Great Dialogue vs Bad Dialogue | Here's The Difference - Steve Douglas-Craig

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  • čas přidán 11. 12. 2023
  • After graduating from the AFI, Steve was recruited by Sony Pictures Entertainment to work as a Story Editor & Acquisitions Executive for the Worldwide Acquisitions team in Los Angeles where he received an induction into story & business development, feature film packaging, domestic & international distribution, theatrical marketing & product acquisition. He helped develop & shepherd film titles including Terminator: Salvation, The Book of Eli, Django Unchained, War Room, Don’t Breathe (Sequel current in post-production), the Insidious horror movie franchise, Manchester By The Sea, The Grudge (reboot), Searching, Arrival, Whiplash, The Call, Attack The Block & many others (including TV releases - The Tudors, House of Cards).
    Steve's tenure at Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions was followed with a promotion to Senior Story Editor & Creative Executive at Screen Gems where he was involved in the development & release of theatrical titles like the recent releases of Monster Hunter & the adaptation of James Herbert’s novel - The Unholy. Before that he helped shepherd Black & Blue, The Intruder, Possession of Hannah Grace, Brightburn, & Slender Man. He was also heavily involved in developing content strategies that attracted financiers & talent to specific projects for the studio.
    Steve is also a professional screenwriter having worked as a freelance staff writer for the hit CBS TV series Hawaii Five-O over a number of seasons & currently has a pilot & several feature films (including a creature feature) going out through his literary managers in Los Angeles.
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Komentáře • 103

  • @filmcourage
    @filmcourage  Před měsícem

    Here is our full interview with Steve - czcams.com/video/adVxPaj17rU/video.html

  • @chasehedges6775
    @chasehedges6775 Před 6 měsíci +73

    I’m watching Puss In Boots The Last Wish right now and I consider it a perfect example of how animation can do action and dialogue correctly

  • @Ruylopez778
    @Ruylopez778 Před 6 měsíci +48

    It's worth remembering that "show don't tell" isn't just visuals vs dialogue. You can still "tell" with visuals and "show" with dialogue. *Show* is where the audience is invited to infer things and draw conclusions for themselves, thus having a deeper emotional or intellectual engagement with the scene/characters, and *tell* is where the information is just explained for the audience for the sake of clarity or brevity.
    Example:
    INT. BEDROOM - Steve awake in bed, in the dark. Alarm clock reads 5am/morning radio jingle plays.
    INT. BEDROOM - Steve awake in bed, in the dark. We hear noises you associate with early morning, like birds, a garbage truck (so we know it can't be evening).
    Sometimes you want the audience to know immediately that it's 5am because 5am is relevant and you don't want to waste time. Sometimes you want them to recall the sensation of waking up early.

    • @Madanth0ny
      @Madanth0ny Před 6 měsíci +1

      I enjoy movies like that let me think for myself without pointing out the obvious…they don’t rely on the audience to be stupid .

    • @ssssssstssssssss
      @ssssssstssssssss Před 5 měsíci

      I think Show Don't Tell is a useful heuristic but the first example is not necessarily bad. For instance, most people hate seeing the alarm clock read 5am. So you can create a sense of anxiety in the audience with the first example if that is what you are going for.

    • @Ruylopez778
      @Ruylopez778 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@ssssssstssssssss I'm not saying one or other example is bad. Sometimes you just want the audience to know it's 5am, and there's no need to waste time or be vague about it. That is the purpose of 'tell', IMO, convey information concisely and clearly. It's just an example.
      I'm just saying that people often confuse 'tell' with dialogue or narration, and 'show' with visuals, or assume that 'show' is always better or more sophisticated, and it's not as simple as that.

  • @yapdog
    @yapdog Před 6 měsíci +39

    Dialogue is energy. If that energy matches the character, then it will flow and resonate with audiences.

    • @milessolomon3324
      @milessolomon3324 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Not necessarily. A lot of dialogue is energetic unrealistic bullshit that turns the audience off

    • @yapdog
      @yapdog Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@milessolomon3324 Not sure how that relates to what I said....

    • @vanjaarsic1616
      @vanjaarsic1616 Před 6 měsíci +3

      ​@@milessolomon3324 energy and energetic is not the same thing. You misunderstood the comment

    • @yapdog
      @yapdog Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@vanjaarsic1616 They most definitely did misunderstand. Thanx for clarifying for them 😁👍

  • @chasehedges6775
    @chasehedges6775 Před 6 měsíci +66

    Good dialogue - “The force be with you.” And “This is the way”
    Bad dialogue - “Somehow Palpatine Returned.”

