scriptwriter could find out more insightful details about the whales as living
creatures and fellow mammals. Do they love, do they hate? Why do they beach
themselves all together – is it really collective suicide because they mourn their
dead like us humans? What kinds of relationships do they have among each
other? Yes, a mother whale is attached to her calf, but are the aunts, the uncles?
What do they say to each other when they click and whine? Have Ted and Sue
ever come into close contact with any whale? Did they feel a connection? How
did the whale react to human contact and was it significant in terms of its
emotional value? What did the scriptwriter feel when he looked at a whale for the
first time and did he get a sense of the ‘spirit’ of the creature?
The scriptwriter would find out that the whales have a tragic history because of
the excessive whaling that took place in past decades. This tragic and brutal past
was because of people, who hunted them almost to extinction. Could their
subsequent conservation by people later on be a result of guilt? The scriptwriter
could ask what larger role this film could have and the answer might well be to
aid in conserving the Orcas for the future by dispelling myths and increasing
awareness. This could the message of the film; that everybody needs to get on
board to save the killer whale and help them flourish in the oceans.
The scriptwriter could try and find related issues that would add value to the film.
Does the migration of the whales have any effect on the surrounding ecosystems?
How about thinking about the spirit of travel or of the ocean itself? Perhaps talk to
a person or a group of people who have saved a beached killer whale in the past.
Or go in the opposite direction and talk to a person who has killed a killer whale
or eaten one. The possibilities of branching out to explore the issue in greater
detail are endless. The scriptwriter should then choose which of the details add
value to the film.
Finding Challenges
Once you’ve done all there was to do, gathered every bit of relevant information,
followed every interesting lead and asked every insightful question, chances are you’ll
have more material than you need. At this stage, it’s time to start thinking about which
bits of information are going to figure in the film. It’s time to start ruthlessly eliminating
material that just doesn’t tell the story. A film lasts for only so long and there are only so
many things to be said.
Organizing research into a comprehensive story basically involves cutting and pasting
and seeing which bits of material can follow and ‘flow’ into each other. A good technique
is to write down each piece of information in a few words on a post-it or cue card or
simply any small piece of paper. For example: one post-it could state “Whales regularly
beach themselves in large numbers” and another one could say “Sue looked into the
whale’s eyes and cried” etc. Then, stick the post-its in random order on a blank board or
wall in columns and rows. After that, the scriptwriter must start a painful process of
plucking, discarding and re-sticking until he forms an information chain, which tells the
story the writer wants to tell. The only requirement of the story at this stage is that the
information must ‘flow’ and all the futile bits of material are discarded. It’s now time to
start thinking about writing that script.
Whereas film has no grammar per say, there are certain ‘rules’ of usage in cinematic
language and syntax, or systematic arrangement, orders these rules and the relationships
between them. This syntax has been determined as a result of the usage of film elements
over the years and is not necessarily a determinant of them. Film syntax evolved much
like a language. It was an organic development, descriptive rather than prescriptive and
constantly changing and evolving. This evolution is still taking place and new thresholds
are being pushed by filmmakers everyday. As a basic guide, however, it is important to
know these ‘rules’ even if only to break them.
There are three elements of film ‘language’ that should be studied by a script writer and
incorporated into a script:
1. Visual Elements
The visual elements of film, or what the audience ‘sees’ on screen is one of the most
integral aspects of writing a script. It’s important to understand, firstly, how a film is
composed structurally from its smallest component. In a script, this is usually a shot.
The Shot
There is a reason why film is called ‘moving images’. It’s what differentiates it
from photographs or painting. Technically, a shot may be a structural unit of film
language, but what it contains is more important – action. Shots are made of
action. Something needs to be ‘happening’ in a shot for the audience to see – a
man walking, a dog barking, a car reversing, a machine working, a river flowing –
anything at all that has action, images moving. These actions form events that
drive the shot forward to completion.
It’s not enough however, just to have random action on screen. The images, the
action, the events have to be meaningful. A documentary, like any film, has
limited time in which to convey a multitude of things and to tell a story.
Therefore, all the components within the film must be specific and meaningful so
as not to waste precious screen time. Each shot has an underlying ‘meaning’
depending on the nature and arrangement of objects and actions within it. This
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visual way of communication or language has evolved through the years and has
three basic elements:
The Sequence
A sequence is a collection of shots put together that tell a story continuously. A
sequence is an autonomous piece of the larger story of the film. An entire film is
made up of a series of sequences, which can be of varying durations, and are
connected to each other in some way. Each sequence has a visual and audio
aspect to it.
A scriptwriter has many choices to make when deciding about the content,
treatment and nature of sequences. They can have their own distinct
‘personalities’. A sequence can have a completely autonomous audio-visual and
conceptual quality to it. A sequence can be a mere chronological aspect within the
film, like a link in a chain, without anything distinct about it. A sequence can be
descriptive, where it doesn’t take a stand but just establishes details. Or it can be a
strong part of the narrative within the story and contain events that drive the story
forward. A sequence can occur in linear time, which is the real time in which
events occur, or in non-linear time, when it can cut back and forth between
different moments in time.
Documentary sequences, for the most part, are observational. This means that
they observe events as they happen. If the film didn’t record the event, it would
still take place. For example, a village farmer herding his cattle to graze in the
fields is an event that would occur everyday, whether or not there was a sequence
that contained it. However, sequences can also be organized. These days, many
filmmakers choose to construct or initiate events that can be then included in a
sequence. For example, if the film dealt with the issue of the fur trade and how
animal rights activists are combating this evil, the filmmaker could organize a
rally with a group of activists and use that sequence in the film. The rally would
be a real event and the filmmaker’s involvement in organizing it doesn’t affect its
authenticity.
Talking heads
Elements of line, texture and colour all carry their own weights in a film,
counteracting, reinforcing, counter pointing and balancing each other within
frames in a complex system. These are read by the senses of the audience on a
sub-conscious level and are used extensively by filmmakers to add new
dimensions in film.
With the advent of multi-coloured films, a whole new visual world opened up to
both the audience, who could now see images as they existed in real life, and for
filmmakers, who could experiment that much further with the medium. Colour
and its presence or absence from a film can make a significant difference to the
film’s message and mood.
