What scripts get positive notes?
An anonymous script reader has crunched the numbers and summarized the results in a fascinating screenwriting infographic.
profound_whatever goes on to explain it all in this reddit post: I’ve covered 300 spec scripts for 5 different companies and assembled my findings into a snazzy infographic.
“I give a RECOMMEND if I can’t find anything to criticize. The script has a great idea (or a great execution of an okay idea) and took chances. A RECOMMEND script doesn’t have to buck the tropes; it just has to use them well, and has to have some self-awareness as it’s using them. Edgar Wright and Rian Johnson are both aware of the tropes of their genres (film noir, cop movie, caper flick, zombie movie, sci-fi), but know how to use them in a fresh way. Tropes are tropes for a reason: they work.”
In descending order, the problems are:
- The story begins too late in the script
- The scenes are void of meaningful conflict
- The script has a by-the-numbers execution
- The story is too thin
- The villains are cartoonish, evil-for-the-sake-of-evil
- The character logic is muddy
- The female part is underwritten
- The narrative falls into a repetitive pattern
- The conflict is inconsequential, flash-in-the-pan
- The protagonist is a standard issue hero
- The script favors style over substance
- The ending is completely anti-climactic
- The characters are all stereotypes
- The script suffers from arbitrary complexity
- The script goes off the rails in the third act
- The script’s questions are left unanswered
- The story is a string of unrelated vignettes
- The plot unravels through convenience/contrivance
- The script is tonally confused
- The script is stoic to a fault
- The protagonist is not as strong as need be
- The premise is a transparent excuse for action
- The character backstories are irrelevant/useless
- Supernatural element is too undefined
- The plot is dragged down by disruptive lulls
- The ending is a case of deus ex machina
- The characters are indistinguishable from each other
- The story is one big shrug
- The dialogue is cheesy, pulpy, action movie cliches
- The script is a potboiler
- The drama/conflict is told but not shown
- The great setting isn’t utilized
- The emotional element is exaggerated
- The dialogue is stilted and unnecessarily verbose
- The emotional element is neglected
- The script is a writer ego trip
- The script makes a reference, but not a joke
- The message overshadows the story
My take: this makes a great list to check your script against.