    • @Milton2k
      @Milton2k Před 6 měsíci +9

      Well, that is not really dialog... the first are "one liners"... the second bad writing. For they last only a couple of lines.

    • @tAc399
      @tAc399 Před 6 měsíci

      It was a joke…

    • @Milton2k
      @Milton2k Před 6 měsíci +2

      Was it? My bad then... Woosh!. @@tAc399

    • @esmeecampbell7396
      @esmeecampbell7396 Před 6 měsíci +2

      The problem isn't so much the line in concept, as in there's magic and cloning and whatnot, the people talking about are regular fighters not knowledgeable on the Force or how it works so it makes sense...
      The problem is it is a very boring standard way of conveying that information.
      A more visual way would have been to have Palpatine appear before various people, all over the Galaxy, and we'd see them reacting, some in terror, some in disbelief and maybe some in determination to "defeat evil once and for all" uniting these people who were scared or in denial etc, showing why they are the one to be the leader.
      "May the force be with you" isn't inherently BETTER dialogue and nor is "this is the way" they are odd enough compared to everyone else talking (in mostly correct grammar even if it is occasionally nonsense words "I was going to go to Toshi's station to pick up some power converters" that therefore the "May the Force be with you" stands out as sounding old, which we infer to potentially be religious due to the context, the incantation like use of it, the odd grammar structure making it sound jumbled up like how old language like how Chaucer does to us now.
      It is less about the words specifically and more about HOW you USE them.

  • @Milton2k
    @Milton2k Před 6 měsíci +10

    Even with small talk one can reveal parts of the characters with a description of their demeanor or the appearance or surroundings... if they are important to the story.

  • @reallymakesyouthink
    @reallymakesyouthink Před 6 měsíci +19

    Dialogue shouldn't hold the story back which a lot of long dialogue does.
    What QT does in Pulp Fiction though is put long dialogue/monologue into slower parts of the movie so other parts can be quicker. The gold watch speech is long but it means the Bruce Willis segment can have an urgency to it. He doesn't have to sit and explain the backstory, he's out the door.

    • @destinypirate
      @destinypirate Před 5 měsíci +2

      You are keying in here. The pacing is everything. How he envisioned this, or whether he workshopped it, is the beautiful mystery. Then there is the mastery of the editing which, if cut any other way, would have made PF feel at once encumbered & rushed.

    • @k-slay4407
      @k-slay4407 Před měsícem +1

      Great point.👏🏾

  • @Crimson28
    @Crimson28 Před 6 měsíci +7

    Good dialogue: “Luke, you’re going to find that many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view.”
    Bad dialogue: “Somehow Palpatine returned.”

    • @trevorthornley8835
      @trevorthornley8835 Před 5 měsíci +2

      "The death star's a bad place"

    • @destinypirate
      @destinypirate Před 5 měsíci +1

      This is accurate. People love to site QT, for good reason, yet ''good'' can be defined relative to individual films/stories as well. Simple and impactful statement lines, such as those of the wiseman (Obi-wan) work when the character is crafted well enough to engage the audiences' earnest belief. . . Another way to define ''good'' is believable - which means that which deepens the understanding of a character, word, or story.

  • @chasehedges6775
    @chasehedges6775 Před 6 měsíci +10

    🎵A little less conversation, a little more action🎵

  • @Glanzfellchen
    @Glanzfellchen Před 6 měsíci +1

    I love his happiness when he talks about his love for the series and movies (:

  • @davidaustinveal9277
    @davidaustinveal9277 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Star Wars was our only big family event when it came out. Getting the tickets as soon as they were available, and at a theater billed as the largest screen in Denver, and being on time - or else. It was a big deal. 5 kids and my parents, as if we were making curtain time for an epic theater performance. Years later, I remember Roger Rabbit was a must see for the animation house I worked for. We closed up and every employee met at the theater, the same large screen Dolby sound theater. I guess what the two films had in common were the cutting edge special effects, the new worlds they developed. But the dialogue, that balance, that movement of the story. All there. And images/phrases that became iconic.

  • @briguy677
    @briguy677 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Best use of dialogue I've seen in a long time is in the tv show Shoresy. Every character has their own way of speaking, conversations are tight, the show don't tell scenes are unique, and the humour is spot on.

