The 4 Rules of Comedy Writing For Screenwriters
The 4 Rules of Comedy Writing For Screenwriters
As the
saying goes, "Funny is money." The person who can write funny has a
definite edge over the person who finds it difficult.
So if you're humor challenged when it comes to dialogue, what can you do about
it?
In my experience, writing funny, original dialogue comes naturally, just as
spontaneously adlibbing funny, clever remarks does. You can either do it or you
can't.
I wish I could say "Take a comedy writing class" or "Read a book
on how to write funny stuff" or offer you some inspirational words of
wisdom on finding your inner stand-up comic.
What I can offer you is something Tim Allen said in a TV Guide interview upon
being asked about his sense of humor, specifically his ability to be funny.
"Being (italics mine) funny is a gift to me. I don't know where it comes
from. It's magic and it's marvelous and I'm terrified it will all go
away."
Where does it come from? Who knows? Where does superior natural athletic
prowess come from? Why is one 6'8" kid who plays forward on his high
school team, better than fifty other 6'8" forwards on other high school
teams? For every Lebron James there's 10,000 kids who aren't quite good enough.
The
First Rule of Writing Funny:
• Just
because you can say funny things doesn't mean you can write funny things
Writing
funny is different than saying or doing funny things. Lots of men and women who
crack up their friends and co-workers are incapable of writing funny dialogue.
Adolescent boys who can't get attention from girls by excelling at sports,
their looks or intelligence resort to goofball antics either physical or
verbal. But that only goes so far and lasts so long. The kid whose talent is
shoving a slice of pizza up his nose will be trumped by the boy who has figured
out that girls get bored quickly with silliness and prefer someone who can
amuse them with wit.
This funny boy will likely blossom into a funny man and will find that his gift
will be a big plus in his social life.
And it will come in especially handy if he sets his sights on being a screenwriter.
In real life most people can't tell a joke or a story, especially a funny one.
They lose their focus, deliver the punch line too soon, go off on a tangent,
leave out an important detail or sink into a meandering blur. They've lost
their audience. As the author of a screenplay that's a comedy, your audience is
much tougher and unforgiving: agents, producers, development people, creative
executives and managers.
You have to keep that agent laughing from the first page--especially the first
page--because if she's enjoying herself by the time she gets to the bottom
she'll definitely turn to Page two. And if you keep the laughs coming for the
next ten and the rest of the first Act you can feel pretty confident she'll
finish the rest of the script--provided you have a compelling story.
Which
leads us to The Second Rule of Writing Funny:
• A
strong story without a lot of laughs is preferable to a weak story with three
jokes per page
Many
comedies falter because of a flimsy or dimwitted plot. Ultimately, no matter
how many laughs a script has, if the story isn't absorbing enough for somebody
to sink his teeth into, it won't get read to the final Fade Out. As we're
laughing at things your characters are saying and doing, we must care about
them and root for them to get whatever it is they want (no matter how goofy).
If that want isn't there we're not going along for that ride no matter how
amusing it might be.
There's an old maxim in baseball: "I'd rather be lucky than
talented." When it comes to a comedy screenplay, I'd rather have a solid
story than plenty of laughs. Laughs can be put in. Maybe not by you, but if
it's a great story your chance of getting an agent or a deal has just gotten
closer to the goal line. If you have a 103-page script with lots of laughs but
a mediocre story, well, it's a lot harder to punch up a plot.
The
Third Rule of Writing Funny:
• Two
heads can be better than one
Let's
say you're a serious, reliable screenwriter with a clear understanding of not
only the 3-Act Structure, but 5-Act and 7-Act structures, as well. You know
that characters should be three-dimensional, have internal and external
conflicts and be properly motivated.
You've immersed yourself in Joseph Campbell and Chrisopher Vogler so you know
the 12 Stages of the Hero's Journey inside and out. You've read all the
screenwriting books (especially mine The Screenwriter Within), gone to the
important seminars, studied, analyzed and deconstructed films, read the key
biographies and autobiographies of screenwriters (Adventures In The Screen
Trade, The Devil's Guide To Hollywood, Bambi Vs Godzilla to name a few) and
subscribed to the best screenwriting magazines.