If a sequence is being organized by the filmmaker, the scriptwriter can have more
of a free hand with colour. Demonstrators wearing the colours of a funeral may be
protesting the death of democracy; Bright, kitsch clothing may, on the other hand,
represent a generation breaking away from tradition. Streets filled with different
colours may present a vibrant society, a cultural hub, festivity, growth; the same
streets in dull grey or faded colours may present poverty, disease and
degeneration.
It is important, however, not to get carried away with colour. That is where
Colour Pertinence comes in. There are millions of hues to choose from and vast
possibilities when using colour to communicate with the audience. It is easy to get
carried away and try and use colour excessively as a medium. Documentaries are
about authenticity and the scriptwriter must always remember that subject comes
before form. The elements the scriptwriter uses must be in keeping with real
events and people. Also, colour can be a powerful element when it is used with
discretion and subtlety. Too much colour may give irritate the audience’s senses
or may confuse them. Too many colours may lead to the audience overlooking
their individual significance or misunderstanding the message.
Textures within a film work on very much the same principles as colour. Texture
is important, not only in terms of the inherent texture of the subject but also the
texture of the image. Documentary filmmakers often use texture to their
advantage by giving old footage a ‘grainy’ texture, thereby signifying that the
footage is of real events that happened in the past. A ‘sepia’ texture is often used
in recreations/flashbacks for the same purpose. Layering of different shots on top
of each other in a half-dissolve has become a popular technique with documentary
filmmakers as it creates an almost musical texture.
Lines and form within a frame in a documentary film are also important and can
add another dimension. A man walking tall amidst the vertical columns of an old
building will immediately be perceived by the audience as someone powerful.
The same columns bathed in dark lighting so that only the layers are shown may
imply that he has a dark or negative power. In the same way, a man lying in a
field of short grass and looking at a flat, striking horizon may be perceived as
submissive to the grandeur of nature.
In feature films, these elements are used extensively by filmmakers and they can
be applied within real environments by documentary filmmakers as well. Even
though, in documentaries, there is sometimes little control over the objects and
locations to be shot on camera, the scriptwriter can still incorporate them into the
story in many ways by suggesting interesting shots and sequences that are
pertinent and relevant to the subject matter. However, this level of detail need not
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be attempted for every shot and every sequence within the script as documentaries
naturally tend to involve less image control.
Sound Elements
Sound is as important as the image. Unfortunately, this fact wasn’t realized until quite
recently. Sound has always been an extremely underrated aspect of filmmaking and,
consequently, sound syntax and even technology developed quite slowly compared to its
visual counterpart. One of the reasons this may have happened is because the audience
does not ‘read’ sound in the same way that it does the visual image. Sound is not only
omnipresent but also omni-directional and this pervasiveness led to it being traditionally
discounted as an important medium of film.
These days, the same pervasiveness is considered beneficial and filmmakers have learnt
that sound can be manipulated effectively to enhance a film. The fact is, sound is
sometimes far more effective a medium in film than the visual image. Christian Metz
identified five channels of information in film: (a) the visual image (b) print and other
graphics (c) speech (d) music; and (e) noise. Interestingly, three of the five channels are
auditory rather than visual, giving testament to the importance of sound in any film.
However, even though it’s given its due by filmmakers, fiction and documentary alike,
sound is often not considered enough at the scriptwriting stage. A soundtrack can
strengthen script moments and sequences and realize both space and time. In
documentary, sound can be a vivid counterpart to the visual, adding to the drama and
realism of the overall film. It is for this reason that the scriptwriter must incorporate
sound into the script.
2. Talking heads
Narration and talking heads are not exclusive of each other as audio
communication techniques. Even though some filmmakers prefer only using
talking heads these days, many documentaries have a bit of both and they work
quite well together.
3. Music
Feature films have traditionally always relied heavily on music as part of the
soundtrack. Music directors and composers would create masterpieces, which
sometimes carried entire visual sequences. Some films were even defined and
identified by their trademark musical soundtracks. It is often said that the musical
theme of the feature film Jaws (1975) created an entire generation of people
afraid to swim in the ocean for fear of a shark attack. Like feature films,
documentaries also use music to enhance moments and create moods and cultural
flavour in the film. Background music appeals on an emotional level with the
audience and increases the level of empathy with the events on screen. Music is
also used to establish a particular geographical location or identify a particular
community; for example, images of a rice field, accompanied by Indian folk
music, easily identify the location as somewhere in India.
4. Ambiance sound
The sound that is naturally present in the atmosphere surrounding the visual
image and is recorded simultaneously with it is called ambiance sound.
Traditionally, this sound was referred to as ‘noise’ and speech and music were
given more attention. However, as sound technology developed, filmmakers
realized its importance in the construction of a complete soundtrack. More than
anything else, this type of sound is essential to the creation of a location
atmosphere. The environment’s sound or what is often called ‘room tone’, based
on the reverberation time and harmonics of a particular location is its signature. In
documentary, ambiance sound is a necessary part of the soundtrack as it
establishes the film’s visual in reality and gives the audience a realization of space
and time. This is invaluable when dealing with non-fictional subjects. Normally,
ambiance sound is used continuously, along with other types of sound, throughout
most of the documentary.
Any sound that is not speech, music or ambiance and is artificially injected into
the soundtrack to enhance it is called a sound effect. This could be a natural sound
like a bird chirping to a digitally created or distorted sound like microphone
feedback etc. In the old days of film, sound technicians would have to create
thousands of sound effects to put in a film in the absence of ambiance sound. This
was needed when either the camera was unable to record sound or when shooting
took place in studios, where the ambiance would have been at odds with the
visuals on screen. These days, sound effects are used to enhance the film’s subject
or mood, during recreations or when the required sound is missing from the
recorded ambiance. For example: sounds of horses galloping, men screaming and
the clang of weapons against each other could be used while showing a recreated
sequence of an ancient battle; or the sound of a helicopter could be injected into a
shot of a helicopter flying that was shot from too far away to catch the original
ambiance.
6. Silence
It may sound odd to add the lack of sound as a type of sound element, but in the
world of film, where everything is deliberate, even silence within the film means
that the filmmaker has chosen to put it there.