  • @arzabael
    @arzabael Před 6 měsíci +3

    I’m glad he made it to that fate-sealing showing of Star Wars

  • @destinypirate
    @destinypirate Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thank you @filmcourage - Steve Douglas-Craig is one of your best at sharing glimpses from within the trenches.
    One of the Great Tragedies of the current era is the waste of absolutely incredible productions (sets, costumes, cinematography, locations...) with the pollution of contemporary/lazy vernaculars and pronunciations on characters who 'would' have very distinct manners, ideas, and ways of speaking. How often do we see a film, especially a period piece, where the effort is made to truly deliver the ways in which those characters would speak within the periods shown?

  • @Ruylopez778
    @Ruylopez778 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Lucas made Star Wars to be something you could only truly experience cinematically - the visuals, sound effects, musical score, archetypes, dialogue used as refrain, create a silent movie tone poem. And arguably for the authentic experience it has to be seen in a theater with an audience. Most movies are just filmed plays or adaptations of books.

    • @Ruylopez778
      @Ruylopez778 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Omnicient. He had cowriters working on the dialogue for American Graffiti. Additionally, that was a movie set in a specific time period in the US and not a sci-fi picture. Huyck and Katz also gave A New Hope a dialogue polish, even though the dialogue was stylised to be an homage to Flash Gordon. Lucas simply isn't that interested in how the dialogue sounds as long it conveys what is necessary to advance the story.
      However, he would schedule time for reshoots if he needs extra scenes, or add in/change dialogue during the edit, as is common in movie making.
      I don't know it's important for you to pretend you know what Lucas does or doesn't feel. I'm paraphrasing things he's actually said and what his inclinations are in what he wants to make. You speculating about someone you don't know adds nothing of value to what I wrote.

  • @sdjohnsononyoutube
    @sdjohnsononyoutube Před 5 měsíci +1

    I really enjoyed his points as I am writing a story for common readers which is nearing a novelette. Due to it being my 1st literary piece and the 1st draft, all of my characters have the same voice - mine - save for one person. I must say that it is fun working with him because his personality and use of vocabulary is nothing like me, but I understand him.
    I really appreciate this writer's insight and perspective on creating dialogue. As always, thank you for sharing.

  • @Draegonfyre
    @Draegonfyre Před 6 měsíci +2

    "Lock S-foils in attack position" and of course "May the force be with you" is the dialogue that sticks in my mind from 1977 Star Wars 🌟😳

  • @leonreaper90
    @leonreaper90 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I've always thought this, I think a film/screenplay has to go Up and Down constantly in some form of emotion.

  • @Rekaert
    @Rekaert Před 6 měsíci +3

    QT gets a pass on his monologues because the joy of the scene is usually the monologue itself. He writes them to be witty and memorable, and manages to attract great actors to deliver them.
    The Walken watch scene is a good example. Sure it's relaying information in how important the watch is to Butch and the long path it took to get to him, but that's almost secondary. The main draw is Walken's anecdote and the clash between a child's understanding vs a veteran's no-holds-barred delivery of the facts, complete with graphic description of where the watch was hidden and littered with disdainful racist language.
    Walken's in the movie for all of five minutes, but everyone remembers the watch scene.

  • @cosmicprison9819
    @cosmicprison9819 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Good dialogue is a tasty burger. And a milkshake.

  • @Milton2k
    @Milton2k Před 6 měsíci +2

    The mood of the dialog is rather difficult to express, mostly by subtext.

  • @arzabael
    @arzabael Před 6 měsíci +1

    That rule about not having your characters sound the same is always like whatever because the characters made by the people most touted for their dialogue skills, all sound the same, which is like that person!

    • @Omnicient.
      @Omnicient. Před 5 měsíci

      It's best to try to make them as individual as possible but I know what you mean. An example: look at all these posts and almost all of them sound as though they were written by the same person but they're all very different yet their communications are mostly identical. That's real life! We learn from others be it written or spoken. We mirror everyone; be it consciously or unconsciously.

  • @Graterstuuf
    @Graterstuuf Před 6 měsíci +2

    Great explanation by Steve

  • @YourLocalCopiumDealer
    @YourLocalCopiumDealer Před 6 měsíci +6

    I'd say I watch movies for the great dialogue before anything else.
    It's amazing to me to hear him call it a "last resort."
    Thanks FC, you never fail to give me food for thought.

    • @ArifRWinandar
      @ArifRWinandar Před 6 měsíci

      You must not like Wall-E very much then.

