There are no screenwriting rules

Scott Myers
Go Into The Story
Published in
4 min readMar 29, 2019

--

There are guidelines, conventional wisdom, patterns, and principles… but no rules.

No matter what you have read or may have heard. Perhaps the source is a so-called screenwriting ‘guru.’ Maybe it’s a friend. A member of your writer’s group. Whoever it is, if they tell you there are screenwriting rules… they are flat-out wrong.

There are no rules.

Why do we know this? Because there is no universally accepted codification of how to write a screenplay.

Sure, there are tons of books, webinars, seminars, classes, downloads, columns, tweets, and blog posts. And there may very well be people who claim this or that to be a rule.

But that’s just bull shit.

“Roads? Where we’re going, we don’t need roads.”

Repeat: There is no single authoritative guide to screenwriting. So by definition, there can be no such thing as a screenwriting rule.

Here is what there are:

  • Guidelines: There are generally known and accepted ways to approach script format that reflect how most professional screenplays look.
  • Conventional Wisdom: There are certain axioms most people who work in the script acquisition and development universe carry with them when they crack open a screenplay for a read.
  • Patterns: There are certain forms and paradigms related to story structure, character types and narrative which are held pretty much in common by these same people.
  • Principles: We can even go so far as to acknowledge there are key precepts about story which derive from the relationship between human experience and our attempts to craft narratives about that experience which entertain the masses and convey some sort of meaning about life.

None of these constitute rules.

Just to be clear, here is the first definition of rule in my online dictionary: “A regulation governing conduct, action, procedure, arrangement.”

Regulation? Governing? Procedure? Think that’s conducive for creative expression? Hell, no! In fact, I’d go so far as to suggest one of the big reasons we have so many formulaic scripts floating around is because too many writers feel constricted by supposed screenwriting rules.

Rules feel like laws. And we are taught not to break the law.

Seriously, this whole line of thinking leads to nothing but the castration of creativity.

Guidelines, Conventional Wisdom, Patterns, Principles? We can live with those. Indeed, it’s critical to know what they are. That’s part of what learning the craft is about. It’s a big reason why we watch movie and read scripts because by diving into hundreds and hundreds of stories that way, we pick up commonalities between them, we see and hear their shared narrative elements.

We pick up those guidelines. We pick up that conventional wisdom. We pick up those patterns. We pick up those principles.

That is important. On most occasions, our story will follow those patterns, play to the expectations of conventional wisdom, work within the perimeters of generally accepted principles.

But sometimes, a story says, “Uh uh. I ain’t fitting into any of your damn boxes. I’m gonna invert, subvert and convert that shit into whatever the hell I need ‘coz I am one unique mofo.”

When we hear that siren’s call, when a story tells us the Protagonist is going to be an unsympathetic bastard… when a story tells us it’s got to be constructed in nonlinear fashion… when a story tells us it must use voice-over narration, flashbacks, flashforwards, a long first act, a third act with a lot of exposition, a denouement that turns into an action set piece…

Whatever defies conventional wisdom…

We not only have the right to write that story that way, we have an obligation.

If we’ve been trapped into thinking there are screenwriting rules, who do you think will win out: The rules or the story?

And what do you think is more likely to sell: A script that plays it safe and by the rules or a great story that is unafraid to take chances?

Break free from the rigidity of formula! Follow the story where it needs to go!

There are no screenwriting rules.

There are guidelines, conventional wisdom, paradigms and principles.

We need to pay attention to the latter because our scripts often will fall within what is generally accepted and expected within the filmmaking community, or we need to know what is traditional in order to go against type.

But we need to ignore anyone who promotes the former because each story is different and in the end, story trumps everything…

Even supposed screenwriting rules.

Comment Archive

--

--