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  • - "Wait a minute, wait a minute!"

  • "You ain't heard nothing yet!"

  • "Wait a minute, I tell ya!"

  • "You ain't heard nothing!"

  • This moment in "The Jazz Singer" in 1928 led to standing ovations in movie theaters.

  • The first moment of dialogue marked the beginning of a boom in the motion picture industry.

  • Improving sales from 1928 to 1929,

  • despite the beginning of the Great Depression.

  • Warner Bros. surged in profits from 2 million to 14 million a year,

  • as millions flocked to these "talkies".

  • Which, for the first few years, consisted mostly of musicals.

  • Talking provided a layer of realism missing in movies,

  • By allowing more character development and plot.

  • Innovation in radio and television writing paved the way for strong, dialogue-driven movies.

  • "12 Angry Men" is written in such a way that you could follow the entire story with your eyes closed.

  • - "Talk, and talk, and talk, even when it's an open and shut case like this one,

  • I mean did you ever hear so much talk about nothing?"

  • - "Well I guess they're entitled."

  • It has an intensity and pace that's impossible for a completely silent movie to achieve.

  • I want to talk about dialogue, and look at how dialogue enhances a story, while also seeing it's limitations.

  • Probably the biggest immediate benefit of dialogue is it's just so damn efficient.

  • - "How are you, Capt. Whitney?"

  • - "Fine, thanks, Mrs. Mallory

  • - "Why, whatever are you doing in Arizona?"

  • - "I'm joining Richard in Lordsburg. He's there with his troops."

  • - "He's a lot nearer than that, Mrs. Mallory. He's been ordered to Dry Fork."

  • - "Why, that's the next stop for the stagecoach! You'll be with your husband in a few hours."

  • From 10 seconds of dialogue, we know who Lucy is,

  • where she is, where she's going, why she's going there, what her husband does, where her husband is,

  • where the stagecoach stops next, and how long it should take until the couple is reunited.

  • Dialogue is quick and easy.

  • But exposition through dialogue runs the risk of being boring.

  • Like when we have to sit through a villain monolonguing his evil plan through a computer.

  • I think voice-over narration can be a lazy substitute for strong, efficient dialogue on-screen.

  • Although sometimes there's no other way to do it.

  • There are right and wrong ways to do exposition dialogue.

  • Let's say a character's parents died.

  • Should dialogue tell us like this:

  • - "Oh, what would mom and dad say?"

  • - "I don't know,"

  • "They're gone,"

  • "They died when I was 3, remember?"

  • Or like this:

  • - "Leave it Billy."

  • - "Mum would allow us."

  • Exposition should be descriptive, and also not completely plain.

  • It's the difference between saying something and revealing something.

  • I call it the "Dead Parent Test" for dialogue,

  • because so many movies seem to have trouble telling us a parent isn't around anymore.

  • - "My mother's name was Susan! She was killed in a car accident with my father and they're both dead,"

  • "so stop trying to bring them back!"

  • Dialogue should reveal a character isn't in the picture, instead of just saying it out loud.

  • It doesn't always have to be through dialogue:

  • And it can even be comedic:

  • - "Oh and she inexplicably mails me a cactus every Valentine's Day."

  • "And I'm like, 'Thanks a heap Coyote Ugly,"

  • "These cactus-grams stings even worse than your abandonment."

  • But it just has to reveal something instead of saying it.

  • It passes the "Dead Parent Test" if it's not completely dry.

  • Because frankly, just saying, is lazy writing.

  • - "And with the number of lifeboats times the capacity you mentioned,"

  • "forgive me, but,"

  • "it seems that there are not enough for everyone aboard."

  • I think the same idea goes for dialogue that explores the movies major ideas,

  • "Interstellar" is a gorgeous movie, but this dialogue is very heavy-handed and just being set.

  • - "Love is the one thing we're capable of perceiving that transcends dimensions of time and space.

  • "Maybe we should trust that,"

  • "even if we can't understand it yet."

  • Maybe it's better to have themes hidden in more ordinary dialogue.

  • - "And fuck the Air Force Academy!"

  • "If I want to fly, I'll find a way to fly.

  • Or revealing the themes through visuals.

  • Dialogue always serves a narrative or comedic purpose no matter how random it feels.

  • In "Pulp Fiction" the dialogue feels meaningless,

  • but it sets up major plot points and conflict.

  • Vincent and Jules have a 10 minute conversation about whether or not it's cheating for a man to

  • give a woman a foot rub.

  • - "Now look I've given a million ladies a million foot massages and they all meant something."

  • "We act like they don't but they do,"

  • "and that's whats so fuckin' cool about 'em."

  • "There's a sensuous thing goin' on, where, you don't talk about it,"

  • "but you know it, she knows it,"

  • "fuckin' Marsellus knew it."

  • "And Antwan shoulda fuckin' better know better."

  • This conversation - while at the surface very casual,

  • reinforces that Marsellus Wallace is not to be trifled with.

  • As Vincent spends his night with Mrs. Wallace, that earlier conversation reminds us that the stakes are high.

  • And Vincent may or may not be overstepping his boundaries.

  • - "So, you're gonna go out there, you're gonna say goodnight,"

  • "'I've had a very lovely evening',"

  • "walk out the door, get in the car,"

  • "go home, jerk off, and that's all you're gonna do,"

  • Tarantino uses dialogue to show character flaws.

  • Jules and Vincent get a great cup of coffee and praise it in an attempt to be polite to Jimmy.

  • All it does is make him mad, because Jules and Vincent are not focused on the crisis they just created.

  • - "But you know what's on my mind right now?"

  • "It ain't the coffee in my kitchen."

  • "It's the dead nigger in my garage."

  • Their signature suave and charming dialogue failed them,

  • but Winston Wolf, he knows the appropriate way to respond, because he's the Wolf.

  • Tarantino's dialogue is masterfully layered.

  • They may be talking about nothing, but in actuality, the dialogue foreshadows the major conflicts

  • in the rest of the movie.

  • - "You shoot me in a dream, you better wake up and apologize!"

  • Don't listen to anybody that says dialogue is bad and visuals are always better in film.

  • It's just false.

  • Dialogue is beautiful, revealing, and hilarious.

  • Just know when to use it.

  • -"Oh yeah!"

  • - "I am the walrus!"

  • - "That's it--"

  • "Shut the fuck up Donny!"

  • "V.I. Lenin. Vladamir Ilyich Ulyanov!"

  • - "What the fuck is he talking about?"

  • If you like this topic, you should check out Channel Criswell's video on the same idea.

  • He talks about dialogue with even more depth than I did.

  • Also, a big thanks to all my Patreon supporters, and follow me at my ridiculous Twitter handle,

  • @SwagThuf4Lyfe

  • Thanks for watching.

- "Wait a minute, wait a minute!"

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映画の中の対話。キャラクターはどのように話すべきか? (Dialogue in Film: How Should Characters Talk?)

  • 54 3
    Book Liu に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
動画の中の単語