Low Budget Screenwriting Part-2
Low Budget Screenwriting Part-2
THE NEXT 5 STEPS TO A LOW-BUDGET SCREENPLAY
In part one we looked at the
first five of the 15 Steps To A Low-Budget Screenplay culled from my Write
It Film It book, and here we are going to look at the next
five. Each one of these steps may require that you retrain your brain to think
in terms of budget. Though these 15 things are aimed at writing a low-budget
screenplay to sell, they also work for writing a low- or no-budget screenplay
to make yourself. We have looked at the importance of limited locations and a
great central location, and now we are going to look at the other important
things, like...
6) GENRE
The most important thing to
consider when writing a low-budget screenplay is the genre. Even if you are
writing an indie script to produce and direct yourself, genre is critical. The
“trap” that people fall into when writing a low-budget screenplay is to make it
a simple drama—a stage play with no explosions or anything else that’s
exciting... which gets into Dog Juice which we will discuss in
Part 3. The problem is—a producer is looking for a screenplay that will make
much, much more money than it costs to produce. Dramas? Don’t make money. Sure,
they win all of the awards, but for years now the big problem has been that
*Oscar-winning* dramas don’t make any money. Only a very small people want to
see them *after they have won Best Picture*. So your small dramatic screenplay?
No market. But take that same story and turn it into a horror movie or a
thriller or an action flick? Now there is a hungry market!
Genre is an envelope that can
hold almost every kind of story, and genre is one of the ways that your story
can reach a larger audience in the low-budget world. Even if you are making the
film, you will want the largest audience possible for your movie so that it
will make your money back. Filmmaker Gary King has a low-budget film
called Among Us (2017) about a husband
and wife trying to deal with the death of their child after an accident that
has left the husband confined to a wheelchair, and the guilt and anger and pain
that never really goes away. This could easily have been a typical small drama,
but the story is told as a horror movie with the ghost of their child haunting
them as they try to go on vacation to escape the pain. You get all of the
drama... plus the scares!
By putting your indie drama into
a genre, you can attract both the genre audience and the drama audience...
which is twice as many downloads on Amazon if you are self-distributing. One of
the things to consider is which genres are popular and which genres are dormant
or dead right now. Though some people think that there is no guarantee that
what is popular now will be popular by the time you finish the screenplay, it
takes a long time for a genre to die. They keep announcing that horror is dead
every couple of years, and then some horror movie comes out and becomes a big
hit... and horror is alive again!
Anything popular now will probably be popular by the time that you finish the
screenplay... and anything dead or dormant right now will probably still be a
tough sell when you finish the screenplay.
In the “mainstream world”
low-budget films are all about genre—there are horror fans and action fans, and
when it comes to made for cable films you have Lifetime and SyFy Channels and
Hallmark... all of them have a genre or two that they are known for. There are
“meat and potato” genres like horror and action and all of the other stuff that
pops up in Red Box that you may have never heard of... take a trip down to 7-11
and see what’s in the Red Box! The way to make sure your story reaches the
largest audience or the largest number of potential script buyers is to put
your story in a specific popular genre envelope. This means that you will need
to know that genre inside and out, so you need to be a fan. If you want to
write a script aimed at the SyFy Channel, you should be watching a lot of their
movies. If you want to write a script to sell to the low-budget horror world,
you should be watching those films. The same with low-budget action or
low-budget family films or faith films or Hallmark movies.
You should understand the
genre... even if your plan is to subvert it. I call this “you are what you
eat.” I don’t understand people who want to write a horror movie because it’s
easier to sell... but hate the genre. If your heart isn’t in it, you are going
to do a terrible job writing it... and the screenplay will not sell. One of the
things I always say is to write the kinds of films that you regularly pay to
see in the cinema every week, and that adapts to watching on a cable network
like Lifetime or Hallmark of SyFy, or renting from Red Box or watching on
Amazon Prime or Netflix.
Because you need to know the
genre inside and out, I always suggest that you grab a stack of films in the
genre and *study them.* Look at things like pacing and when the story beats
hit. Also, know what has already been done before, so that you can have
something that they *haven’t* seen before. What’s your genre?