    • @DenkyManner
      @DenkyManner Před 6 měsíci

      Give an example

    • @Diego-lt4wm
      @Diego-lt4wm Před 6 měsíci +1

      It is the last resort because most actors can't learn their dialogues. It is not a creative oriented rule, but a production oriented one

    • @destinypirate
      @destinypirate Před 5 měsíci

      True! A warning shot across the bow of the many writers who try and force ''great dialogue'' which, if undelivered, only serves to encumber the passage of the ship.

    • @Diego-lt4wm
      @Diego-lt4wm Před 5 měsíci

      Indeed, no dialogue exercises are great for amateurs and beginners, but ultimately becomes a burden once you grasp better the concepts of screenwriting. There are stories that need tons of dialogues, and others will require minimum dialogue.@@destinypirate

  • @gregorylagrange
    @gregorylagrange Před 6 měsíci +1

    Star Wars didn't depend on clever dialogue as a standout. Star Wars is such a beloved movie and used as an example for so many aspects of good movie making because it uses so many aspects of good movie making as complimentary to each other.
    It doesn't use dialogue as a standout. It uses good dialogue. It tells the story of Luke. It informs the audience of what the force is. It illustrated the personality differences in characters and was an engine for how those traits played out in the movie.
    There was no set aside big special effects scene. All the special effects were used to help flesh out the story. Which is why the opening Imperial Cruiser scene is so iconic.
    And it uses the hero's journey that we've seen in so many other movies that have good story telling.
    And all later versions or sequels, whatever you want to call them, are used so much for examples of bad movie making because they abandoned using aspects of good movie making as complimentary to each other.

  • @kdizzle901
    @kdizzle901 Před měsícem

    All of the monologues in True Detective season 1 we find out more and more about Rust

  • @filmcourage
    @filmcourage  Před 6 měsíci +23

    Do you believe dialogue should be sparse?

    • @chasehedges6775
      @chasehedges6775 Před 6 měsíci

      Yes. Let actions do the talking

    • @arthousefilms
      @arthousefilms Před 6 měsíci

      It completely depends on the character and scene tone. czcams.com/video/JduADWt0XMI/video.htmlsi=flJmiWfXDob_yd8J

    • @interestedparty7523
      @interestedparty7523 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Dialogue shouldn’t have to be anything besides effective.

    • @AlexKurilovMusic
      @AlexKurilovMusic Před 6 měsíci +8

      For me it's not so much about being sparse, but more about there being subtext between the lines, that I can see and dig out. That's the most satisfying part when you feel the "undercurrent". A lot of bad dialogue is either characters spilling subtext on the surface or not having any subtext at all.

    • @PhantomFilmAustralia
      @PhantomFilmAustralia Před 6 měsíci +6

      It depends on the target audience, the style of movie, and the characters. Some characters are point-by-point on their intentions outlaying everything in their plan which is later juxtaposed to how the plan actually went. " Intent VS Outcome". Quentin Tarantino and Kevin Smith films are primary dialogue-driven with snappy quips, quotable one-liners, and monologues. It's an absolute meal for an actor that smacks of theatre. Some introverted characters are likely to internalize, and it's up to the actor to convey their intentions. A film like "No Country For Old Men" has a silent antagonist who only speaks if he deems it absolutely necessary. The audience has to "read" the character their gesture and behavior, much like a pantomime.
      Either make the dialogue either serve the narrative, be entertaining, or don't have it at all. Any dialogue that is either preachy or mere filler will irritate or lose an audience.

  • @CasperLCat
    @CasperLCat Před 6 měsíci +1

    This gentleman prefers “less is more” with dialogue, but there are also GREAT movies that are almost nothing BUT dialogue. Much of classic Hollywood film, all of Woody Allen, many of Tarantino’s great scenes, etc.
    When you analyze Sorkin’s A Few Good Men, EVERY scene is a dialogue scene; the major events, like Santiago’s death, have either already happened, or are presented in flashbacks, like the suicide of Col. Markinson. Maybe that’s why that movie FEELS like a classic Hollywood film.

  • @shadowmossentertainment7430
    @shadowmossentertainment7430 Před 6 měsíci

    A Playwright rules in his/her domain, but everyone, Producers, Directors, Actors...right down to the Boom Op 🙄, changes a Screenwriters work. Aaron Sorkin said (I'm paraphrasing), "I write just enough action to satisfy the audience so I can get back to the dialog". This video illustrates how, as a writer for the screen, several additional layers of skin is highly recommended.

  • @mattwilmshurst8456
    @mattwilmshurst8456 Před 5 měsíci

    I find Steve to be a fantastic youtube mentor.