In the days of silent films, filmmakers used to hire live orchestras to play while
the film was being screened to add to their entertainment value. Today’s
filmmakers have realized the power of silence. The lack of any sound over a
particular moment in a film forces the audience to focus on the visual and
heightens their anticipation for the moment when the something happens or when
sound re-enters the picture. This is a technique used quite frequently in horror
films. In documentary, the scriptwriter can use this technique when he wants the
audience to hone in on the visual to such an extent that it takes them into a kind of
suspended or unnatural reality. However, unless it is a silent film or silence plays
a thematic role in the film, this element should be used sparingly. Too long a gap
between sounds will struggle to hold audience attention.
Story Elements
Music, whether it’s hip-hop or classical, would just be noise without a story. A painting
would be just a collage without a story. Across art forms, the innate story is as variable as
it is constant.
Like in all other art forms, film story has three broad structural elements:
A beginning
A middle
An end
The beginning
2. Establishes the ‘core assertion’ of the film, which is the point the
filmmaker wants to make through the documentary and the
message he wants to communicate to the audience. It is this
message around which the entire film is built going forward.
The Inciting Incident is often a common feature used in the beginning to start a
story. It is an incident that radically upsets the balance of forces within the film’s
story. It is a dynamic and fully developed event, not something vague. As a story
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begins, the forces at play are arranged in a particular way, whether they are
balanced or not. The inciting incident is any event that swings reality in either a
negative or positive way, creating imbalance relative to the previous way. This
storytelling technique is useful because the forces within the film must then react
to the inciting incident, setting the story on its way into the middle. For example;
the leader of a small desert community could be informed that a large corporation
was planning to buy the nearest oasis from the government, effectively creating a
water crunch in his community. The leader could be spurred to then organize his
people to ensure the government doesn’t sell their precious natural water supply.
The leader obtaining the knowledge that his community’s water supply was in
trouble is the inciting incident. This incident upset the balance of forces and
impelled them to react.
The Middle
The big, unwritten space that is the middle of the film is often a daunting
challenge for the scriptwriter. Many scriptwriters focus on the dramatic beginning
and end of their film and get confused and lost in the middle, leading to a
meandering series of events that lack focus.
The key to a good middle is structure. The scriptwriter must ensure that the
middle of the film presents a chain of logic designed to prove its core assertion.
Each event and action must be pertinent and in keeping with the subject and tone
of the film. The issues at hand must be kept in strict focus and events must be
arranged in such a way to ensure that the film keeps moving along and
progressing. This ‘tight’ structure will result in a dynamic and interesting middle.
A good middle consists of good sequences, which also have their own beginnings,
middles and ends. Within the sequences, the flow of events determines these
parameters. There could many types of sequences within a film, ranging from the
dramatic ones that decide the film’s direction, to the sequences that lead up to and
follow after the dramatic ones. The scriptwriter must allot a particular message for
each sequence and ensure that each one has an impact on its own. Then, he can
explore the order in which he will place them all depending on flow of
information and the gradual increase of impact.
These sequences must be related to each other and unified as a whole in order to
give the film a flow. The scriptwriter can use the following criteria to relate and
unify them:
Because a story is a metaphor of life, we expect it to feel like life, to have the
pace, rhythm and tempo of life. Rhythm is set by the length of sequences. It is
important to vary the length of sequences and not keep them long or repetitive.
Most sequences are visually expressive in one location within two or three
minutes. A sequence held too long in one place becomes redundant and loses
audience attention. Tempo is the level of activity within a sequence. A person
staring out of a window contemplating life may have a low tempo; a riot will
naturally have a high tempo. In a well-told story, the progression of sequences
normally accelerates pace. As he heads toward a dramatic point in the film, the
scriptwriter could take advantage of rhythm and tempo to progressively shorten
scenes while the actions in them become more and more brisk. Immediately after
a dramatic point in the film, the scriptwriter can ‘let the audience breathe’ and
slow down the pace. Dramatic sequences themselves are usually played out for
maximum impact and the length depends very much on the subjects and events of
the individual sequence. Pace begins in the script and it is important that the
scriptwriter to incorporate it at this stage.
‘Beats’
Beats are a useful technique often used by scriptwriters in creating pace for the
film. A beat is the smallest element of structural technique. It is an exchange of
behavior in action/reaction. Beat by beat these changing behaviors shape a
sequence. A sequence needn’t be built up of just one action. It can have multiple
actions, and each action is one beat. For example; A man could walk into a room,
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walk to the window and look out, sit down on a chair, pick up a book and read it,
put down the book, get up and leave the room. This sequence has five beats – 1.
Walking into the room, 2. Looking out the window, 3. Sitting down, 4. Reading a
book 5. Getting up and out of the room.
The scriptwriter can benefit from breaking down each sequence into beats
because he can then have greater control over the sequence. He can shave off
beats to make a sequence shorter, add more beats to make it longer or increase
and decrease the tempo of beats to suit the point of time in which the sequence
occurs. In documentary, the scriptwriter may have limited control over the nature
of actions that take place in a sequence, but he can control how many of them
feature in the final film.
The scriptwriter also has a choice whether to order the sequences in linear time,
meaning a temporal order of the events that occurred, or in non-linear time, a
random order where the film can switch back and forth between events that
occurred at different points of time without any temporal continuity. Whereas
linear time is a more traditional method of arranging sequences, many
documentary scriptwriters these days opt for non-linear time to tell a story. Non-
linear time is generally held to the more ‘interesting’ of the two because the
scriptwriter has far greater control over the amount of information revealed to the
audience at every stage since they may not initially follow the order of events.
However, this is a difficult arrangement to master and the scriptwriter needs to be
completely clued into the audience reactions and provide information in a
succinct manner so as not to confuse or overwhelm them. The scriptwriter can
also combine the two arrangements to the extent that he can have some sequences
arranged chronologically and occasionally slip into the future or the past using
flashbacks and recreations.