7) INTERESTING STRUCTURE
Another thing that you can do
that costs nothing... or might even lower the budget, is to make your story
unique by using an interesting structure. Just because a film is a thriller or
a horror movie doesn't mean it's stale and boring. Run Lola Run (1998)
is a great example of a wild, imaginative story that is still a fairly basic
"beat the clock" thriller. Each of the three acts of Lola shows
the exact same sequence: Lola has to race across town to get enough money to
keep a gangster from killing her boyfriend. But each time, variables change the
outcome of her run: she hurts her leg, she gets hit by a car, she hops a ride
in an ambulance, etc. Not only is this a cool idea, but it also saves money!
They film the same scenes three times, just adding the variable! This was also
done in the Blumhouse horror film Happy Deathday to You, with
a Groundhog Day twist. A young woman wakes up on her birthday,
and ends up being murdered by a horror-movie-style slasher... and then wakes up
and relives it all over again. She must figure out who her killer is to stop
her death from happening. So, we have the same handful of locations used again
and again, with the same actors at those locations, and like Lola,
the difference each time they film it are the variables that might change the
outcome.
I am a fan of low-budget
filmmaker Paul Osborne, whose Rashomon (1950) like
thriller Cruel Hearts (2019) tells the same story from three
different character perspectives, so the cast and number of locations can be
limited because we see many of the same things from different angles. The story
has a great hook with a handsome young man going into a Soprano's
style mob bar in the morning and sitting in the mobster’s booth as he’s going
over the books from last night... and admitting that he’s been sleeping with
the mobster’s wife! There are three main characters: Mobster, Wife, Handsome
Young Man, and only a handful of secondary characters, and only a handful of
locations. We see the first third of the story from the Mobster’s point of
view, the second third from the Wife’s point of view, and the last third from
the Young Man’s point of view. What’s great about this is that the story seems
to completely change from the different points of view. There’s a great *line
of dialogue* from the wife that you think means one thing when the husband
hears it, but actually means another thing when the wife says it. Clever
writing is required when you don’t have a lot of money, whether you are making
the film yourself or selling the screenplay to someone else.
Like having a high concept,
coming up with an interesting way to tell your story costs nothing... and might
even save you money... and can make the story different than anything else,
interesting, “arty,” and clever. I saw Cruel Hearts at two
different film festivals where it was featured... in the same week! When you
are trying to write a great screenplay that can be made on a limited budget,
the pressure is on the writing itself. When you don’t have money, you have to
use great writing and amazing ideas and fantastic dialogue and extra creativity
to make up for the lack of cash. We’ll take a closer look at how important our
screenplays are to low-budget movies in Part 3, but consider things like an
interesting structure or storytelling method as a way to make your horror, or
action, or whatever screenplay, stand out from the rest.
8) LIMITED SPEAKING ROLES
Low-budget and Indie movies don't
have casts of thousands... or even casts of hundreds... and sometimes not even
casts of tens. Every speaking character has to be paid SAG minimum which is
$1,005 a day for theatrical, $630 a day for Low Budget, and $125 a day for
Ultra-Low Budget and Student Films. Those are not what the stars get, those are
what that Waiter makes who has that one line where he tells the star what
today’s specials are and then takes their order. The stars can make a million
dollars per film on a low-budget flick... and I have written movies where
that’s what the star was paid. Stars take a huge chunk of the budget, and name
supporting actors all have a daily and weekly and per-film quote and those
roles can add up. And their payment is just the beginning! You have to feed and
clothe and snack and makeup all of these people! And provide dressing rooms and
everything else. It’s not unusual for an actor to cost you twice (or more) what
you are paying them per day in other costs. Let’s say you have a character who
wears a nice suit in a scene—they will probably need at least two suits in case
one gets dirty while shooting that scene. If the scene requires food or drinks
that could spill, or a fight or something else that makes that nice suit even
more likely to become soiled in the middle of the scene? Maybe 3 suits... for
one scene! Now, how many scenes do you have and how many actors? These things
add up!
I mentioned Disappearance
of Alice Creed in part one—that film has three actors in a two-room
apartment (three rooms, if you count the bathroom) and plenty of twists and
excitement. The story is about a wealthy young woman who is kidnaped by a pair
of criminals fresh from prison... one of them is Alice’s ex-boyfriend. She doesn’t
know that, we don’t know that... it’s a twist. Will Alice and her ex figure out
a way to steal the ransom money together? The great thing about three
characters is that there are lots of combinations of double-crosses! You don’t
need a dozen actors!
