A GUIDE TO USING VOICE OVER
IN YOUR SCREENPLAY
Written by
Curt Wiser
American Beauty,
The Usual Suspects, Sunset Boulevard, Network
and All the President's Men; what do all of these films have
in common? They all have won Academy Awards for either Best Picture
or Best Screenplay.... and they all use voice over.
Many of my favorite films
have voice over and that is usually one of the things that I really
love about them. Over the years writing voice over has gotten a bad
wrap, as if just daring to type [V.O.] is the death knell of any spec
script. This is probably because it is used improperly in sloppy ways
by many writers as a short cut, an easy out.
Well I would like to set
the record straight and give writers the ability to write voice over
with confidence and not worry that it has a bad stigma associated
with it according to some.
So far every spec script I
have written has had voice over in it and one of those, Web-Cam
(2011) landed financing
and was produced with the voice over left in tacked.
Web-Cam
is a Thriller about a web cam stripper who is pushed to
the limit when held hostage by an unknown gunman.
I
decided to tell this story with voice over because the film revolves
around Gessica, a cam girl. Using voice over lets me bring the viewer
into what it must be like to work such a strange job and how it could
affect them. If it is something your character cannot put it into
words like that, then you can say it with voice over.
The
first question you should ask: Is this story one that would be better
told if it had voice over in it?
Think
about a classic film like Taxi Driver. If it did not have
voice over it would just be a quiet DeNiro siting alone in a cab. What about Danny Boyle's 127 Hours? If it was for the voice
over or those video tape messages that the character made, the whole
movie would be James Franco caught under a rock screaming.
The
next question: Is dialogue/voice over your strong suit as a Writer?
If
not, then you can force yourself to have a better ear for it. Go to a
party and just listen to all the different conversations around you. The other option is you could find a writing partner to write it for
you.
I
know what you are thinking. The main mantra has always been show
don't tell, so why should I put voice over in my new masterpiece? I
agree that you should show and not tell but that refers to the
stories plot and inciting incidents. That is way I say:
NEVER
USE VOICE OVER AS EXPOSITION.
That
means do not tell why something is happening or has happened or
explain why a character is doing anything with voice over. I will not
list some titles but there have been some major motion pictures that
managed to get produced somehow with poorly written voice over
exposition. Those films have flopped hard at the box office and
maintained one star ratings on NetFlix.
NEVER
SAY ANYTHING IN VOICE OVER THAT IS CLEAR TO THE AUDIENCE OR SAID
ALREADY WITH DIALOGUE.
That
one goes without saying, you do not want to be repetitive or waist a
single word in your script.
So
how should voice over be used? Here are some examples from films that
I admire and writers that are a force to be reckoned with.
- CONVEY WHAT A CHARACTER IS FEELING.
This
is the most common way voice over is used. It is also the most likely
form that can be miss-used. So make sure there is no alternative to
using voice over this way, then make sure it is not overtly stating
how the character is feeling.
Here
is the immortal Taxi Driver as an example:
Travis
Bickle (V.O.)
Damn,
the days go on and on, they
don't end. All my life needed was
a sense
of some place to go. I
don't believe one should devote
his life to
morbid self-attention.
(a beat)
I believe that
someone should become
a person like other people.
What
Paul Schrader is implying here is that his character Travis is so
isolated and disillusioned in his pathology of loneliness that he
does not even feel like a real person, he does not feel alive. Now
the character could have just said “I'm lonely, it's like I'm not
really here, I think it is because nobody loves me” but that would
be nothing compared to Schrader's prose.
Remember,
a good actor should be able to convey any emotion or feeling with
just their eyes. But not even the best actor in the world can put a
feeling into words that hit you in the gut or sound like pure poetry
the way great voice over can.
- REVEAL SOMETHING IMPORTANT ABOUT A CHARACTER.
