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ELA 3: Dialogue 312 Views
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Description:
If you came here for multicolored woodwork, you're sadly mistaken. You're probably looking for a "dye a log" video. Today's video is about characters communicating with each other.
Transcript
- 00:04
[Coop and Dino singing]
- 00:13
Movies depend on all sorts of elaborate stuff, from huge sets to fancy special effects. [People watching Batman at a theater]
- 00:18
But some of the most important stuff is what comes out of the actors' mouths.
- 00:23
And no, we don't mean all of that gross spit that flies out when actors get super passionate. [Spit flies out of Batmans mouth]
- 00:26
We mean dialogue.
Full Transcript
- 00:28
Dialogue is what two or more characters say to each other in a piece of fiction, whether
- 00:32
it's a book, play, or movie. [Coop talking about dialogue]
- 00:34
Usually, dialogue contains some of the piece's most dramatic moments, and it tends to be
- 00:38
what people quote once they leave the theater.
- 00:40
After all, it's kinda tough to quote the facial expressions of an actor…y'know, like [Girl makes facial expression in class]
- 00:44
"He kinda moved his eyes a bit like this…"
- 00:47
That doesn't exactly get people smiling and nodding with recognition.
- 00:51
Dialogue is also very important for helping the audience understand the characters, because
- 00:54
how someone speaks tells us a lot about them.
- 00:57
For instance, if one requests an ice cream cone by saying: "One scoop of vanilla, please," [Girl asks for Ice cream]
- 01:02
the audience will get the sense that this character's pretty polite.
- 01:05
However, if they say: "Hey, doofus!
- 01:06
Gimme one scoop of vanilla, and step on it!" the audience gets the impression that this [Guy wearing leather jacket and sunglasses demands ice cream]
- 01:10
character's impatient and rude.
- 01:11
We kinda hope he drops his cone on the ground…
- 01:14
Anyway, long story short: it's important to work on dialogue if you ever want to be a writer.
- 01:18
You'll need to have good sense of how people talk in the real world to write dialogue that
- 01:21
sounds realistic.
- 01:23
And the more you listen to speech, the more you'll recognize that people don't always speak
- 01:26
in full sentences, using a mix of context and body language to fill in the gaps.
- 01:30
It might drive grammar buffs crazy, but it makes for realistic dialogue. [Man in a stray jacket]
- 01:34
The more time you spend listening to dialogue in the streets, and studying it in fiction,
- 01:37
the better you'll be at crafting dialogue of your own. [Girl reading a book in a trash can]
- 01:40
And maybe someday, your lines will come out of an actors mouth!
- 01:43
Hopefully with no spit attached…
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