[Quick Summary: When a female skater loses her skating partner, she and a hockey player team up as a doubles pair for the next Olympics.]
Q: What is "voice"?
A: "Voice" can be defined as "how a writer tells a story that is unique to him/her."
Q: Is voice truly evident on the page? That is, that a particular writer wrote a script?
A: Sometimes. It's not just a point of view, but HOW the writer leads you through the story.
Q: What is a good example of a strong voice?
A: One of the strongest voices I've seen is writer Tony Gilroy, whose scripts I'll be posting about in the upcoming weeks (both original and rewrite jobs).*
Q: What is it about Gilroy's voice that is so evident?
A: I think one would hire Gilroy because you like the way he tells a story. I like the way he balances tone in the dramas and action thrillers that he's known for.
He has distinct brisk pacing, a way of getting into the story fast, and sustaining suspense, all while being very clear about what the characters want.
Today's script is an unusual one:
- It's Gilroy's first produced film credit as a writer.
- It is also sort of a sports/romance/action story to boot.
- Though this is a younger Gilroy script, it has all his trademark pacing and clarity.
In the scene below:
- It is the1988 Calgary Olympics.
- There is a simplicity of two athletes of very different temperaments on a collision course.
- We are clear what each wants: to win.
- Note the economy of writing. In a very few words, we feel the urgency of the moment, yet the Doug and Kate's mutual annoyance of encountering an obstacle.
INT. THE BOWELS OF THE SADDLEDOME
An empty passageway. DOUG is lost. Sweating. Cursing. Charging blindly ahead. From above, the MUFFLED ROAR of the crowd. If he could claw his way up to the ice he'd do it.
CUT TO:
A DIFFERENT PASSAGEWAY
KATE striding ahead -- rounding a corner and -- SMACK! -- right into DOUG -- a head-on collision and it's no contest -- KATE sent flying on her ass --.
DOUG (barely stopping): -- Does this go up to the ice?
KATE stares at him, incredulous. "THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER" begins to play in the distance.
DOUG: Is this the way to the ice?
KATE (still sitting there): Why you barbarian jerk -- is that all you have to say?
Screw this, DOUG is already several steps away and moving.
KATE: Where were you raised, in a barnyard?
DOUG stops mid-stride. This kind of shit demands at least a moment of his time.
DOUG: Honey, where I'm from we stand for the National Anthem.
Now he's gone.
WHAT I'VE LEARNED: I was impressed by how much takes place in such little space on the page. It takes a lot of drafts to hone a script to get it into this shape.
The Cutting Edge (1992)(4/15/90 draft)
by Tony Gilroy
*Interestingly enough, the only other writer who had this strong of a voice (i.e., I could spot his invisible fingerprints on the page) is the legendary writer, William Goldman, who was one of Gilroy's mentors.