Transitions
Every story needs to have a seamless progression between sequences for the
entire thing to work. For this, it needs to have something to link the tail of each
sequence to the head of the next sequence. Generally, we find this linking element
in one of two possibilities: what the two sequences have in common, or what they
have in opposition. A ‘Transition’ is something held in common by two
sequences or counter pointed between them. This common or counter element can
be many different things:
Many a time, a film starts off with a bang and fizzles down to a boring rut by the
time it reaches the middle. This is the result of the scriptwriter’s imagination
going limp at the worst possible time. The scriptwriter must keep in mind that a
story must not retreat to actions of lesser intensity or magnitude but move
progressively forward to a final action. The events must become bigger and better
and their excitement and involvement must gradually increase as the film move
forward. This is called progression. The scriptwriter must never resort to
repetition, staying on one point too long or showing too many similar events. The
movement forward needs to be sharp and planned. This presents a tricky problem
to the scriptwriter in terms of how to express the element of progression. Broadly,
there are four techniques to this:
The End
Closed End
A closed ending is usually one where all the questions raised in the story
are answered and all emotions evoked are satisfied. The audience is left
with a rounded and closed, overall experience that leaves nothing further
to doubt or question. This type of ending is absolute and irreversible and
the film’s subject cannot be extended. For example; a documentary about
a particular sect of women working to change divorce law by passing a
bill in parliament could end with the bill being passed and the battle being
won. This kind of ending doesn’t leave anything further to be said on the
matter and the audience is left with a feeling of closure.
Open End
An open ending is usually one which leaves one, some or many questions
unanswered and some emotions unfulfilled. This type of ending relies
heavily on audience imagination to fill in the gaps once the lights have
come on. The ‘open’ implication doesn’t mean the film finishes in the
middle, leaving everything hanging unresolved. The questions left are
answerable and the emotions resolvable and all that has gone before has
led to clear and limited alternatives that make a certain degree of closure
possible for the audience. For example; a documentary about inter-
religious relations during Independence Day celebrations in a particular
country may end as night falls on the festivities, but many questions as to
the future of relations between the religious groups may be left
unanswered. This type of ending has become very popular in documentary
films after many filmmakers started realizing that the issues most
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documentaries deal with are part of larger problems facing the world to
which there are no clear cut solutions or answers.
Each ending has a decided flavour, a mood. A resolution can occur in so many
different ways. ‘Happy endings’ have always been popular in feature films as they
leave the audience on a ‘happy high.’ In documentary, things are not so
straightforward. The flavour or mood of the ending must be determined by the
events of real life and cannot be controlled by the scriptwriter. Depending on the
events that occur, the ending can be optimistic, pessimistic or even ironic in
nature. The scriptwriter must judge the mood of the ending after studying the
conclusions the film has come to based on the turn of events. Some issues may be
left unresolved, some may have taken a turn for the worse. Many scriptwriters
feel the pressure to ‘find the silver lining’ and leave the audience on a high, but
they should be obliged to stick to the truth and tell it like it is.
The end of a feature film is often called a ‘climax’. It is when the story builds to a
last revolution in values from positive to negative or negative to positive, with or
without irony, at maximum charge that’s absolute and irreversible. Basically,
something big happens in the end that changes the film radically and moves the
audience. The process of building to this climactic end is also often applied to
documentaries in a toned down manner because it works so well in feature films.
‘Saving the best for last’ is the old adage and the climactic sequence/series of
sequences are the most meaningful and dramatic in the film in terms of resolving
the issues at hand. The climax is the last leap of the scriptwriter’s imagination and
should be clear and self-evident, requiring no explanation and playing out in a
dramatic rhythm and tempo. For example; a documentary about two boxing
champions may end with a climactic series of sequences in which they fight each
other for the boxing title. The scriptwriter could make winning or losing the title
into a spectacular drama played out in the ring and keep the audience on the edge
of their seats.
Character
Traditionally, characters were the people in the film. However, as both fiction and
documentary films became more varied and complex, this simplistic view of who or what
is a character was discarded and a new definition was coined based on a broader scope.
Simply put, characters are the significant ‘beings’ in your film. A character can be
human, animal and, in some films, even an object or a location. Anything that has the
ability to take action or suffer consequences can be a character. However, a character is
always viewed from a human perspective. This is just simply because the filmmakers are
human and the audience is human and therefore, we unconsciously try and attribute
human qualities to all characters in a film, even though they may not be human. For a
scriptwriter, it helps to think of characters from this angle as it makes them more
understandable. People are easier to deal with than, say, a rock. As humans, we may
never understand a rock completely, so we can portray it as a character in a film with
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regards to its relationship with humans. When studying characters, it always helps to go
back to the traditional definition and think of them as human, the people in a film.
Character is a central part of story structure and is regarded as possibly the most
important aspect of a film by many. Every film must have characters and whatever
happens within a film, must happen to the characters. They are our representatives inside
the film, experiencing it for us, making complex topics accessible to us as viewers. If the
story is about people, then the people the story is about are the characters. If the story and
subject is not about people then the people the story affects are the characters. For
example; if the documentary is about a married couple and the process of them getting a
divorce, then the characters in the film are the couple themselves and the people
facilitating or opposing the divorce like family members, lawyers etc. If the film is about
democracy, then the characters in the film could be representatives among a larger
population whom democracy, or the lack of it, affects. These could be citizens of a
country, policy makers or perhaps members of government institutions and the press.
Central character/s
Secondary character/s
A film about a school boy who faces bulling in school has one central character – the boy
himself. A film about a group of four school children who have been victims of bullying
and have come together to stop this practice in their school may have the four children as
central characters unless the scriptwriter chooses to tell the story through only one of the
children, thereby making him the central character. The decision to tell a story through
one protagonist or multiple protagonists depends on a few factors like the scope of the
subject and whether it needs more characters to cover that scope, the types of people
involved in the story and to what extent they are a part of it and the length of the film and
how many characters can realistically be featured during that time. A single protagonist
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may result in a focused, simpler film and will also be easier to tackle in terms of story.
However, multiple protagonists, while making a story more complex and difficult to
write, may add variety, multiple dimensions and interest to the film. It is not advisable,
however, to have too many protagonists in one film as the audience will get confused
after a point. Many multiple characters make a story more horizontal, spreading it out in
scope, and this may hinder the vertical progression of the film after a point.
Characters have personalities. In fiction films, characters are created by the scriptwriter
and are fictional representations of real people. In documentary films, characters actually
are real people with real traits. While the scriptwriter may not have control over the kind
of personality traits the characters in his film have, it is imperative that he study these
traits and incorporate them in the script.