This
would be some internal detail, like the character's point of view,
their hidden intelligence or private thoughts. Take Frank Darabont's
sleeper break through film The Shawshank Redemption for
example.
Red
(V.O.)
I
must admit I didn't think much
of Andy first time I laid eyes on
him,
looked like a stiff breeze
would blow him over. That was my
first
impression of the man.
Notice
how the line “That was my first impression of the man” subtly
says that there is more to Andy than appearances, he should not be
underestimated. That is good writing.
It
could also be used to show how a character lives a double life. Look
at American Psycho, One Hour Photo, Mr. Brooks
and Secretary for examples of that.
- DRAMATIC IRONY.
This
is the classic writing term that means the audience has knowledge
about something before the character(s) in the story do. This
technique is a great way to create suspense. I chose Alan Ball's
brilliant script American Beauty as an example of this.
Lester
Burnham (V.O.)
I'm
42 years old, in less than
a year I'll be dead. Of course
I don't
know that yet. And in
a way I'm dead already.
That
was the opening of the film. It leaves us wondering how this poor guy
meets his end as we grow fond of him over the course of the film.
- COUNTERPOINT OR COMIC RELIEF.
Well
placed voice over can completely break the tension or change the tone
of a scene by showing what a character would say if it was
appropriate.... but it is not. It could also be a funny non-sequitur
like in Diablo Cody's Juno.
This
is what Juno is thinking when she sees the high school track team run
by as she breaks the news to her teenaged friend that she is pregnant
and he is the father.
Juno
(V.O.)
When
I see then all running like
that with their things bouncing
around in
their shorts I always
picture them naked even if I try
not to. All I
see is pork swords.
Now
that breaks the tension and how can you not laugh at “pork swords”?
- SCENE TRANSITIONS.
One
of the staples of good writing is how well one scene transitions into
the next. If it plays well, the voice over at the end of the scene
could be the start of the spoken dialogue at the beginning of the
scene that follows. This can make your screenplay more concise by
keeping things moving and it can show how the two scenes relate to
each other.
My
example for this would be the operatic ending to The Usual Suspects,
the film that put the screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie and the
Director Bryan Singer on the map.
The
film ends with an iconic montage that strings all of Verbal Kint's
interrogation together as voice over along with quick cuts that
reveal it was all a lie and that he is the notorious Keyser Soze. The
last line of the film is Voice Over.
Verbal
Kint (V.O.)
... and like
that, he's gone.
- FORESHADDOWING.
Lastly,
voice over can plant a seed in the viewers mind. By that I mean to
hint at but not fully explain what will happen or what the scene is
really about.
See
how this one single line from Fight Club is not given much
thought at first but speaks volumes by the end of the film.
This
voice over takes place during the scene when Edward Norton's
character is beating himself up in his bosses office so he can extort
money from his employer.
Jack
(V.O.)
For
some reason I thought about
my first fight... with Tyler.
With
that screenwriter Jim Uhls makes a clever hint to the film's big
reveal at the end, that Edward Norton's character and Tyler are the
same person. If an audience can pick up new things in your film on
the second of third viewing, that is good writing. Such is the case
with Jim Uhls adaptation of the groundbreaking iconoclast novel Fight
Club written by Chuck Palahniuk.
Good
screenwriting is all about structure and if you use voice over, that
needs to have a structure too. It should be consistent. If you have
30 minutes worth of voice over in the first act only that will come
off as bad structure. The viewer will get used to hearing that voice
over and then you would be taking it away.
Most
scripts that use voice over have it mostly at the beginning and then
at the end. American Beauty is a good example of this. Juno
begins with the voice over “It all started with a chair.” Then
the closing echos, “It ended with a chair.” Now that is symmetry,
that is good writing.
I
hope I have let you think about voice over in a different way. So
that maybe your characters will be able to make us laugh, cry, be
inspired or even experience something new through the well crafted
thoughts in their voice over.
Curt
Wiser (V.O.)
Fade Out
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