The Key to Writing Freakishly Good Dialogue | Video Essay

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  • Опубліковано 24 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,8 тис.

  • @localscriptman
    @localscriptman  Рік тому +2828

    The consultation thing is paused right now. There is no waitlist. I made this video when my channel was much smaller. If consultations come back, it will have to be a raffle of some kind. I cannot accommodate the thousands of people who want my help. Thanks 👽

    • @kaleidico
      @kaleidico Рік тому +64

      You’re writing advice has been extremely influential in how I restructured my story. Absolutely going to submit something thank you for this. Everything you’ve been making is gold.
      I also hope you continue the narrative you had started with the sponsorship segments, because my friend thought it was funny, which led to me discovering this channel.

    • @AlanWalkerFan1357
      @AlanWalkerFan1357 Рік тому +6

      Hallooo

    • @Harmonica821
      @Harmonica821 Рік тому +52

      How dare you take away my comment pin

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +61

      @@Harmonica821 Sorry I just can’t handle the emails anymore

    • @Harmonica821
      @Harmonica821 Рік тому +22

      @@localscriptman me too buddy, me too

  • @NaoyaYami
    @NaoyaYami Рік тому +12518

    I was about to comment about how insanely quickly I got invested in this Philip and Kima's drama but then the ad began and I couldn't stop laughing.

    • @rvermillion8188
      @rvermillion8188 Рік тому +663

      and Kima said “what? what are you talking about” 😂😂

    • @dri4nr4dit37
      @dri4nr4dit37 Рік тому +357

      Really wasn't ready for that ad, nearly choked myself 😭

    • @milesbaby1267
      @milesbaby1267 Рік тому +153

      I got caught so off guard I was questioning reality

    • @flejj5148
      @flejj5148 Рік тому +25

      😂😂😂

    • @simeonsocha996
      @simeonsocha996 Рік тому +52

      Best ad read ever 😂

  • @sabsdelgado
    @sabsdelgado Рік тому +31071

    This is the greatest sponsorship integration of all time

    • @racool911
      @racool911 Рік тому +859

      I wholeheartedly agree

    • @kineticwayss
      @kineticwayss Рік тому +1407

      100% caught me off gaurd lol

    • @kaiepstein
      @kaiepstein Рік тому +1073

      That was without a doubt, the hardest I've laughed out loud in a very long time.

    • @osanneart9318
      @osanneart9318 Рік тому +240

      seamless!

    • @IsaSaien
      @IsaSaien Рік тому +642

      I was beginning to cry a bit because of how relatable her pain was and then that line dropped and I literally screamed fuck you at my phone and started laughing like a maniac

  • @knockonwall
    @knockonwall Рік тому +3685

    "conflict is the state in which characters reveal things about themselves"
    Is a great quote

    • @DarkAgent
      @DarkAgent Рік тому +26

      I had the same thought!

    • @xavierthomas5835
      @xavierthomas5835 7 місяців тому +21

      It's much like how the Bible reveals alot of things without saying them. After all, as much as it is inspired by the Lord of all, it is written by men. They speak with certain points in mind, to describe certain events in certain ways, and to deliver information clearly and concisely. If we only ever look at the text, we miss subtext and pretext.

    • @harryking_
      @harryking_ 6 місяців тому +6

      @@xavierthomas5835 L response

    • @skorupigo5544
      @skorupigo5544 6 місяців тому

      ​@@harryking_L criticism

    • @lunyxappocalypse7071
      @lunyxappocalypse7071 5 місяців тому +7

      @@xavierthomas5835 Exactly, the stories of the past informs the hope of the future.

  • @auliamate
    @auliamate Рік тому +8579

    Can we get an F in the chat for our girl Kima? Her man wasn't just leaving her for Icarus, but he is also a Skillshare salesperson. Completely devastating, and then he went and told her her jaw stank! Oh she must be in shambles, utter shambles!

  • @Eric-jh5mp
    @Eric-jh5mp Рік тому +6979

    The fact that the ad read was so hilarious to me just shows how well the writing of that scene really draws you into these characters. That's so genius and I respect it soo much.

    • @BattleBladeWarrior
      @BattleBladeWarrior Рік тому +321

      And I love that you can still hear the girl in the background going "What?!? Who are you even talking to"

    • @wespicedmemes
      @wespicedmemes Рік тому +45

      Marvel movies abuse this however to the point you become numb and nothing no longer matters to the story

    • @litarogers3984
      @litarogers3984 Рік тому +58

      ​@@BattleBladeWarrior ye ill be honest... i kinda wanted 2 see the rest of the scene.... and also might rly enjoy the movie they came from where the guy slowly realizes he did love her, and finds out he can only communicate with her once once hes in space so he spends the 8 years making a rly heartfelt note while she gets more and more over him, but not so much that when the letter arrives she doesnt immediately enter the space academy

    • @BattleBladeWarrior
      @BattleBladeWarrior Рік тому +6

      @@litarogers3984 Same, that would've been cool!

    • @impactframes6514
      @impactframes6514 Рік тому +4

      That was c l e a n

  • @Inoperable335
    @Inoperable335 11 місяців тому +2589

    this is how you fucking teach.
    explaining a premise, explaining why its used, showing what its like when it isnt used, and then showing what its like when it IS used.
    if my English teacher thought this way, my stories in class would have been so much better.

    • @soysource3218
      @soysource3218 8 місяців тому +76

      UA-camr educating more effectively than a teacher is so 21st century.

    • @serZemain
      @serZemain 5 місяців тому +43

      @@soysource3218 i hope the 22nd fare better than us

    • @cclockwize
      @cclockwize 3 місяці тому +22

      "This class has been sponsored by Skillshare."

    • @fairyfarms
      @fairyfarms 2 місяці тому +7

      and it’s just much more interesting ^_^ i think it’s harder to listen to teachers since they often don’t care about making their class engaging and more about just covering their scheme (which makes sense, but still)

    • @galacticlava1475
      @galacticlava1475 Місяць тому +3

      One could say that this video had freakishly good dialogue

  • @donnieblue420
    @donnieblue420 Рік тому +10976

    "I still remember the last words he ever said to me before walking out of my life forever."
    "What did he say?"
    "I-I can't, it still hurts to think about..."
    Her therapist jotted down another note with a vacant expression. He pushed his glasses back up the bridge of his nose. "What did he say? The healing process can only begin once you've fully internalized the memories that have caused you such pain. What, did he say?"
    She swallowed, grimacing as if the memory itself had a bitter taste.
    "This... this video..."
    The therapist leaned forward, his expression almost hungry with anticipation. "Finish it."
    "This video... is sponsored by Skillshare..."

    • @moreaudracula6156
      @moreaudracula6156 Рік тому +495

      This is brilliant... 🥲

    • @jasonlewis4438
      @jasonlewis4438 Рік тому +1

      ​@@moreaudracula6156Nah Brilliant's a different sponsor

    • @OakPotatoo
      @OakPotatoo Рік тому +251

      why is the therapist hungry

    • @appads
      @appads Рік тому +439

      ​@@moreaudracula6156 No, that's the sponsor of a different video.

    • @squidaker
      @squidaker Рік тому +51

      ​@@appads
      lol underrated

  • @joanne1168
    @joanne1168 Рік тому +4414

    i love that the fake dialogue looked just like something i could hear in a bad movie or read out of a shitty wattpad fic

    • @justflavio3260
      @justflavio3260 Рік тому +360

      or just a normal Rick and Morty dialogue.