Characterisation is a writer’s term for the sum of all the visible traits of a character in the
film. Age, gender and IQ, speech and gesture, education and occupation, personality,
values and attitudes. The totality of various combinations of these traits makes each
person unique. A character may be an ambitious, confident woman, who has a good sense
of humour and loves sports. She may be impatient and demanding of others around her
and have a chip on her shoulder about being a woman in a man’s world. She may have
feminist beliefs but loves cooking and cleaning. These traits are visible parts of her
personality and can be incorporated easily by the scriptwriter into the woman’s actions in
the film. These traits are also important in making the audience ‘connect’ with the
woman on a human level. She is like them, shares parts of their own personalities and,
therefore, they can relate to her.
True character is revealed in the choices a character makes under pressure – the greater
the pressure, the deeper the revelation, the truer the choice to the character’s essential
nature. True character lies beneath characterization and is revealed slowly to the audience
over the course of the film through the actions of the character. It asks the question,
‘Regardless of appearances, who really is this person?’ Is the woman courageous or
cowardly, generous or selfish? As she chooses, she is. For example, the same woman,
despite believing herself to be a compassionate person, may witness an accident on the
road in the middle of the night and not stop to help the victims for fear of her own safety.
By her choice, she has revealed an aspect of her true character to the audience. This is an
important aspect of character and should be studied and incorporated by the scriptwriter
into the documentary as far as possible. The gradual revelation of true character adds
incredible dimension, surprise and audience interest in a film.
The words ‘to plot’ literally means to figure out a path to enter or exit a situation. In a
story sense ‘the plot’ is when a story navigates through branching possibilities to choose
a path that will lead to a resolution. The plot of a story is where every sequence in the
film makes the next one inevitable because of their events and design in time. Every story
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needs to have a plot, no matter how small, to move the story forward towards a goal.
There needn’t be dramatic twists and turns or high pressure suspense or shocking
surprise. A plot can merely be a selection of events and their patterns displayed through
time in the film. The scriptwriter must make event choices – what to include and what to
exclude – and place them in a particular order.
The plot is a unifying force that holds a story together. If the film were a human body,
then the plot would be the spine, creating unity between all the elements. Even when the
story portrays chaos, the plot is what keeps the audience on track. The plot always
adheres to a ‘controlling idea’, which is the ultimate point that the film is trying to make.
The plot of the film is designed as a larger whole by the scriptwriter. In many cases, the
film starts a plot in one direction and then makes it change direction sometime during a
film towards a completely new goal. For example; a documentary film that shows a
lawyer trying to defend his young, male client could start off with a strong belief in the
innocence of the man. Then, in the middle of the film, the lawyer could be presented with
startling evidence that shows his client was guilty and he could actually try and have him
convicted. This sweeping change that takes the film from one condition to a changed
condition by the end is called the Plot Arc.
Many films also have Subplots. These are smaller plots that make up different,
simultaneous and, often contradictory, parts of a larger plot. Subplots are self-contained
stories that adhere to the controlling idea of the film but also add a new, related
dimension to the film. Most documentaries have one or more subplots as they often tend
to deal with issues that are tied in with other issues. Subplots don’t take away but rather
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add to the main plot and their individual beginnings, middles and ends take place in the
middle of the main plot. The resolutions of subplots help drive the main plot to its own
resolution. The scriptwriter can use this technique to include different ideas and events
that are related to but not directly part of the main storyline. For example; a film about an
adopted girl’s search for her birth mother could also feature a subplot about another girl
who found her birth mother and wished she hadn’t started looking in the first place. This
subplot then raises doubts as to whether the main character’s meeting with her own birth
mother would be a happy or sad one.
The ‘Backstory’
Simply put, the backstory is the background story that occurred before the start of the
film. For example; a film about a farmer trying to stop a bank from repossessing his
farmland could very well start with the farmer having a conversation with a lawyer. The
backstory in this film would be that the farmer was going about his work but having
trouble repaying his debts to the bank when, one day, he was given a repossession notice
and asked to vacate. The backstory is crucial in providing the audience with some context
for the story and the scriptwriter must provide them with this information at some stage,
either visually or verbally, in the narrative. A few ways of doing this are having
characters talk about what happened previously, show it visually through a dramatized
recreation of events or through records of events like newspaper clippings etc.
Point of View/POV
Each story is set in a specific time and place, yet sequence by sequence, as the audience
look at events happening on screen, where do they locate themselves in space to view the
action? This is point of view – the angle taken to look at the events and characters, their
interactions with each other and the environment in the film. The scriptwriter’s choice of
point of view or POV makes an enormous difference on how the audience views the film.
This is because who or whatever’s POV is shown is the person/thing that is telling the
story to the audience.
A story is told in many different ways – through visuals, sound, words, characters, events
etc. However, the scriptwriter must make the decision early on as to who will tell the
story to the audience. This decision then binds the story to the limited experience of that
entity. Suppose a number of people had a shared experience like a plane crash. Each
person on the plane had a different experience and different POV so each one would have
a different story to tell. One of them couldn’t tell you anything about another’s
experience. So, as a scriptwriter, if you wanted to show this event on film, you would
need to narrow down on one or a few of the passengers and only show the event through
their eyes. It would be possible to hopscotch through time and space, picking up bits and
pieces of everyone’s experience, but this would probably make the story sprawl and
become unfocused.
The way in which the scriptwriter chooses to tell the story through focused POV is called
a Narrative. This literally means someone or something is narrating the story. Narrative
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is different from Narration, which is restricted to the spoken word. Narrative is a
combination of audiovisual elements, story elements and is when a particular entity’s
POV uses the various elements to tell the story. In other words, POV gives or drives the
narrative. Once the POV of a sequence has been decided, then the shots are taken from
that POV, the sound is tailored towards it and the information given to the audience is
limited by it.
First-person POV
This is one of the most common types of POV used in documentary. It is the
direct POV of one or more characters in the film. They talk in terms of ‘I’ and the
narrative is done through their eyes and records their experiences. In this type of
POV, the character can either be featured on screen in an interview, perform
actions or be part of events on screen and/or his voice can be featured as part of
the sound track while the visuals can relate to what he is saying. For example; a
film about a boy who ran the marathon could feature him narrating the story. The
visual structure would be from his POV, the events would be limited to his
experience of them as would his story.
Second-Person POV
This kind of POV, where the narrative of the film directly addresses the audience
as ‘you’ and forces the audience into the story is less common in documentaries
and more a feature of television video magazines and news stories.
As difficult as it seems, combining visual, audio and story elements into a documentary
script, at its most basic level, can be as simple as following a few scriptwriting tips and
techniques that have been known to work in many films.
