Barry Staff
Sometimes it’s an image, which I then juxtapose with another one – and a dialectic occurs, and you find a new synthesis and start exploring the possibilities presented. Sometimes it’s an idea that bugs you and you want to exorcise it in a script. Sometimes you conceive of a great character, and you then need to build an interesting plot around them. Sometimes you see someone out and about and you think what on earth they do; what are they after? Pretty much everyone sees interesting things, has insightful thoughts. But it’s only the writers who devote the time to pursuing those things into the concrete articulation of a story. One script yet to be written is held up because I can’t get it beyond a feeling that it’s too staid. It needs to be something fresher, more original to warrant the time spent on it. So, the idea stays in limbo, in the backrooms of my mind, until that substantive leap can be made.
Whatever you send out you should assume it’s going to go nowhere, even if they’ve requested a read. Without being big headed about it, if you think the piece is intrinsically good, look upon the lack of uptake as their loss, not to mention the world’s. Or it might simply be that it’s not the right fit for their slate – even though you’ve done the research to suggest that it is. Keep faith with your work – especially if it’s had recognition by colleagues, competitions and festivals. It means someone gets it. Working to imposed determinants should be savoured, not despised. Asking for a specific genre is obviously itself already a delimitation. A limited location or numbers of characters and I probably have something in my bottom drawer that fits. Or you can easily rework it – without losing anything; in fact you might even improve it. A short comedy? I’ve got some. A contained horror? Already have a well-regarded one available. If it’s a request for a MOW of a Hallmark-type, no can do. If low-budget is a requirement, most of mine are that – depending on who’s definition of ‘l-b’ is being used.