There's only one problem: you are incapable of writing a funny line of
dialogue. Unfortunately, all the ideas you come up with are way too serious and
downbeat (like that bio-pic on Damien the Leper you've been mulling over for
three years).
You need to get together with a certain kind of person. The off the wall, rapid
fire, life of the party, grown up class clown who has the ability to write
jokes, great set pieces and funny lines and is hilarious 24/7, but if his or
her life depended on it, couldn't come up with a story and write a script.
It's the perfect convergence of talent.
Check the credits on sitcoms. You'll find at least one and often two writing
teams on every show. Same with screenplays. It's fair to assume that most of
these teams got together because they each brought their strength to the table.
Finding your writing soul mate isn't easy. It's like finding someone to marry.
You have to look around, see how you get on and hope that it works.
If it does work you'll both be in a much better place than going it alone.
The
Fourth rule of Writing Funny:
• Find
your genre
When
we go to a Farrely Brothers movie we expect a certain kind of product. Lots of
gross out humor in largely unrealistic, high concept plots with a handful of
genuinely inspired lines and moments. Woody Allen films, especially his early
and mid-career efforts offered a witty, neurotic take on the human condition,
especially romance. His fans know that we were going to see a unique,
intellectual kind of creativity and wit. If Judd Apatow's name is on a film be
it writer, producer or director we know it'll be something high concept with an
abundance of sex jokes, but with an undertone of sweetness.
The thing is, depending upon the kind of comedy you're writing, you may not
need to be as funny as these guys.
Romantic comedies need laughs, but not tons of them. Take two Reese Witherspoon
films. Sweet Home Alabama wasn't a laugh a minute. Neither was Legally Blonde,
but it was funnier and had a higher concept. Both had compelling stories.
Guy comedies (or buddy comedies) need more laughs than a romantic comedy. Think
I Love You, Man, Wedding Crashers, Talladega Nights, The Pineapple Express or
Role Models.
Let's look at television. I used to hear people refer to Sex and The City as a
sitcom. It wasn't. It was a drama with occasional laughs. No one watched Sex
and The City for the humor (and nobody went to the film version expecting to
laugh out loud for two hours), as opposed to Seinfeld, Family Guy or 30 Rock.
Same with Entourage. Is it a sitcom? Not really. Parts of every episode are
hilarious. But it's really a drama with laughs that come from character.
Sitcom writers have an expression for the parts of a script where there are
intentionally no laugh lines: laying pipe. Information crucial to the plot is
given. Comedy screenplays are allowed to have some laying pipe sections, but
not many. And there shouldn't be one in the first 15 pages. You have to keep
the laughs coming.
So if you want to write a big, broad comedy (Tropic Thunder, Dodgeball,
Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy, Dumb and Dumber) your script better be
funny as hell from first page to last.
So if you want to write a romantic comedy or something serio/comic (serious
topic with laughs) or a comedy/drama (lighthearted story with a serious or
sentimental turn) you don't necessarily have to have 3-6 laughs per page. Once
again, here is where having a solid story will supersede lots of laughs.
In conclusion, can someone be taught to write comedy? Yes. Just like someone
can be taught how to cook. If you take cooking classes, read a bunch of
cookbooks, watch Food TV and spend enough time in the kitchen trying out
recipes, you'll be able to prepare a meal that you won't be ashamed of.
Learning to write comedy is pretty much the same. You can find a class or
program on sitcom writing, improv and stand up. You can read books on comedy writing
(Writing The Romantic Comedy is very good, as is What Are You Laughing At?: How
to Write Funny Screenplays, Stories, and More). You can study comedies (you'll
learn more from the bad ones, than the good).
Lastly, if you don't want to collaborate and if your heart is set on writing
comedies, just keep staring at that scene that needs punching up until a funny
line pops into your head. Then do it again and again and again. Just don't try
to analyze what's funny or figure out where it comes from. E.B. White said it
best: "Analyzing humor is like dissecting a frog. Few people are
interested and the frog dies of it."
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