Everyone knows films have characters. But why? In a film about democracy, for
example, what is the need for characters when the subject of the film is an idea?
The answer is simple; characters give a human face to any story. They experience
the story for the audience watching the film. Even if the subject of the film
doesn’t involve people, most films will show characters within the subject to
‘humanise’ the film and make it more accessible. That said, in a film about an
idea like democracy, it wouldn’t make sense to include characters that are not
directly or indirectly related to the subject matter. For instance, a woman
experiencing having a baby is not really connected in any way to democracy, so it
wouldn’t make sense for her to be in the film. Not unless she was a reporter who
was talking about freedom of the press and there was very little of her pregnancy
covered in her film experiences.
There is also a reason for the scriptwriter to study characterization and true
character carefully and represent both in the character’s actions on film. The more
the audience knows about a person in the film, the closer they feel to that person.
This empathy is important to create because, through it, the audience can get
emotionally involved in the film and be that much more affected by it when the
lights come on. They start to ‘root’ for a character they empathize with because
the have unconsciously put themselves in the character’s place and are imagining
having the same experiences. This audience-character bond will have the
audience laughing and crying with the character throughout the film, especially in
a documentary, where they realize that the character is real and so are the events.
Characters can often identified by the nature of their actions, or lack of them.
Active Characters are those that initiate the events that take place around them.
They take action and make things happen. For example; a character who decides
that a particular law is detrimental to society and starts a campaign to change the
law is an active character. Passive Characters, on the other hand, react to
situations thrust upon them without any choosing of their own. Their actions are
brought upon by things happening to them. For example; a farmer whose village
has seen drought for 2 years may struggle to make ends meet is a passive
character.
Conflict
Conflict is one of the most important aspects of a film, documentary or fiction. To
put it simply, conflict is to film what sound is to music. Without it, all the
elements of a film are useless because there is no reason for them to move
forward. When the main character/s step into the inciting incident, they enter a
world governed by conflict and when conflict ends, the film ends. The most
difficult task of a film is to hold audience interest and attention and carry them
through time without an awareness of it. Conflict has till date been the only thing
able to do that perhaps because the audience themselves experience conflict in
many forms every day of their lives and a life without conflict would seem
abnormal and boring. Since conflict is, whether we like it or not, such an integral
part of life and film replicates life, conflict becomes indispensable in film.
So who goes through conflict? The characters do. The try and attain their goals in
the face of opposition and obstacles. These opposing forces could be big or small,
one or many, brief or protracted and in any shape or form. Opposition could come
from other characters with incompatible goals, organized entities or the situation
and environment surrounding the characters. The characters struggling in the face
of conflict, even if the amount of struggle is as miniscule as walking with a stone
in your shoe, make the story move ahead.
There are generally two types of conflict that characters in a film must face. The
first is Outer Conflict. They must face antagonism outside of themselves from the
world around them. This could be from other people, objects, organizations or the
environment. The second type is Inner Conflict. The characters must face conflict
inside of themselves. This may include their psychology, weaknesses, fears, dark
sides etc. It involves the inner world of the character’s minds. Many films have a
combination of both types because, as with real life, one rarely occurs with the
exclusion of the other.
In documentary, it should obviously not be taken for granted that the character
overcomes all or any of the conflict. Real life isn’t always made up of heroes and
villains and the character may fail to achieve what he set out to do.
Change
An audience watches a film with the desire to ‘see what happens.’ Therefore,
something, or many things, must definitely happen to keep the audience in their
seats. This something is change. Change is some aspect of reality becoming
different in a particular way. It is at the root of everything in the world – it is what
happens, has happened and will happen. Change is also an extremely intriguing
thing for humans because it almost always has consequences, which affect our
lives directly or indirectly.
There is no question that change must occur in a film. In the beginning, the
inciting incident introduces change to the character’s life. In the middle, the
character must face conflict and, when he does, things change around him and he
changes as well. In the end, something must have changed from the beginning and
this change lead to the resolution. The scriptwriter must choose which change to
include in the film based on how meaningful the change is. If it is not meaningful,
then it doesn’t complete the story. For example; a character could have learnt
many things from the experience of trying to cook for the first time, the first being
that he learnt how to cook a little better. He learnt from his mistakes and won’t
make them again, thereby changing him as a person. This is meaningful change. It
is the job of the scriptwriter to decide which change is meaningful and incorporate
it into the script.
Writing Visually
Writing visually is not just a question of blindly incorporating visual elements into a film.
There are a few important things a scriptwriter must keep in mind:
Show, don’t tell – The scriptwriter needs to keep in mind that film is a
visual medium. Unlike a novel, a film script is never ‘read’ literally by the
audience and therefore the scriptwriter should try and incorporate most of
the information he has to give into a visual format. For example; rather
than telling the audience that a man is a farmer, the scriptwriter should
show the man working in his fields. A potter should be making pottery, a
hairdresser cutting someone’s hair and so forth. It always helps to show
character and event action rather than talk about it or include it in
narration because the audience is then able to experience it themselves,
making it more real for them. They can also grasp details and take in sub-
conscious information. When given a choice, the scriptwriter must always
try and start with a visual image as a base for portrayal of any concept and
then use other methods of portrayal only when the visual is not possible.
Moods and Metaphors – The scriptwriter has many visual tools at his
disposal including the control of visual mood and visual metaphors to
represent an idea that would be otherwise difficult to portray visually. For
example; a sequence which features a man working late into the night in
his office could be full of shadows to add to the perception of time. Or, a
sequence, which features a man on death row being executed in jail by
electric chair, could focus on a light bulb momentarily flickering to signify
that the man has died.
Writing Narration/commentary
An important point for the scriptwriter to remember is that, as crucial as sound is to films,
the visual always comes first. Narration, therefore, is secondary to visual. It is a part of
the overall narrative, but does not lead the narrative. Therefore, the scriptwriter, even
though he is a writer and his first relationship is with words, should not necessarily give
the narration a dominant role in the narrative.
Keeping narration relevant is another challenge. Many scriptwriters use the narration for
information-shoving at the audience. The narration should be as focused, clear-cut, short
and relevant as possible. Information should be given on a need basis only and when the
particular subject has been sufficiently covered, it should stop short of exposition.