The fewer speaking roles the
better. Try to keep it at ten to fifteen speaking roles. Again, that’s a
ballpark, so if you have 17 speaking roles you are probably still okay... but
*try* to keep the numbers down. Fewer characters actually make for a stronger
script because you are forced to make sure every character has a specific
purpose in the story. That Waiter who reads the specials and takes the order?
Why not just start the scene *after* they have been served? With fewer
characters, each has more screen time and that means more depth and drama per
character. If you have 30 speaking roles in a 90-minute film, that’s what?
Three minutes per character?
Also, limit (or completely
eliminate) the number of extras and crowd scenes. You may think nothing of having
a scene in a poetry reading, a scene in a restaurant, and a scene at a
concert... but that's three crowd scenes where you will have to pay $100 per
person to fill the location. The most you can afford is *one* "extra
location," and make sure we're talking about a dozen extras, not a
hundred. It’s easy to write a scene at a baseball game or a theme park or a
concert or a wedding party or any of the other events that require a whole room
full of extras, but that is a budget breaker. I mention Cruel Hearts,
and that has scenes in a bar either before the bar opens or in that first hour
of opening when it’s the hardcore alcoholics and nobody else. The scenes were
written for when the bar was empty—so we don’t expect anyone to be in there!
Try to avoid all crowd scenes if possible... nobody comes to see that
background actor in the film except their mom.
9) CONFINED CAMEOS
The key to a low-budget
screenplay is maximum production value at minimum cost. So we want to limit our
speaking roles... yet still figure out ways to hire recognizable actors to be
in the film in addition to that star that is being paid a chunk of the budget.
The best way to do this is to have a couple of juicy character roles that can
be cast with known actors who never leave one of your locations. Put your mentor character in that 24-hour
coffeeshop location that your lead goes to at 3am and have her dispense wisdom
in a series of scenes woven throughout the script. Let's say you have four or
five 3am coffeehouse scenes that are each about two- to three-minutes long—those
can be filmed in a single (long) day. Hire a known actress for that mentor role
and it will seem like she's in the whole movie! That’s what Cruel
Hearts did (though it may have been two days of shooting).
In Down and Dangerous (2013) the lead
character’s mentor is in prison... so there are several scenes in the prison’s
visiting facilities where the lead character gets advice on how to run his
(illegal) business. Because the character is in prison, they really can’t go to
some other location with the lead character, right? The Breakfast Club’s
Judd Nelson played the mentor, and his name is on the DVD cover and was on the
poster when I saw this film in the cinema. Probably worked for a day or two.
One of the things that can help a
confined cameo character maximize their screen time is to minimize their
movement. In my embarrassing Droid Gunner flick for Roger
Corman, I wrote a Jabba The Hutt like mobster who is mostly shown on his throne
ordering people killed, or interrogating our hero—he is almost always on that
throne. That allowed them to light the actor who played that role (the late
great Robert Quarry, star of a bunch of 70s horror hits like Count
Yorga, Vampire and Dr. Phibes Rises Again) and
shoot most of his scenes without ever changing the lighting or the main camera
angle. I also have the hero’s boss, who is always in his office, and usually
behind his desk. You don’t need to stick all of these characters in a chair or
behind a desk, but if you put someone at a location, don’t have them wander all
over the place so that they keep having to take the time to change the lighting
constantly.
On Droid Gunner I
wrote a “confined cameo” at every location—so it seems like an all-star (B
movie) cast. There was a seedy spaceport bar, where the bartender was the
confined cameo, there was the main villain who was always shown in his
office... even in a TV commercial that plays on a screen at another location.
There was a gunslinger security chief in underwater “New Angeles” who has three
or four scenes with the hero... every location had a role written to be played
by a name actor... if they could find one.
You want these roles to be “star
magnets”—juicy roles with great dialogue that will be attractive to those actors hired for a
single day or maybe two days. They know that the producer is getting their name
on the poster to help sell the film in exchange for only a day’s work, so there
has to be something in it for them. If these are flashy, interesting characters
with great dialogue the actor will think it’s worth it. Actors want to act! A
few juicy character parts like this (each one confined to a single location)
woven through the entire script, can give your script an All-Star Cast, without
the producer spending much money. If they don’t hire a star in that role, it’s
still a juicy role!
10) UNCONTROLLABLES
There are a whole bunch of things
that are difficult to impossible to control, and will drive up the cost of a
low-budget film or indie film or made for TV film or a film that you are making
yourself, so you should do everything that you can to avoid them. They are
Kids, Animals. Weather, Night, and anything else that you can not control.