    • @hiiambarney4489
      @hiiambarney4489 Рік тому +248

      @@justflavio3260 to break the rules so consistently, you gotta know them

    • @blobpoop457
      @blobpoop457 Рік тому +165

      Wattpad symptom is describing too much what a character is thinking instead of writting it through dialogues. I mean books are different than movie lines but I feel like some amateur stories are too mind-descriptive

    • @xavierthomas5835
      @xavierthomas5835 7 місяців тому +44

      ​@blobpoop457 they want to be deep and communicate their ideas thoroughly, but media isn't about just writing things that entertain YOU. Which is where alot of writers fail. If you want to just have some mind or eye candy, don't post your intimate ideas where everyone can see them. If you want to show everyone a story you think is really great, you have to be able to grab, hold, and communicate your ideas and thoughts through text and imagery, if that's your thing. Otherwise you get the exposition hammer.

    • @ovgem
      @ovgem 7 місяців тому

      @@xavierthomas5835fanfiction is much more self serving than published works imo, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing

  • @Zethin64
    @Zethin64 9 місяців тому +280

    "This video is sponsored by Skillshare."
    You did not just drive me to tears through an instructional exercise and then slap me with *that* 💀

  • @Johnathonaaron
    @Johnathonaaron Рік тому +3963

    I don't think i laughed as genuinely and deeply in the last year as when he said "this video was sponsored by skillshare". I don't know who you are, but you sir are a screenplay genius. Literally in tears right now.

    • @LindyLime
      @LindyLime Рік тому +122

      Same here. And the girlfriend freaking out in the background.

    • @Flairis
      @Flairis Рік тому +41

      @@LindyLime friend*

    • @LolLol-wc1fi
      @LolLol-wc1fi Рік тому +13

      💀💀

    • @patche
      @patche Рік тому +17

      SAME I HAD TO PAUSE THE VIDEO TO BURST OUT LAUGHING BC I DIDNT EXPECT THAT LMAO

    • @treemuger1
      @treemuger1 Рік тому +14

      @@LindyLime fr i felt so bad for her lmao like could you imagine "Wtf did you just slip into a psychosis?!"

  • @rangamullet5815
    @rangamullet5815 Рік тому +7315

    I was waiting for the scene to end with Phillip saying "No it wasn't" and then you hit us with something even more devastating, an adread.
    You connected the audience to kimas feelings, we too are betrayed and told our investment in the scene wasn't real. good writing lol

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +1343

      Bwahaha thanks I can’t express how proud I am of that gag. I appreciate the support!

    • @jo-ui3ly
      @jo-ui3ly Рік тому +569

      @@localscriptman Genuinely one of the funniest ad transitions I've ever seen, I rewatched it like three times lol

    • @browniebear
      @browniebear Рік тому +148

      I'm so glad Local went with the silence as Philip's response. A "No it wasn't" response wouldn't be bad, it's just not as impactful and real as the silence. Elite craft of writing yet it was just an exercise, Local is a writing prophet!

    • @RedBirdRabbit
      @RedBirdRabbit Рік тому +99

      @@localscriptman involuntarily whispered "god DAMN it" under my breath and burst out laughing, gg that was VERY good

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +67

      @@loturzelrestaurant I like big criticism essays when I actually learn practical skills from them. But otherwise I’m disinclined

  • @azureNotsure
    @azureNotsure Рік тому +573

    That sponsorship segment. That small section. That transition. That’s all I needed to see to know that you most definitely know how to write freakishly good dialogue

  • @FabbrizioPlays
    @FabbrizioPlays Рік тому +4851

    You hammering home that "vibes don't write stories" in every video will single-handedly save an entire generation of writers, mark my words. It's such a legitimate epidemic.

    • @LisaEifie
      @LisaEifie Рік тому +220

      Depends on what you're trying to achieve. If you look at studio Ghibli films, plenty of their movies have moments connected by vibes where nothing really happens

    • @jojbenedoot7459
      @jojbenedoot7459 Рік тому +445

      ​@@LisaEifiethat's because a lot of Ghibli movies are art books with vague stories attached to them lol

    • @katgreer6113
      @katgreer6113 Рік тому +322

      @@LisaEifie ghilbi has the advantage of a visual art to it.

    • @opalpersonal
      @opalpersonal Рік тому +28

      @@jojbenedoot7459 yikes

    • @jojbenedoot7459
      @jojbenedoot7459 Рік тому +191

      @@opalpersonal I mean I love those kinds of Ghibli movies, it's just that the art, vibe, and overall tone of them are much more important than the plot. In something like Kiki's Delivery Service, the plot isn't nearly as important as the overwhelming sense of coziness and beauty, so they can just get by on paper thin transitions between setpieces

  • @kingtut6243
    @kingtut6243 Рік тому +2798

    i'm not gonna lie my jaw kind of dropped when you mentioned the idea of putting emotional exposition through a human filter because i have been using that exact phrasing to describe this concept for years. before now i've never heard someone else describe it that way and it made me feel a little giddy to hear you use the same wording. i've had countless experiences on my own watching a movie and hearing a character explain how they're feeling in a way that doesn't feel natural or at all influenced by a subjective perspective and in my head i'm just like "bro forgot to put it through the filter 💀💀💀"

    • @sherbertshortkake6649
      @sherbertshortkake6649 Рік тому +109

      I have had that feeling. It is indeed an excellent feeling. I am glad that others may have the opportunity of enjoying this feeling. Please enjoy it to the best of your abilities while you can. And I will enjoy this slice of my sister's birthday cake.
      While I can.
      *AGGRESSIVE RUNNING*

    • @gljames24
      @gljames24 Рік тому +60

      Yeah, it seems like people have internal aspirations and things they are trying to avoid, but then they have to mesh that with the external sociopolitical environment around them to try and get what they want. I be thinking about this in terms of understanding personality, but it makes sense that it applies to dialog as well.

    • @viktoriab4293
      @viktoriab4293 Рік тому +6

      AHH that's adorable:DD

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 Рік тому +1

      @@gljames24 Suddenly it makes even more sense this guy is a giant personality theory nerd.

    • @What-ki4we
      @What-ki4we Рік тому +2

      I'm not into this filter thingy or watching any series or cinematography in general. But the thing that he mentioned has always been common sense to me since a kid. "How else can one make a masterpiece?" I confidently thought then, now I realize I never really moved my eyes from the Great and failed to appreciate the lesser but passionately crafted works.

  • @Sillay-Goose
    @Sillay-Goose 8 місяців тому +17

    That skill share plug was BRUTAL

  • @arzabael
    @arzabael Рік тому +1841

    “I don’t want it to be easy, I just want it to be real.” Good lord man. Chills covering me and tears wallowing. Good lord man.

    • @super_sentai9998
      @super_sentai9998 Рік тому +163

      this video is sponsored by skill share

    • @MasterYoshiOfficial
      @MasterYoshiOfficial Рік тому

      also yo breath stank

    • @stacklysm
      @stacklysm Рік тому +59

      "What?"

    • @Shroobi
      @Shroobi Рік тому +33

      might need one more good lord man in that sentence

    • @alexcrazy1492
      @alexcrazy1492 10 місяців тому +4

      I this uhhh put into words what I wasn’t able to

  • @aerie.the.artist
    @aerie.the.artist Рік тому +1498

    "Not key moments connected by vibes. Scenes." That hit right in the feels, man😢

    • @stephanefrediman2894
      @stephanefrediman2894 Рік тому +85

      I'm starting a new story and that's all I have. Felt personal 😅

    • @Pr0pheceye
      @Pr0pheceye 9 місяців тому +65

      My whole book is held together by vibes 😭😭

    • @ZurditaDinamita
      @ZurditaDinamita 7 місяців тому +51

      Guy is asking me for bricks and I'm here with some straws and wool 💀

    • @grayman2749
      @grayman2749 Місяць тому +3

      Screenplays are objectively unlike most other forms of stories.