Keeping narration simple is the final challenge. Big words and fancy sentences are lost
on an audience that has to keep track of multiple elements coming toward them at the
same time. In fact, a verbose narration only makes the film harder for them to follow. A
good narration is precise and simple and works in tune with the other elements of the film
without trying to be grandiose.
Writing Sound
The soundtrack of the film, the music, ambiance and sound effects, can be used by the
scriptwriter in two ways within the film script. The first is to make a point on its own,
like the sound of a train whistle when the visual only shows a train track, and the second
is to reinforce a point that the visual is already making, like sad music when a character is
crying with grief. Both are effective ways of incorporating sound at the script stage.
A soundtrack must have Aesthetic Relevance, which is simply relevance to the subject,
location and emotion of a particular point in the film. After all, it wouldn’t make sense to
hear a western music track when showing visuals of rural villages in India or to hear
upbeat drums at a particularly sad, slow moment in the film. The scriptwriter should
make sure that the soundtrack is always in keeping with the narrative and the audience
should hear only a seamless extension of what they see.
In most films, but especially in documentary, the scriptwriter should try and keep a more
or less continuous presence of ambiance or natural sound. The ambiance volume may be
kept low or high depending on the rest of the soundtrack, but keeping it constant reminds
the viewer that the visuals are set in the real world. It is just one more layer that adds to
the feeling of authenticity and credibility that documentaries try and establish.
Disclosure
The flow of information in a film is very important, as is the order, amount and frequency
with which it is given to the audience. The scriptwriter can use a method called disclosure
to control the flow of information. This technique is about withholding as much
information as possible until the point when it is absolutely necessary to provide it to the
audience. The scriptwriter gives the audience the information in bits and piece, as and
when required and never too much at the same time. Then, progressively the bits of
information start making sense and adding up to a whole context. The idea behind this
technique is to keep the audience guessing and levels of suspense and curiosity high. The
scriptwriter can ‘bait’ the audience with key pieces of information, never too little but
never too much, right up until all is revealed.
Idea Vs Counter-idea
A popular technique to create tension and heighten interest in a film is using a debate of
ideas. The scriptwriter can forge a story ahead in a dynamic way by moving it back and
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forth across the opposing charges of its primary value. Simply put, different sequences
alternatively express positive and negative dimensions of the controlling idea creating a
debate between ideas and counter-ideas within the story. In this way, the scriptwriter can
use the element of contradiction as a technique to make the film more vibrant.
Eventually, one of these ideas can ‘win’ and result in a resolution at the end. This
technique needn’t involve obvious positive and negative elements, like people doing
good or bad things in the sequences. There needn’t be a value judgment about what is
good and bad either. This sequential debate is more to do with the message of each
sequence. This message, regardless of the action portrayed in the sequence, has a positive
or negative charge and this is what can be played against one another between sequences.
Another technique often used by scriptwriters is when they set-up layers in knowledge
and then pay off by closing the gap and delivering knowledge to the audience. This is
done by planting insights or ‘visual clues’ at various points in the film. These clues are
hazy and without context when they are presented to the viewer, who doesn’t quite
understand them at the time but remembers them because they’ve been emphasized by
the narrative. This is a deliberate move by the scriptwriter. The clue or insight is not
meant to make sense on its own. Later on, the scriptwriter provides the larger picture or
contextual information in other sequences, closing that gap in knowledge and making the
meaning of the clue or insight clear to the audience. By suddenly having the haziness
removed, the audience reaction is an ‘aha! That’s what it meant’ and they are intrigued
and involved in the story even further.
Chances are that there will be many parts of a story that demand representation in a film.
The scriptwriter must make a choice about what to include in the film and, more
importantly, what to exclude. A gap in the story or missing information and information-
overload are both extremely undesirable situations in a film. The scriptwriter’s choice
could make the difference between the film making being interesting or not. He must go
over the story and narrative with a toothcomb to make sure the sum of all the various
parts add up correctly, the flow of information is smooth and relevant and anything
excessive or not focused enough is cut out of the film. This is a difficult but necessary
decision and the scriptwriter needs to be harsh and let go of bits of the film that he may
have grown attached to but just don’t make the cut.
A note on Duration
Rarely is a scriptwriter given the privilege of deciding the duration of the film he is
writing. This is something predetermined, set by the producer and/or TV channels or
others, depending on the film’s distribution plan. The scriptwriter has to work within
those parameters and tailor the film to suit the desired duration. If, however, a
scriptwriter is ‘let loose’ on the film’s duration, then a word of advice; less is usually
more. It is better to stay prudent with duration and limit the film to commercial
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parameters than get carried away and try and say everything with leisure. The finished
film will be more conducive to commercial viewing and the audience will stay glued. No
matter how dramatic or interesting the subject matter may be, no matter how well
presented a narrative, an audience will lose patience after a while and start thinking about
their dinner.
What makes a great script? That is a much harder question. Is it just the x-factor or can
we pin-point certain things that have been noticed in award-winning films that go beyond
the expected and set them apart from the ordinary? The answer is – we can. Anybody can
make an award winning film. The key to this is just going that extra distance once the
basics have been done and dusted.
Think!
It seems silly to ask a scriptwriter or filmmaker to really ‘think’ about his film. Of course
he thinks about it – how could he not? However, does he really think enough? A great
film is often a result of non-stop thinking about how it could be made great. The
scriptwriter needs to go over everything related to his film over and over again in his
mind and constantly challenge what he knows and how he thinks. Then he should rethink
the rethinking process! The idea behind what seems like excessive ‘thinking’ is that,
sometime or the other, an inspired, creative and never-before-attempted idea will seep
through to the surface and change the film dramatically. Is it really as simple as that?
Sometimes it is.
So go ahead – make them laugh, make them cry. Make them feel fear and pity, empathy
and understanding. Make them celebrate gain and mourn loss along with the characters in
the film. Make them nod vigorously along and shake their heads in disdain. Don’t be
afraid to include a variety of emotional elements in the film. A range of emotions will
provide an unconscious feeling of ‘completeness’ within the audience. This technique is
often used in feature films to increase entertainment value. And, as many famous
documentary filmmakers will tell you – there’s nothing wrong with making an
entertaining documentary.
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Inspiring change once the lights have come on.
Never forget the message of your film. It is the reason behind the film project and the
goal towards which an entire film unit has come to work together. Many people will,
hopefully, spend time and money to watch your film after it is made. It is all for the
message.