W.C. Fields was right about
working with kids and animals, but from a cost standpoint, both are expensive
for similar reasons. Kids are, by law, only allowed to work a half-day on a
film set—so you pay them the same as an adult and only get half as much work
out of them! Add to that, they are required to have an on-set teacher (you have
probably seen teachers in the end credits on a movie) and an adult to supervise
their work on set to make sure that they aren’t being harmed physically or
emotionally. So, for every kid who can only work a half-day, there are these
adults who need to be paid a specialist rate... who aren’t even in the film!
Same with animals, who need to be
specially trained and have a trainer on set. Often multiple identical animals
are required because each is trained to do a specific number of tasks, and the
dog that has been trained to get the beer from the refrigerator is not the same
dog that can open a door. Animals, like kids, also are often completely
uncooperative. They can become cranky and tired and that’s the end of their
workday, even if it’s the middle of the shooting day. And sometimes they poop
at inconvenient times. It’s easy to write a scene where a bird lands on
someone’s shoulder, but expensive to train a bird to do that.
This is why those teenagers in
movies sometimes look like their pushing 30... they are played by actors who
are 30! I have had a couple of scripts about tween kids become scripts about
16-year-olds in rewrites so that an adult could play the role... and one Kids
Film where the story was rewritten to be about one of the parents so the kid
would have less screen time (and less expensive production time). It changed
from a story about a kid, to a story about the kid’s mom!
Writing a scene where it is
raining or snowing is much easier than making it rain or snow on command—which
is impossible as far as I know. When it rains in a Hollywood film, there is a
giant structure built over the house or street and a crew of technicians that
create the artificial rain (or snow) for the scene. This costs a bundle. I
worked on a friend’s low-budget horror flick where a group of people were
supposed to be snowed in... except when we got to the usually snowy mountain
location, they had no snow! Basically ruined the story because there was no
money to do the Hollywood snow thing. Much less expensive if the script just
doesn’t have any unusual weather in the first place.
Night? Are you crazy? Well, Night
Exteriors can be a big problem, because you have to light them—and that can be
very expensive. There’s a photo bouncing around the internet that shows how they lit a freeway scene
from Once Upon a Time in Hollywood that shows
dozens of huge lights on cranes over a closed section of the freeway—so that
they could show people driving on the freeway at night. All of the things that
you want to have show up on film—the buildings in the background, the trees in
the background, anything in the background—needs to be lit. And that’s a lot of
huge and expensive lights, and a lot of crew members to operate those lights
and the generator that powers them.
Often low-budget films will find
a section of the city that is already lighted and use that—we did that on
my Grid Runners (HBO World Premiere)—but that means the scene
has to take place where the light already exists.
Here’s the key to Exterior Night
scenes—if two people are having a conversation they have to be right next to
each other (same lights, no background between them) rather than on either side
of a parking lot having a conversation while getting into their cars. So, just
try to avoid Exterior Night if possible. Interior Night is fine. I realize this
screws up that low-budget horror script you wrote, sorry... but maybe it’s
cooler if it takes place in broad daylight? You are avoiding a cliche!
Also in here are any special
effects or stunt or anything tricky that you don’t know how it will be done.
The first thing a producer will ask you is: How do you expect us to do this on
our budget? And if you have an answer for exactly how they can do that special
effect or stunt for no money, great! It can stay in the screenplay. If you
don’t have an answer, you should probably take it out before you ever show it
to the producer. I usually try to have an answer that a ten-year-old can
understand with stuff like this.
The problem with all of the
“uncontrollables” is that they cost extra money for technicians or experts or
teachers or trainers who don’t show up on the screen. You want every cost to
show up on the screen. Hey, sometimes you are writing a kid and dog holiday script,
and you can’t help but use all of these things... unless they have you rewrite
your dog script to be about the dog’s owner.
I know that these ten things may
sound impossible to you, but these and the next five are the basics of
low-budget screenwriting. There are thousands of movies made that have done
these ten things and the five that we discuss in the next chapter, and you have
probably seen a bunch of them! Grab a handful of Blumhouse Films that you probably saw
in the cinema and count the locations and speaking roles! In the next part, we
are going to look at the importance of Dog Juice and Imagination
Harvesting, two things that get whole chapters in my Write
It Film It book!
Good luck and keep writing!
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