  • @bio9leader60
    @bio9leader60 7 місяців тому +88

    As an autistic person, this has taught me that I somehow knew less about human people than I once thought.

    • @tonok_g8873
      @tonok_g8873 Місяць тому +17

      human people sound so funny lol. So you urself basically have no filter?

  • @scs998
    @scs998 Рік тому +738

    I was like for real feeling it on "I just want to know if it was real" and got slapped across the face with that ad read. Never been so close to tears to then be cackling like a jackal.

    • @stoianborissov2800
      @stoianborissov2800 Рік тому +56

      Same. The girl doing the voice acting did such a great job, so compelling I was tearing up ... And then WHAM. haha. And the smooth transition back to the video, chef's kiss

    • @tylonmcswain9431
      @tylonmcswain9431 Місяць тому

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @miketacos9034
    @miketacos9034 Рік тому +1593

    Dude I want more from this Icarus story. The way Philip rattles off facts about the mission also makes him seem a bit nervous and is such a realistic way to show his avoidant personality.

    • @kiltmaster7041
      @kiltmaster7041 Рік тому +174

      The reason why I was invested is... Phillip uses the exact same evasion techniques that I do when I'm avoiding an uncomfortable subject. I saw myself reflected in this character in a way that I don't normally. My investment wasn't just because the writing was competent. It was because it struck a very particular chord.
      but I'm in. I want to know more.

    • @thechoephix
      @thechoephix Рік тому +30

      Yeah, what happened next?
      Did it turn out his breath also kinda stinks?

    • @butchcassidy9791
      @butchcassidy9791 Рік тому +1

      @@kiltmaster7041 I guess that's why people unironically like creative products similar to the room.

    • @soysource3218
      @soysource3218 8 місяців тому +11

      Realistic dialogue is ridiculously effective at grabbing view retention.

    • @gabrote42
      @gabrote42 7 місяців тому +2

      So true. Bless the algorythm

  • @TheCoolcaspar
    @TheCoolcaspar Місяць тому +61

    8:40 I have never laughed harder for an adbreak 😂

  • @Harmonica821
    @Harmonica821 Рік тому +13552

    Remember kids, any crap can be good and deep as long as some youtuber makes a overanalytical video on it.

    • @sbilldmilk
      @sbilldmilk Рік тому +1192

      Remember kids, your comment is added to the US Constitution as law if it is pinned.

    • @Onceuponawriter
      @Onceuponawriter Рік тому +82

      touché

    • @Vizible21
      @Vizible21 Рік тому +157

      Says by someone who has an attention span of a tiktok kid.

    • @willpoweramv
      @willpoweramv Рік тому +52

      Finally someone said it

    • @jackieronimo8112
      @jackieronimo8112 Рік тому +322

      Remember kids, video deep crap any overanalytical be makes some on it, as can long good and UA-camr a.

  • @itstimconnors
    @itstimconnors Рік тому +1323

    Ive never written fiction and don’t plan on doing it anytime soon, but i love these videos.

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +101

      Thanks for the comment, I appreciate your support!

    • @cofromdiscord118
      @cofromdiscord118 Рік тому +43

      I still think the analysis is nice since it lets you engage more in the media you consume and to help you explain why you liked something or why you didn't. UA-cam really makes it easy to be an armchair anything

    • @justinacton8897
      @justinacton8897 Рік тому +8

      @@cofromdiscord118 Exactly! That’s why I love video essays like this, it helps you appreciate the art of good writing more.

    • @christianstephan7301
      @christianstephan7301 Рік тому +2

      Same here. It just helps me understand myself better, why some scenes feel to be better than others.

    • @d4s0n282
      @d4s0n282 Рік тому +1

      me be like LMAO, I watch so many fiction stuff, but I hate writing lol

  • @amusedcuriosity3370
    @amusedcuriosity3370 9 місяців тому +77

    My third time watching this video and man, I love it. So many people will say "there was too much exposition!" and it drives me crazy because what they're really saying is that there was bad/lazy exposition. You won't notice the exposition if it's good, it doesn't kick you out of the story. You'll just be there in the scene listening to people talk. And from a writer's perspective good exposition just feels like magic lol like consuming a story where the exposition is handled elegantly? Better than anything else in the world

    • @viperblitz11
      @viperblitz11 3 місяці тому +1

      300 IQ critics when a scene takes .003 seconds longer than the plot strictly requires

  • @Practicallypreposterous
    @Practicallypreposterous Рік тому +853

    15:10 the entire movie of Up revolves around this concept. The entire first act serves to absolutely soak Carl's house and every object inside with sentimental value and memories of his wife. The way he interacts with it throughout the movie resembles how he comes to terms with the death of Ellie: while at first it's hard to let go, and he desperately tries to fulfill what he believes to be his wife's dying wish, he eventually learns to move on and continue making new fond memories, leaving their old house at the waterfalls.
    Ironically, only in letting go he also sort of fulfills a wish he and Ellie shared: he has found a son in Russell

    • @zeusd3717
      @zeusd3717 Рік тому +38

      I never ever realized that, damn

    • @YEY0806
      @YEY0806 Рік тому +7

      You just made an already tearful movie more tearful. Congratulations

  • @TheCrunchifiedOne
    @TheCrunchifiedOne Рік тому +868

    That dialogue scene with Kima and Phillip is one of the best things I have seen this year. It sucked me in and I just keep falling deeper. Then you hit me with the freaking ad read ahahahah. Genius!

    • @317cmrogers
      @317cmrogers Рік тому +27

      Lmao yooooo fr! Im just over here like "Phillip! You're breaking Kima's heart!😢"

    • @abigeil2002
      @abigeil2002 Рік тому +19

      bro same I was so invested hahaha

    • @justsomeguy6240
      @justsomeguy6240 Рік тому +17

      Yeah. I want to see the actual end to this.

  • @AegixDrakan
    @AegixDrakan Рік тому +222

    Jeez you're right, this WAS freakishly good. Thank you for giving me some additional tools to use!
    That "she's supportive" line dropped with such bluntness that it really hurt, let alone "I don't want it to be easy, I want it to be real". Oof that one made my stomach flip.

  • @m0gi
    @m0gi Рік тому +998

    I was crying. That shit was do good.
    And then the sponsorship came in and I actually died.
    How the fuck could this man create such a deep complex dynamic between these characters in 2 minutes.. and I'm immediately invested enough to cry

  • @armedraptor5114
    @armedraptor5114 Рік тому +368

    My favorite scene was when the giant worm ate them both and said ""Mmmmm. Je mange." Very profound and eye opening to abstract concepts such as France. Looking forward to more of your work.