The idea of a documentary film is not only to showcase change, but to also inspire it.
Documentary films are an effective tool in spurring people on to make social, political
and issue-based changes in their own lives and communities. However, this desired
response only takes place when the audience is inspired. A great script makes sure not
only that the audience hears and understands the message of the film loud and clear, but
also creates in them the desire to be part of the solution and ‘do’ something as a follow
up. Therefore, the scriptwriter must tailor everything in the film in such a way that, when
the lights come on in the screening room, every member of the audience has been
inspired by the message of the film they’ve just seen and they go out into their own real
lives with the conviction to change things for the better.
Imagine the Mona Lisa without that enigmatic smile. It is unthinkable. Out of millions of
portraits painted over centuries, it is a simple smile, an expression that sets the Mona Lisa
apart. A documentary equivalent of the Mona Lisa, though yet to be made, would almost
certainly contain that same element of detail that springs up to surprise and intrigue the
audience. As a scriptwriter, it is important to research these details and find the ones that
will add extra dimension and elements of surprise to the film. These details could be
absolutely anything – from a gesture to an expression to an action to a detailed image to a
sound choice. They needn’t be directly related to the subject and also needn’t be covered
excessively, but they can woven subtly into the fabric of the film. The choice of which
details to use in the script is entirely up to the scriptwriter’s imagination. It may help to
think of dispensing these details as a form of ‘playing’ with the audience and staying a
step ahead of them, anticipating every ‘aha!’ along the way.
It’s easy to dispense information to the audience in a creative manner. It’s also easy to
tell them what to think as they go along in the story. The audience then becomes a
passive observer to the events happening in the film. However, a great film makes sure
that the audience is an active participant in the film process. The script should be
structured in such a way that it questions the audience at every step, challenges their
beliefs and encourages them to come to their own conclusions about events. Never say,
“This is good” or “this is bad”. If you let the audience make that decision themselves,
then they will feel more strongly about it. The basis for this argument is that every
filmmaker or scriptwriter needs to have a healthy respect for his audience. If the film is
targeted towards adults, then the scriptwriter must keep in mind that every person out
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there is a product of life experiences, has a mind of his own and has made important
value-based decisions before. The scriptwriter needs to trust that an intelligent audience
member will come to the right conclusion on his own.
The worst possible thing a scriptwriter can do is sit at his table just before writing a
controversial sequence and think, “Maybe the audience won’t like this. I should tone it
down.” The greatest films of all time weren’t the ‘toned down’ ones. In fact, some of the
best documentaries ever made were Nazi propaganda films! A documentary film is a
platform to express and challenge ideas and issues and the filmmaker should not be
restricted by the desire to ‘please’ the audience. In fact, it is much better to have an
audience up in arms, disagreeing strongly with the filmmaker’s point of view, than to
have a bored audience who leaves thinking that the film made no point at all. Stand up for
your views, back them up with conclusive arguments and don’t be afraid to believe in
your film.
Naturally, as the scriptwriter, you know the script you are writing well. However, have
you experienced it? Every script is a film experience and a good scriptwriter is able to
read the script he has written and experience it audio visually in his mind, going through
exactly what the audience will go through and feeling as they would during every
moment of the film. The idea behind this technique is to be able to fine tune the script in
great detail and direct its energy along the way. This is a skill which comes with
experience. However, a novice scriptwriter should learn to experience the following
aspects of his script:
Be sensitive, be privileged
As a scriptwriter, you may or may not have met all the characters in your film or been to
all the locations and experienced them. However, it is extremely important to remember
that all the people and places you are writing about are real – they exist and have lives of
their own. Lives, that they have allowed you and the film crew to enter and, in a sense,
invade. They have given up not only their privacy, but put their reputation and honour in
your hands. This is a privilege they have awarded you and you must always be aware of
that responsibility. In return, you must treat them with respect and sensitivity and give
them their due. Always, no matter how you feel about the subject personally, try and see
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things from their perspective. This attitude should apply to every character in the film,
whether the film is eventually in agreement with their views or not.
Needless to say, every person should be passionate about their work. However, often
scriptwriters get bogged down by the extensive subject matter, structural elements and
technical aspects that go into making a film and forget the spirit behind it. Filmmaking
and film writing is all about passion – you must feel the spirit behind the subject matter
and really want to put it out there for all to see. The closer you are to your script, the
more imaginative and inspired you will be to try out new ideas and techniques and really
make it special. Each script you write should be like a child you nurture while you work
on it, each word you write should resonate with your passion. That is how masterpieces
are made.
A word on simplicity
Coming back to the Mona Lisa; would she still be special if she were portrayed with the
same expression but this time she was holding an infant on the back of a white horse
galloping through fields of blazing fire in a charred landscape full of the souls of little
children that looked like demons with their arms outstretched towards her baby? Maybe,
but, probably not. The point is, it doesn’t have to be complicated to be good. In
documentary, there is a tendency to make the narrative overly intellectual and
complicated. This can, at best, make the film a little difficult to follow, and, at worst,
alienate the audience. However, sometimes simplicity in word and thought can pull an
audience far more effectively into the film experience.
A common problem with documentary films is their shelf life. A film within itself may be
a suspension of space and time but after it’s finished, it still has to exist in the real time of
the real world. Documentaries often tend to deal with current events and issues and, in
the real world, anything current today is outdated tomorrow. To ensure that a
documentary has a reasonable shelf life of at least a few years, the filmmaker and
scriptwriter need to ensure that there are no time-restrictive elements in the film. It
always helps to address larger issues, which cannot be dated for a while. Date-specific
events can be put into a larger context and the scriptwriter can, as far as possible, try to
avoid putting the film into a very noticeable date in time.
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SCRIPT FORMAT
Narration
ROB
Sometimes I see a
movement in the side of my
eye, but when I turn around,
there’s nothing there.
SUE
CU of Rob’s eyes.
Dissolve to:
CU of Sue’s eyes.
Sound
Continuous Ambiance
FX : Echoing footsteps on
floor
FX : Echoing sigh
INT : Indoors
EXT : Outdoors Sequence
Location
Rob’s
Voice
Close up
WS = wide shot
LS = long shot
MS = mid shot
CU = close up
ECU = extreme
close up
Sound effect
Sequence Transition
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REFERENCES