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před 5 měsíci

      Cheers Matt! You are hearing from a guy that worked in the studio system and is also a writer himself.

  • @rossthoughts
    @rossthoughts Před 5 měsíci

    Characters ought to behave like they would in a given situation. I want to relate to them. The things they say I should find relatable. In a given moment being relatable might be more important than pushing the sequence of events forward.But sure, why not strive for both.

  • @Omnicient.
    @Omnicient. Před 5 měsíci

    It's like anything; sometimes sparse dialogue is required and sometimes it isn't. It depends on your characters and audience. If you're writing soap opera then it's mainly females who watch and they love nothing more than talk, talk, talk. Everything depends. I write sparse dialogue but only sometimes as it can be a bore to read and listen to. I write full bodied lyrical dialogue with a high concentration on freshness and surprise as it's a dream to read and listen to; I then know when to stop and return to sparse. The story/characters/setting tell us when one is appropriate and when the other isn't. Everything's about balance. Our main job is to keep audience attention; we all know how easy it is to move from one Netflix film or series to the next if we're not being hypnotised. Never forget the audience; think about them as much as the characters; we've thousands of points of reference; we know what they like and what they don't like; what they need and what they don't need.

  • @TheDuckHasArrived
    @TheDuckHasArrived Před 6 měsíci

    I really like this guy :)

  • @Doggieworld3Show
    @Doggieworld3Show Před 6 měsíci

    Bricks dont hit back!

  • @lindenstromberg6859
    @lindenstromberg6859 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Different rules for different mediums. This is one of the conflicts that occurs in the social media fanbases surrounding adaptations from works that have a lot of dialogue. All the stuff that gets cut down and the more cynical snobbish gatekeeper sorts whine about it at the top of their lungs, not understanding that the 36 minute dialogue scene they think should be preserved may work in a novel, not so much in a film or TV show. And it’s really annoying because it’s hard to find fanbases not infested by these hyper dramatic cynical gatekeeper sorts that won’t allow anyone to post anything positive without spamming up the thread. I wish more people understood: novels are works of words, and films/TV are visual.

  • @davidzeto2446
    @davidzeto2446 Před 5 měsíci

    I've believed everything he's said so far except when he said "great dialogue is Aaron Sorkin." I disagree with that with great prejudice.

  • @greyeyed123
    @greyeyed123 Před 6 měsíci +2

    The soul of wit is bla bla bla bla bla.

    • @sabster79
      @sabster79 Před 6 měsíci +1

      😂 that’s the opposite of brevity 😂

    • @greyeyed123
      @greyeyed123 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@sabster79 And the definition of irony.

  • @user-vt8br7uo3n
    @user-vt8br7uo3n Před 5 měsíci +1

    this is the diffrence between discribing and showing cause a picture is a thousand words while words are words but ok in the way one talks is a way of saying things as in the way one says something it means diffrent things ok shes hot to some that might mean shes beatiful to otheres shes over 96 degrees lil better shes fire as in shes hot or shes on fire cause shes fire ha get it
    and this just came to mind and im not even sure what this vid is about but that was my general idea and wtf nvm

  • @ceelothatmane9421
    @ceelothatmane9421 Před 2 měsíci

    I can’t help but disagree. My favorite movies are dialogue heavy

  • @UrbanOspreys
    @UrbanOspreys Před 6 měsíci

    I've got a script about a self-hating homosexual Klansman called Douglas who runs away to become a magazine editor. It's called "Everyone Else Is Bad". In terms of 'separating characters so they all don't sound the same' how can I delineate the mother's voice in his head?

  • @jordanrattanavong2655
    @jordanrattanavong2655 Před 5 měsíci

    Dialogue is a last resort? Remind me to never see this guy’s movies.

  • @WiLyO8
    @WiLyO8 Před 5 měsíci

  • @misterbonzoid5623
    @misterbonzoid5623 Před 15 dny

    Interesting that someone so eloquent about the artform of storytelling has such poor visual art permanently on his arm.

  • @wexwuthor1776
    @wexwuthor1776 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Not to be rude, but this guy is talking about teaching. And his IMDB is almost empty.
    Not a word about subtext.

    • @cyankoopa8111
      @cyankoopa8111 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Check the description of the video, it lists his credits far more extensively.

  • @strongerchood
    @strongerchood Před 6 měsíci +1

    Three specific screenwriters I love to base my dialogue on with a mix of my style are Quentin Tarantino, David Mamet, and Bill Wilder.