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It’s a SPECIAL CHRISTMAS DAY CANDY CANE CONSULTATION OFFER. E-mail me at carsonreeves1@gmail.com with the subject line “CHRISTMAS CONSULTATION” and I will give you half-off my 4-Page Screenplay Notes package. Your script doesn’t have to be ready now. But you do have to pay to secure your spot. It’s been sixth months since I last offered this deal so e-mail quickly. The slots are going to go fast. In the meantime, here are some new year’s resolutions. Make sure to add your own resolutions to the comments section!

1) I will write strong ideas only – One of the biggest time wasters in screenwriting is starting with a weak concept. No level of execution can save a bad idea which means all those hours you spent writing that script were for naught. So let this be the year you stop wasting time on weak concepts only you, yourself, are interested in. In addition to sharing your concept with others to see if it’s any good, I suggest a 6-8 week incubation period for all new ideas. If you’re still excited to write the script 6-8 weeks after you came up with the idea, that’s a good indication the idea’s worth pursuing.

2) I will finish what I start – Most professional screenwriters will tell you that there are three times during each screenplay where you’re convinced the script doesn’t work and want to quit. The weak will fold during these moments. But fighting through these roadblocks often leads to the biggest creative breakthroughs. Not only that, but every time you stick with a script, you build the muscle that fights through obstacles and gets to the finish line.

3) I will set aside 2 hours a day, six days a week, to write – If you’re in your twenties with no family obligations, this number needs to be 4. But 12 hours a week is the absolute minimum for getting any significant writing work done. If you don’t think you have that much time, download one of those internet charting apps that tells you how long you’ve spent browsing each day. You’ll quickly realize you have more than enough time.

4) I will become better with character – Remember that the true currency of a Hollywood screenwriter is character. The screenwriters who can make their hero likable, add compelling flaws, add inner conflict, add vices, explore unresolved relationships, and arc characters, all in an emotionally affecting way that feels organic and invisible, are the ones who will rise to the top of the mountain. Every year, you should be pushing yourself to create bigger, deeper, more interesting characters.

5) I will become a more original scene writer – In the last 50 scripts I’ve read, I’d say that 97% of the scenes are ones I’ve seen already. Writers aren’t pushing themselves on a scene-by-scene basis to give us a consistently fresh story. This doesn’t mean every scene has to be the most original thing ever. It means that you’re not taking the lazy way out. The best way to beat this problem is to come up with a concept we haven’t seen before. Fresh concepts lead to all sorts of fresh scene opportunities. Lots of A Quiet Place’s scenes were new because the concept (if you make a noise, the monsters kill you) was new.

6) I will master two new screenwriting skills this year – Pick two major screenwriting skills (dialogue, theme, suspense, loglines, concepts, prose, conflict, dramatic irony, second act structure, setups and payoffs, etc.) and commit to mastering them by the end of the year. And do this every year. That means whenever you have free time, read an online article or a chapter about that specific writing tool. Then practice it. Write short scripts utilizing it. Write practice scenes focusing on it. If you’re not trying to improve specific screenwriting skills, you’re never going to get better.

7) I will stop blaming my lack of success on the external – I get it. If you’ve failed to succeed at screenwriting, it’s easier to blame the system (or nepotism, or geography, or sexism, or ageism). That way, you don’t have to take responsibility for your lack of success. But there is power that comes from taking responsibility. If you accept it’s something in yourself that’s hurt you, you have the ability to work on and change it. Blaming others is a bad way to live life anyway.

8) I will set clear goals for myself – The vaguer you are with your yearly goals, the less motivation you’ll have to finish them. Write out clear achievable goals and hit them. If you don’t know where to start, target one major screenwriting contest in the first half of the year and a second contest in the second half. Have a screenplay done and sent by each deadline. By all means necessary, meet your goals!

9) I will get feedback – Stop living in your bubble. Stop making excuses. You’re not getting anywhere in this business without feedback. Get your scripts out to people. Listen to what they have to say. The number of things I assumed weren’t problems in my screenwriting but were in my early days is embarrassingly large. You’ve got blind spots as well. And you’ll never correct them until you have a third party telling you what they are.

10) I will enjoy myself – Remember why you got into screenwriting in the first place. Because you love movies. So if you’re ever down or angry or frustrated during a writing session, step away from the computer, take a deep breath, remember back to that feeling you had when you first decided to become a screenwriter, SMILE, then get back to it. Our job is to entertain others. If you can’t have fun doing that, what can you have fun doing?