  • @dameanvil
    @dameanvil Рік тому +705

    00:27 📝 Dialogue is the last step in the writing process, after central idea, characters, conflict, and scenes.
    00:42 📝 In screenplays, if information isn't communicated within a scene, it's not communicated at all.
    01:24 📝 Dialogue is a tool to communicate information in a story, including factual, emotional, and cultural details.
    02:35 📝 When writing dialogue, consider how the character would naturally communicate information in their situation.
    03:03 📝 To effectively write dialogue, list all the information a scene needs to communicate.
    03:58 📝 Define your character's priorities in a scene to serve as a filter for their dialogue.
    04:41 📝 Characters should have clear objectives in a scene to guide their dialogue.
    05:50 📝 Dialogue scenes should be situation-specific and interact with the location and props.
    08:27 📝 Conflict is essential in dialogue scenes to reveal character traits and advance the story.
    14:46 📝 Use subtext to add depth to dialogue scenes by having characters convey emotions indirectly.
    16:56 📝 Incorporate the "yes and" improv technique to keep dialogue scenes dynamic and engaging.
    17:49 📝 The creator's focus is on providing writing strategies and frameworks to help others improve their craft.

  • @kylepearce-obrien1021
    @kylepearce-obrien1021 Рік тому +706

    As a DM who hates exposition dumps, this is great for my D&D games as well. Thank you for this!

    • @MCbeccy89
      @MCbeccy89 Рік тому +12

      I'm glad I wasn't the only one who couldn't help but look at this through the d&d lens. As a player, I'm always wanting to find more ways to be dialogue interesting between players or npcs, since I always feel as though I don't do that great of a job. But these sort of things like using their personality to be their psuedo 'filter' for their emotions is such a fascinating idea. I definitely need to keep more an eye on that when I play.

    • @butchcassidy9791
      @butchcassidy9791 Рік тому +2

      I like to hide my exposition in obscure books and PDAs hidden around the encounter areas. That way, I get to chuckle at my Player's misfortune - because of course that exposition is going to help you with the boss fight - and they get this feeling of wonder and mystique. Conversely, people in my campaigns rarely talk, as I write dialogue about as well as George Lucas does. But man, can I write a short story. Which game do you DM? Edit: After watching the Philip and Kima segment, I have come to the conclusion that I am, in fact, a good dialogue writer, even if my dialogue can feel stilted at times. Hiding behind Exposition is good for the world and bad for my growth as a writer. Thanks to both of you for helping me find my mojo!

    • @TheImmoralAuthor
      @TheImmoralAuthor Рік тому +1

      ​@@butchcassidy9791 yeah man exposition can be bad for a story. I write novels and exposition can be very boring to read and just a crutch for the writer. Anyway, good on ya man for believing in your ability, keep going.

    • @VaSoapman
      @VaSoapman Рік тому +3

      For me it helped me realize that I had the exact opposite problem.
      All my NPC's have been JUST a lens. With nothing useful to say or any information to hand out.

    • @adamripplinger6035
      @adamripplinger6035 Рік тому

      I didn't realize you have to write your dnd characters that sounds cool

  • @paddyq3235
    @paddyq3235 Рік тому +1643

    I love the growing list of "writing advice" from said "writing gurus" that you have been calling out for its bs. Also your filter and process for dialogue and writing scenes was enlightening. That process has always been something I struggle with so I greatly appreciate your advice. Also, also the dialogue scene you used made me really want to hear the rest of that story. Also, also, also the transition into the sponsor read was amazing 😂

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +161

      Thanks dude I appreciate that. And yeah that transition was something I’ve wanted to do for a while and I finally got a golden opportunity - glad you enjoyed

    • @fluffywolfo3663
      @fluffywolfo3663 Рік тому +54

      said "Writing gurus" are BS cause they so often say there's some kind of rules of writing. My point of view is that there _are_ no hard-and-fast rules as long as you have a good reason to break them.
      Case in point, what if I construct the story in a way that means people really, _really_ want the exposition? Lke in Chernobyl?

    • @johncra8982
      @johncra8982 Рік тому +17

      Agreed. I have a dream that one day, we will have a constitutionally enshrined right to beat the dogsh*t out of anyone that says "show don't tell" unironically 😇😌🙏

    • @holyleech2159
      @holyleech2159 Рік тому +52

      @@fluffywolfo3663 The rules are important, but it is more important to know why the rules exist, so when you do break them, you are aware why you are doing it.

    • @fluffywolfo3663
      @fluffywolfo3663 Рік тому +20

      @@holyleech2159 you know what they say - you gotta know the rules before you can break em.
      Good example would be Welcome to Night Vale - the “rule” is “describe as good as possible,” while WTNV actively… refuses to describe wherever it’s scary or funny, or makes deliberately silly descriptions to screw with you. And that helps heighten both the fear and absurdity of it all.

  • @MagorzataSzutowicz
    @MagorzataSzutowicz 5 місяців тому +21

    The moment the name "Skill Share" was mentioned was the moment I paused. I screamed. I pressed the "subscribe" button and went back to watching. No one has ever done anything like this to me. I'm excited for more videos.

  • @ShuyaTheDark
    @ShuyaTheDark Рік тому +679

    That little story about Phillip and Kima reminded me of the timeless classic "A man goes to the store to buy milk". You prepare your basic information, and then you enrich it with your character's thoughts and feelings.

    • @redacted144
      @redacted144 Рік тому +19

      and with a dash of props interaction, naturally put a timer into the scene, set a staged urgency and fully developed the characters' inner emotions.
      top notch screening.

    • @sateleim
      @sateleim Рік тому

      this is how i write any dialogue i do for anything i write, although i have a hard time getting that method to flow continuously with a story

  • @Andromalius5286
    @Andromalius5286 Рік тому +713

    I'm no screenwriter, but genuinely, thank you so much. I've been struggling a lot with dialogue lately in my own writing and the way you've described your own methods just clicked so easily with me somehow. Definitely going to reference back to this vid a ton from now on as I try writing my own scenes.

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +42

      Thanks for your support! I’m glad my stuff helped

    • @Andromalius5286
      @Andromalius5286 Рік тому +29

      @@localscriptman Its funny too, I've been subbed to you for a bit and literally as I'm writing dialogue, this banger drops. You love to see it.

  • @stacklysm
    @stacklysm Рік тому +47

    Unironically, this is the most well integrated ad read in UA-cam history. It connects to the video topic while being hilariously out of pocket

  • @evec3138
    @evec3138 Рік тому +846

    As someone who’s had an ex *exactly* like Philip, its a testament to the dialogue that it put into words all the things I couldn’t name in my own head, even if it was just a silly segue into a skillshare ad. Well done sir

    • @TARMHeLL
      @TARMHeLL Рік тому +33

      Silly segue? (is that actually how you spell it, it feels wrong) It was the gosh darnit best segue i've ever seen.

  • @pedroalexandredillemburg3751
    @pedroalexandredillemburg3751 Рік тому +511

    8:39 you made me almost cry from laughter, never have I seen an ad break so funny, you're a truly masterful writer and director.

  • @LordFarKwadth
    @LordFarKwadth 7 місяців тому +23

    8:53 WOW! You win I’m watching

  • @chikari123
    @chikari123 Рік тому +637

    I don’t care what anyone says what changed my dialogue writing and depicting scenes that aren’t clunky in general is by talking to myself. I look insane having a conversation with myself and acting out dialogue but it WORKS. Its the best way ive been able to have shit come across as natural and human and something a real person would say. The problem I’ve seen with a lot of writing is that the back n forth between characters is like someone trying to do a stand up routine it’s so fucking cringe. Rick n morty for example has this habit of only initiating dialogue or setting up something on purpose so Rick has something clever to say, modern day equivalent of a laugh track and looking at the camera with a smirk while crossing your arms. I’d rather be cringe privately and do my process of working out dialogue than post cringe.

    • @christopheraguirre1418
      @christopheraguirre1418 Рік тому +44

      Tremendous comment i dont like it

    • @chikari123
      @chikari123 Рік тому +31

      @@christopheraguirre1418 LMAO my work here is done

    • @PhoniexStudio
      @PhoniexStudio Рік тому +73

      "I'd rather be cringe privately and do my process of working out dialoug then post cringe"
      This quote goes hard

    • @landmindssoul4636
      @landmindssoul4636 Рік тому +19

      My brother or sister. Your not alone. I thought I was. It just more raw. And I think you just summed up my dislike for Rick n Morty dialogue or in general alot of adult cartoons. They just sound so monotone

    • @chikari123
      @chikari123 Рік тому +23

      @@landmindssoul4636 Oddly enough although it likes to satirize and poke fun at the sitcom structure and formulaic it tends to fall into that one the nose bordering on groan worthy dialogue that is just the writer on their soapbox. Its so clunky and shit that i would’ve quoted on fb during my edgy phase in hs. That diatribe Rick goes on about love was so out of place I had to think man if someone talked liked that irl they would be bullied.

  • @opalpersonal
    @opalpersonal Рік тому +722

    for me, character thoughts and interaction are the bread and butter of my stories. it doesn't matter how elaborate a world you have if your characters feel like cardboard, and it doesn't matter how simple a scene is if your characters are colorful enough to fill it entirely with interest.

    • @oompalumpus699
      @oompalumpus699 Рік тому +60

      This. SO MUCH.
      I love sci-fi but a lot of stories in that genre suck because the characters are so bland.
      Some stories have great worldbuilding but the characters just vomit Wikipedia paragraphs at each other.

    • @AndersonMallony-EricCF
      @AndersonMallony-EricCF Рік тому +3

      Yea sometimes character interactions carry the soul of a movie/series. Marvel Studios uses that in some of their films and it works, like Infinity War.

    • @opalpersonal
      @opalpersonal Рік тому +3

      @@AndersonMallony-EricCF personally i'd say they do the opposite... especially in infinity war...

    • @AndersonMallony-EricCF
      @AndersonMallony-EricCF Рік тому +2

      @@opalpersonal you're objectively wrong tho

    • @opalpersonal
      @opalpersonal Рік тому +1

      @@AndersonMallony-EricCF oh yeah? and how might that be? ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

  • @mobeanie
    @mobeanie Рік тому +106

    I think there’s something to be said for minimalistic dialogue. Sometimes a cigar is a cigar. Indie writers straight out of film school can have a certain style where every word of dialogue needs to fill a specific narrative purpose, and ends up sounding uniquely disjointed and unnatural, not like a real conversation. More skilled writers and directors seem to know how to do this well and balance the needs of the story with the elements of immersion. Not at all a professional writer, so curious what others think!

    • @MackPaddy
      @MackPaddy 8 днів тому

      Do you spend a lot of time thinking about cigars? LOL By that I mean, everything is symbolic, including dialogue and structure.

  • @kylespevak6781
    @kylespevak6781 Рік тому +299

    "Yes and" Is something people need to understand in everyday conversation. So many times I find myself talking to people and it feels like an interview because I'm being given answers and not anything to leap off of

    • @Zurvanox
      @Zurvanox Рік тому +46

      I give short answers when i want the concersation to be over.

    • @gabrote42
      @gabrote42 7 місяців тому +1

      I always ramble and make sure the other person is engaged by asking if the understand an example or metaphor before explaining a general rule, and generally pass the ball back. It's rare that someone forgets to return the ball, but if they do, I often point out that they stalled the convo and ask follow-ups until I get THEM to ramble

    • @pencilonpaper1026
      @pencilonpaper1026 2 місяці тому +1

      oops

  • @4xdblack
    @4xdblack Рік тому +863

    I'm a novelist and this was some seriously profound stuff. Other writers wish they could teach as good as you. I'll have to rewatch this video several times to truly absorb what I've heard, but I'm excited to put it into practice!

    • @shabalaogrreeetzel.4418
      @shabalaogrreeetzel.4418 Рік тому +7

      How is it for you? I've been using it a lot and it's such an amazing technique

    • @4xdblack
      @4xdblack Рік тому +26

      @@shabalaogrreeetzel.4418 I haven't started a new project to practice it on yet, but I'm noticing patterns in my current projects that follow these same principles, which is really exciting. Confirmation bias is my favorite bias.

    • @shabalaogrreeetzel.4418
      @shabalaogrreeetzel.4418 Рік тому +7

      @@4xdblack Good luck bro, it'll definitely turn out awesom!!!!!

    • @dbappio
      @dbappio Рік тому +15

      same, i'm writing a webcomic and while i believe i've been well-versed in knowing how to "show, don't tell", this video has given a broader perspective on what to do going forward. i will definitely be utilizing the points in this video and i wish you guys do well in your creative journeys too 🫡

    • @4xdblack
      @4xdblack Рік тому +5

      @@shabalaogrreeetzel.4418 Suddenly got a massive dose of inspiration, and I know exactly what I'll be putting into practice this time round.

  • @Bordigolli
    @Bordigolli 9 місяців тому +26

    “Not key moments connected by vibes” wow I feel seen.

  • @Justin-gv3lp
    @Justin-gv3lp Рік тому +1524

    If your solution is “I’ll have the funny character say the funny thing, you’re not grounding the line in anything meaningful.”
    This man needs to be in every writers room of every TV show currently on the air.

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +351

      I'm currently squatting in the AMC basement and venturing upstairs at night to steal food from the breakroom

    • @FrostburnVID
      @FrostburnVID Рік тому +71

      ​@@localscriptman I pray for your sake the AMC death squad legal ninjas don't find you

    • @evah3136
      @evah3136 Рік тому +22

      I'm storyboarding a comic (just for fun :) ) and this nailed the thing that was bothering me about my own writing without quite being able to put my finger on it. AND he proposes a workable solution.

    • @lilyofluck371
      @lilyofluck371 Рік тому +15

      You might have a character who says funny things to ignore the drama of a situation, but that's still more context than just "funny." You almost want to think about _why_ they are some character trait that way you can better know where to utilize certain traits and when not to... Just some thoughtsa

  • @wolflowow
    @wolflowow Рік тому +784

    Fun fact : I am french and, as a non-native english speaker, I'm having a hard time following through your rather intensive speech rate. So for the last few weeks, I have been watching your whole playlist at 0.75 speed and now it's perfect. Except for the few times when you flow deccelerates and you start sounding like a teacher on Quaalude. Anyway, I really enjoy watching your content, mindblowing quality !

    • @zarbi64
      @zarbi64 Рік тому +7

      Il parle pas si vite t'abuses

    • @sinocelt
      @sinocelt Рік тому +5

      Il parle vite, oui, mais clairement. Je n'ai pas eu de problème à comprendre.

    • @wolflowow
      @wolflowow Рік тому +8

      @@sinocelt la vitesse réduite de 25% me permets d'enregistrer les informations plus efficacement, en dehors de ça je n'ai aucun souci avec son élocution, qui est très claire.

    • @vicentezavala9274
      @vicentezavala9274 Рік тому +4

      So you are the giant worm huh

    • @wolflowow
      @wolflowow Рік тому +8

      @@vicentezavala9274 Hello, what do you mean ?

  • @abbierose2278
    @abbierose2278 Рік тому +34

    I'm gonna cry. So much writing advice makes me feel stifled and stuck. They all start out telling you "just start writing" and then don't give you any meaningful advice until you get to the editing phase, which leaves me feeling stranded. But you point out everything I'm missing and give me a system to get where I need to go. I finally feel like I have a path forward with hope of creating something that'll actually turn out resonant and meaningful and... maybe good.

  • @GreyReBl
    @GreyReBl Рік тому +763

    "Sometimes I'm accused of: thinking I know better than professional writers."
    ...Once upon a time, I would read the latest works I could find in a library or bookstore. I wanted to understand their technique, what made those books professional. Because surely professional writers knew what they were doing compared to silly randos in the internet, right? Ahaha. I was wrong. So, so wrong. I've come out with the understanding that professionally written books with the bestselling award stamped on the cover were somehow worse than fanfiction. Seriously.
    I had always thought it was something about the writing environment. Those who go straight into professional writing seem to write a book appealing to the market yet offer little else. But in fanfiction, you are free to experiment, free to explore new ideas, free to dive into the fan theory rabbit hole, and free to spend hours crafting the perfect scene for your favorite ship. The biggest fanfic writers I knew would have pages of author's notes MALDING on how much effort they spent on a scene, learning the trade and from others as much as they could, and yet still come out unsatisfied with what they wrote as they would realize more and more of their mistakes, that storycrafting could be technical in a manner beyond grammar and spelling. Here, fanfic writers had skin in the game.
    One time I browsed a forum where fanfic writers-some who already were or eventually became professionals themselves-bring their experience and techniques to the table, and share their advice. Advice that I realize is VERY similar to what's stated in this video. This was in the My Little Pony fandom.

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +251

      Yep there’s no such thing as legitimacy in art. People appeal to authority all the time and it’s clear they’ve never actually taken the journey themselves

    • @Ballchugger
      @Ballchugger Рік тому +16

      That forum sounds interesting, do you still remember the name of it or what website it's on?

    • @sfglim5341
      @sfglim5341 Рік тому +8

      @@localscriptman i struggle with appealing to authority or the populous a lot because i don’t know how to judge art on its own merits but thats just my own fault

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +68

      @@sfglim5341 Well to me it’s not about assigning a value judgement. I don’t
      teach people how to consume stories, I teach them how to create (via frameworks that have helped me accomplish my writing goals - consistency, accurate character psychology, internal logic, etc.) But most of my favorite stories have nothing in common with this system. Again, I’m not a part of the “you’re watching movies wrong” media literacy crowd - this is purely practical

    • @SirDeadPuppy
      @SirDeadPuppy Рік тому +14

      @@Ballchugger its called fimfic....read fallout equestria or end of ponies or...dame theirs alot of good ones the platinum crown sweetiebell Chronicles...

  • @Zeemyth
    @Zeemyth Рік тому +611

    Wow. Not only did you have an unbeatable ad segue, but the way you've honed in your tbf blunt, efficiently explained advice and knowledge is great. Every time you make a video I step out of it knowing waves more than any other writing channel I've seen. Best vid yet man

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +37

      Thank you! That means a lot, at this point I’m just afraid I’ll run out of things to talk about. Dialogue was one of the last big areas I hadn’t addressed

    • @Zeemyth
      @Zeemyth Рік тому +6

      @@localscriptman I'm sure there's always a few ways to keep a stream of things to talk about by honestly just answering questions. Say you had people ask more specific or even general questions to you every few videos or more, answering them in depth like you do could be super insightful

    • @savstinks6847
      @savstinks6847 Рік тому +7

      I've been living my entire life thinking that "segue" is spelled "segway" 😔🤌. Turns out "segway" is a literal object 😅

    • @MissEvieYT
      @MissEvieYT Рік тому

      oh zeemyth! hi! love your videos, some of the most creative and interesting stuff anyone's making with Minecraft

  • @kingster14444
    @kingster14444 5 місяців тому +126

    0:01 I can't believe I'm listening to a non book writer smh

  • @MajorTomFisher
    @MajorTomFisher Рік тому +216

    One of my criticisms of the most recent season of Stranger Things were these scenes where it was very obvious that a "dialogue scene" was beginning because the camera would zoom in on the characters, play some slow music and the characters would start talking about their romantic relationships. The most notable one is when Steve and Eddie are in the upside-down and they start talking about relationships right after (if I remember correctly) they've been in a bloody fight that critically injures Steve. Guys, I feel like talking about your love lives is the _last_ thing you would or should be doing in such a risky situation?
    The thing is, this happens multiple times with the characters where the characters don't have anything to do but walk or drive, so this dialogue isn't integrated into a scene where the characters are doing something critical to the plot. It's just "this is the scene where the characters update you on who they want to bone and why the current state of affairs prevents them from doing so".

  • @mrwafflez7211
    @mrwafflez7211 Рік тому +83

    The cut to the ad is genuinely the funniest thing ever done on this platform

  • @themaincharacter420
    @themaincharacter420 3 місяці тому +5

    The interaction between kima and philip was so good it got me wanting more

  • @xsomili5501
    @xsomili5501 Рік тому +162

    8:44 not her being confused in thebackground xD

  • @dancronin5691
    @dancronin5691 Рік тому +289

    Dear Local,
    Your dialogue was so good that it made me spent the last week thinking about it from time to time when I was supposed to be doing assessments. Please make your videos pop in my suggestion box at a more convenient time in my life so that I'm not thinking about how to make good dialogue.
    Kind regards,
    Dan

  • @safegourd
    @safegourd Рік тому +15

    My creative writing professor expressed a similar idea in one of his lectures - his example was a date where the bf kept on talking about how depressed he was because he knew the gf wanted going to break up with him & he wanted to avoid the conversation. But I love how you connected it to constructing the rest of the story. That really made it click for me. The class I took was for students who had finished a short story or taken a lower level creative writing class, and I had done neither, so I definitely have some fundamentals to catch up on. Thank you for your help!

  • @jonathanmain59
    @jonathanmain59 Рік тому +270

    I love the entertainment and efficient communication of these videos so much.

  • @blueblimp
    @blueblimp Рік тому +238

    The way you worked in the year 2097 was interesting. I've heard a lot of dialogue where one character says to another something they both know, and it sounds awful, but it's also not easy to fix, because realistically they most likely wouldn't talk about it at all in the scene.
    "What's the current year" is an extreme example. It's the kind of information that I'd imagine coming from a TV broadcast, maybe, but not from a character. Yet you found a way to get characters talking about years just far enough that they need to be named yet close enough that we can figure out roughly what the current year is. Very artful.

    • @vulpinemachine
      @vulpinemachine Рік тому +8

      This is actually a REALLY tricky thing for good scifi or fantasy writing where there is so much technology and/or magic and/or history/culture/lore that differs from our world and yet most of it from the characters' point of view is irrelevant, mundane, trivial, uninteresting, and widely known. It's just as bizarre for a character to take time out of their day to explain a teleporter to another character who lives in that era as it would be for a character in a present day story explaining how a coffee brewing machine works. I mean, yeah from our point of view the teleporter is some real "gee whiz" technology, but it's boring and common to them. I'm sure a coffee brewing machine is like magic to people from the medieval period. But yeah, no one today is going to explain that to anyone but a child and the same goes for future tech or magic or whatever. So in a lot of ways good scifi and fantasy writing is not just about crafting a decent story (because you still have to do that too!) but also about how to sneak tons and tons of information (if relevant) into the narrative without it being annoying or info dumping or just stupid in dialogue or whatever. It takes some real creativity and it isn't for the faint of heart.

  • @rocketsniper8726
    @rocketsniper8726 4 місяці тому +6

    The scene to ad transition is such a freakishly good gag

  • @animuswonder
    @animuswonder Рік тому +344

    i’ve been just downloading tons of writing data into my brain to create a comic, and this video actually is the first one to directly show solutions to my problem. i’ve got this group of passionate but also argumentative weirdos who *have* to work together to survive, when they disagree on how to go about surviving. i haven’t actually figured out how to expand their differences, but now i have to try
    weird how comic scripts and screenplays are so similar

    • @phoneypseudo
      @phoneypseudo Рік тому +24

      i'm in the exact same boat, i've been watching filmwriting essays and studying popular films to prepare for my comic! the parallels between the two medias are so undervalued. best of luck to you, i really hope you end up making it.

    • @bigwijdsljla
      @bigwijdsljla Рік тому +4

      this is exactly how i felt

    • @tacticstories7159
      @tacticstories7159 10 місяців тому +3

      I can remommend the channels: Terrible writing advice (For short term) and the Video the fall of Dr. Who. It takes 5 hours to get through, but it's the perfect example of what NOT to do.

  • @notthatserious480
    @notthatserious480 Рік тому +151

    Aspiring amateur author here, Novel writing is EXTREMELY different from screen writing IMO because they both deliver different end products. Where screen writing is merely a stepping stone to the final story portray, novel writing is the final product.
    When I first started novel writing, i leaned towards screenplay due to my background (and mind set quite frankly) being more geared towards telling stories through film. Everyone I showed my early writing to said it was like reading a script. They can visualize what’s happening incredibly well. My dialogue was incredible, my descriptions of locations, atmosphere, even the characters facial expressions were all spot on. But it lacked soul, substance, inner monologue and ‘getting in characters heads’ moments.
    Which is the opposite of what I thought film and good story telling in general was all about, show don’t tell. But in novels, you kinda have to tell everything your character or characters (depending on if you write with POV switches) is thinking in excruciating detail.
    In film, you have the crutch of the senses sight and sound to convey literally everything about a story. Plot, vibe, moral, what a characters feeling, emotions, back story. Etc. But novels only have words to do all the heavy lifting, so you have to go into crazy detail which means more fancy words and longer paragraphs. Subsequently, that’s what separates the good authors from the bad. All depends on how you utilize each and every word to your advantage in a interesting way.

    • @donkeydrangis216
      @donkeydrangis216 Рік тому +6

      I’m glad your dialogue was incredible.

    • @BuizelCream
      @BuizelCream Рік тому +3

      I have the same situation as you, especially when my messy zero drafts are essentially screenplay/comic scripts. But I'm writing a 1st person novel dual perspective, and I have been doubling down on improving my narration and descriptions, paragraphs and sentence structures and word choices just for this project.

    • @TitularHeroine
      @TitularHeroine Рік тому +6

      There are novels that are nothing but dialogue, and novels that are incredibly spare with detail.

  • @enderfire3379
    @enderfire3379 Місяць тому +13

    0:34 oof. that hurt

  • @DraconicKobold
    @DraconicKobold Рік тому +21

    8:32 That deadpan sponsored segment transition hits different.

  • @coomstick
    @coomstick Рік тому +152

    I think emotional filters is a good way to look at subtext in dialogue. I usually go in with "what does the character want/how does that immediately effect them" but writing out each emotional beat for each scene is a really good way to structure it. My beat sheets are short scene synopses which is probably not the way to go, but structuring beats like this really streamlines and focuses the process. I always found it hard to get from A to Z in terms of moving the plot forward with dialogue, I tend to stumble in the dark getting from beat to beat with exposition, but the wheels are already turning and this will really help me out with my next project, thanks

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +21

      Thanks Coomstick! Yeah like I said the filters mindset is quite a simplification, but it’s always helped me. Also, wording can be a subconscious thing too. And I don’t really touch on that but it’s an important distinction

    • @coomstick
      @coomstick Рік тому +6

      @@localscriptman yeah it's a lot of spinning plates haha

  • @mooselessness
    @mooselessness 8 місяців тому +8

    jaw dropped at 4:06. I LOVE this idea that the filter isn't a descriptor, but a statement of motivation. Where to begin. So much hackneyed writing comes from something the writer wants the character to be, or something they want the audience to feel. there are soooooo so so so s os so many scenes where characters just...start fighting. because that's DRAMA(tm). rather than motivating things by what the characters want at the time. I feel like using descriptors as filters rather than motivations is somehow stating what the author would like the character to be without really going inside their head.
    That said, I have to ask - everyone here - do you think there is interesting cinema without desire or conflict? I spend a lot of time trying to figure out the "rules" of art, but find myself equally frustrated once they feel clear. Can't we do something other that make people fight? what about coze, comraderie, relaxation, togetherness. do you think it's possible to write movies that aren't held together by desire and conflict?

    • @lacyperry4631
      @lacyperry4631 6 місяців тому +2

      I think desire and conflict are necessary for story telling, but probably not in the way you're imagining it. Think of desire simply as want. Our wants are what move us through our day. From something small and in the moment like "I want a milkshake" to something grand and long-term like "I want to start a business" our desires spring us into action. Conflict is better seen as an obstacle. An obstacle doesn't have to be a fight between people, it simply has to be something that gets in the way of your character and their desire. If you had a character want something and then instantly obtain it, that's not really an interesting story is it? We need for characters to struggle so that we can get invested and cheer them on.

  • @spoiler321
    @spoiler321 Рік тому +77

    A good tip for dialogue is to get into the scene as late as possible and get out as soon as possible, even before it's resolved. This makes the audience work to catch up and seeds anticipation. The next visual cut could then answer or set up the resolution.

  • @willowpets
    @willowpets Рік тому +16

    BRO I WAS ACTUALLY TEARING UP BECAUSE THATS EXACTLY HOW MY FIRST RELATIONSHIP ENDED AND THEN YOU HIT ME WITH SKILLSHARE

  • @blackdragon6188
    @blackdragon6188 9 місяців тому +5

    Yo the way he plugged skull share was epic

  • @ilovebeansprouts2600
    @ilovebeansprouts2600 Рік тому +87

    I can’t express how,,, real? that scene you made felt? something really important to me for any type of fiction is the dialogue, and what you wrote is what i wanna see in fiction more. you’re insanely talented man, amazing vid

  • @Teriyaka
    @Teriyaka Рік тому +170

    I swear I've gotten more genuine writing advice from like 3 of your videos than I have from ~100 podcast episodes/UA-cam videos featuring writing "gurus" that tend to spout the same 5 pieces of generic advice in different fonts. Your videos don't bore me out of my mind either, which helps a lot. I'm not sure what it is specifically but all your videos are very engaging, like you could spend 2 hours talking about what you had for breakfast this morning and I would be entertained the entire time.
    love ur vids king

  • @cosmic8437
    @cosmic8437 Рік тому +6

    Gad damn, you are the few people on youtube who actually know what they're doing.

  • @SomeUniqueHandle
    @SomeUniqueHandle Рік тому +45

    Thanks for explaining it as "putting it through a human filter." I've been struggling with some of my dialog seeming a bit off. I know each character's voice, but adding the idea of it also being a filter for how they see things really hit home. Most writing channels regurgitate the same points. This video really put things in a new light.

  • @theomonty
    @theomonty Рік тому +4

    that sponsorship integration made me subscribe

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +1

      Thank you theomonty, from one Minecraft UA-camr to another

  • @halfdeadfish
    @halfdeadfish Рік тому +10

    The effect the voice acting has in making a script believable shouldn’t be overlooked. Especially Anna! Seriously good acting

  • @Cityweaver
    @Cityweaver Рік тому +76

    Very good points. I was once helping a young writer who couldn't generate conflict and her only understanding was dialogue. Princess walks into a lavishly decorated room and tells a foreign prince that she'd rather run away than marry him! So he tells his guards to seize her! Oh, no, the story was never going to be her attempting to run away... no...
    It's a struggle to move beyond the vague concept of a plot into asking what is the verbal and physical interaction between two characters.

  • @dannymalkani
    @dannymalkani Рік тому +55

    This is powerful stuff, I found myself invested in that whole Icarus story until you rattled my jaw with the sponsor. Dialogue is something I've had issues with, nothing worse than re-reading my dialogue and realizing it looks like it was written by a child. Great video!

  • @kpr2
    @kpr2 8 місяців тому +2

    The ad read caught me completely off guard & cracked me up. Mad props to you!

  • @SarahMaeBea
    @SarahMaeBea Рік тому +41

    3:55 is the best comedic dialogue I've read, my goodness

  • @mentkansleyunitedstatesgov6364
    @mentkansleyunitedstatesgov6364 8 місяців тому +6

    I'm not even a screenwriter this guy's just gives good writing advice 😂

  • @soulevans7334
    @soulevans7334 Рік тому +45

    Your use of language is so precise. Every word feels so deliberate. You use the pen like a scalpel.

  • @byakugan2173
    @byakugan2173 Місяць тому +1

    The best advice I've heard about dialogue that I think of every time, is that all the characters need plausible deniability.
    No one is just going to expose everything they truly feel and really want because if they get rejected it would be devastating to their egos. Everyone hides what they want and what they feel behind layers of deniability so if they get rejected they can claim that they never really wanted that thing in the first place.

  • @frenchy3044
    @frenchy3044 Рік тому +62

    You clarify yourself at the start in regards to it not being about books, but you can use this for book writing too. Just because this is talked about in relation to a screenplay, doesn't mean the same concept can't be applied to a book.
    By the way, you helped me actually write better dialogue for a story I'm writing in my free time, that's why I'm saying this. Loved the video.

  • @Magni4cent_Pose
    @Magni4cent_Pose Рік тому +14

    It's nice to hear someone who doesn't actively revile exposition as a crime against humanity.

  • @firebrandr
    @firebrandr 5 місяців тому +2

    I’m a playwright, so dialogue is the supermajority of my work. This video is saved, I took notes, and now I’m going to watch through your whole channel. Thanks!

  • @Ahmed-jx6lf
    @Ahmed-jx6lf Рік тому +17

    8:37 GOT ME DYING FOR LIKE 4 CONTINUOUS MINUTES I CAN'T THIS IS GENIUS 😭😭😭

  • @Hint0Lime
    @Hint0Lime Рік тому +99

    This is, no holds barred, my favorite sponsored section transition I've ever seen on youtube. Just some icing on a very fun and interesting video on writing. Very much enjoyed this!

  • @minah8292
    @minah8292 8 місяців тому +2

    I’m glad this video wasn’t just a take. I’m an amateur screenwriter and I haven’t quite grasped how to write scenes or dialogue yet. I’ve seen your video on my feed for a long time but tried to ignored it; as much as I love arcane I didn’t feel like watching another video gushing over how amazing it is (I know it is). I finally gave in and was pleasantly surprised to find a video loaded with information and advice that is readily applicable to my own projects. Thank you!

  • @johnterpack3940
    @johnterpack3940 Рік тому +54

    This video was an epiphany. I have started writing things numerous times. But I am one of those maniacally analytical people, roughly zero EQ. I have no problem creating detailed worlds in my head, but they come out on paper like an encyclopedia entry. So I figured the ideas in my head were destined to stay there. The way you explained filtering ideas was just brilliant. I now understand how I can take a dry bit of exposition and turn it into readable words. I'm not saying I'll whip out the next Great American Novel by the end of the month. But I do think I now have a glimmer of hope that I can dust off some ideas and run them through some filtering algorithms.

  • @Greykas
    @Greykas Рік тому +137

    8:35 You really had me getting into that scene, just to emotionally yeet me out of it like that. 😂 LMAO
    A testimony that it is indeed well written!

  • @jdpowell6405
    @jdpowell6405 Рік тому +26

    The sponsorship 4th wall break had me in stitches, and my coffee went up my nose. 😂 brilliant, especially with her dialogue.

  • @BetterDayz55
    @BetterDayz55 Рік тому +27

    16:50 Man, how could you leave us on a cliffhanger like that?? Now I'm DYING to know what happens in the pink scene!!..

  • @GuineaPigEveryday
    @GuineaPigEveryday Рік тому +33

    Dude, in the first 10 minutes you've already made easily one of the best video essays on dialogue. You've got instructive examples, and acted out too, and instead of you reading out the dialogue in one big monologue like other channels, you've got constant commentary. Not saying others' approach is bad, but I do really appreciate the way you've structured it. And I get the sort of feeling watching your little scene the same way I get rewatching clips from movies I like where it excites me how clearly well-handled it is.
    A perfect sort of example of this sort of emotional exposition scene for me personally is the scene on the Zeppelin from the Last Crusade where the father-son relationship is shown fantastically through good dialogue, even if clearly outlining their history together, the way your scene does.

  • @jel011
    @jel011 10 місяців тому +2

    I'm convinced LSM is an actual genius. I'm 29, and you realize at the end of your 20's that you've met almost every type of person in the world (if you've been paying attention, people start duplicating themselves around 30). If you're honest with yourself, you can tell who understands a topic and who is scared that they don't understand a topic.
    I would say LSM is beyond his years in wisdom, but that would be prescribing to the patently untrue notion that young people can't have wisdom based off their knowledge and experience.
    LSM 100% knows what he's talking about, and I'm jealous that I wasn't this mature when I was his age.

  • @lostshoe5058
    @lostshoe5058 Рік тому +37

    For someone who's trying to learn screenwriting to write his own short films but have no prior formal background in this sorta thing, this video has helped me tremendously. You explained the intricacies of a single scene in such a beautiful manner. Thank you very much

  • @Terrivian_Vess
    @Terrivian_Vess Рік тому +21

    I'm a dnd dm, and one of my player's has a lot of trouble translating information they know, into how the character would say it.
    I'm definitely sending them this video. The way you explain how to translate boring info dump through a filter to what a character would actually say and have a conversation about is really well put together. Time to test how idiot proof it is

    • @localscriptman
      @localscriptman  Рік тому +7

      Thank you, I have some dnd content on the way as well

    • @Terrivian_Vess
      @Terrivian_Vess Рік тому +2

      @@localscriptman Looking forward to it, and any other awesome content you release on the way, and probably after as well!

  • @jakeswierdfriend7204
    @jakeswierdfriend7204 5 місяців тому +2

    I think this is the single best ad transition I've ever seen in a UA-cam video.

  • @TheDormantPsycho
    @TheDormantPsycho Рік тому +51

    I really enjoyed hearing your thought process as you went through a specific example of creating dialogue. I would greatly enjoy more example walkthroughs of dialogue from scratch like that

  • @RoyalFusilier
    @RoyalFusilier Рік тому +59

    The example with Kima and Philip had huge Dead Space Motion Comic energy, with the exceptionally sketchy style, deadpan-naturalistic dialogue, and people being miserable about space things. That's high praise, because I absolutely adored that and recently watched it again. This whole video was exceptional, the idea of passing the actual content of the scene (what you want to communicate to the audience) past the 'filter' of the characters to produce dialogue and actions is so brilliant, your content has like seven complete brain-blast revelations that will hopefully help my output, and also just the videos are great generally.