--- name: dialogue-crafting id: SK-FTV-004 version: 1.0.0 description: Create character-specific dialogue with distinct voices, subtext, and naturalistic speech patterns specialization: film-tv-production --- # Dialogue Crafting Skill ## Purpose Create distinctive, character-specific dialogue that reveals personality, advances plot, and creates subtext. Great dialogue sounds effortless but is carefully constructed to serve multiple purposes simultaneously. ## The 5 Functions of Dialogue Every line should serve at least one: | Function | Description | Example | |----------|-------------|---------| | **Character** | Reveals who they are | Vocabulary, syntax, rhythm | | **Plot** | Advances the story | Information, decisions | | **Conflict** | Creates tension | Opposition, evasion | | **Subtext** | Says what isn't said | What they mean vs. say | | **Atmosphere** | Sets mood/tone | Rhythm, word choice | ## Character Voice ### Voice Components ``` VOCABULARY ├── Education level (erudite vs. simple) ├── Regional dialect (y'all, eh, innit) ├── Professional jargon (cop, doctor, lawyer) ├── Era/period (23-skidoo, YOLO) └── Cultural background SYNTAX ├── Sentence length (short/punchy vs. long/flowing) ├── Grammar (proper vs. informal) ├── Contractions (can't vs. cannot) └── Incomplete sentences RHYTHM ├── Pace (rapid-fire vs. measured) ├── Pauses (significant silences) ├── Interruptions (talks over others) └── Patterns (repeats certain phrases) QUIRKS ├── Catchphrases ├── Verbal tics (um, like, you know) ├── Mispronunciations └── Unique expressions ``` ### Voice Examples **Educated, Formal:** ``` "I find your proposition intriguing, though I confess to harboring certain reservations regarding the temporal constraints you've outlined." ``` **Street-Smart, Informal:** ``` "Look, you want my help? Fine. But we do this my way, on my time. You don't like it? Door's right there." ``` **Technical Professional:** ``` "The arterial damage is extensive. We're looking at a six-hour procedure minimum, and even then, the odds aren't great. Fifty-fifty at best." ``` ## Subtext Techniques ### Surface vs. Underneath **On the Nose (Bad):** ``` JOHN: I'm angry at you for sleeping with my best friend! MARY: I'm sorry, I was lonely and he was there! ``` **With Subtext (Good):** ``` JOHN: How was your day? MARY: Fine. Yours? JOHN: Fine. (beat) Tom called. Asked about Saturday. MARY: What did you tell him? JOHN: That I'd check with you. (long pause) Should I call him back? ``` ### Subtext Tools 1. **Deflection** - Answering a different question 2. **Silence** - What isn't said 3. **Actions** - Doing opposite of saying 4. **Understatement** - Saying less than meant 5. **Topic change** - Avoiding the real issue 6. **Questions** - Answering with questions ## Naturalistic Dialogue ### Real Speech Patterns ``` People actually: - Interrupt each other - Trail off mid-sentence... - Use filler words (um, uh, well) - Repeat themselves - Speak in fragments - Don't always respond directly ``` ### Dialogue Example ```fountain SARAH So about last night-- MIKE Yeah, about that. Look-- SARAH No, let me-- MIKE I just want to say-- SARAH Mike. (beat) Let me talk. Please. A long moment. Mike nods. SARAH (CONT'D) I... I don't know what I want to say anymore. ``` ## Dialogue Formatting ### Parentheticals Use sparingly for: - Tone that contradicts words: `(sarcastically)` - Specific direction: `(to John)` - Physical action with line: `(standing)` **Don't** use for: - Emotions the actor can interpret - Directing the performance - Every single line ### Beat `(beat)` indicates a pause: ```fountain JOHN I love you. (beat) I always have. ``` ### Overlapping Dialogue ```fountain SARAH I didn't mean to-- (overlapping) MIKE --you never mean to-- (overlapping) SARAH --if you'd just let me explain-- ``` ## Genre-Specific Dialogue ### Drama - Subtext-heavy - Emotional weight - Character reveals - Silences matter ### Comedy - Setup/payback rhythm - Surprise word choices - Timing in phrasing - Rule of threes ### Thriller - Information control - Tension building - Double meanings - Interrogation dynamics ### Action - Short, punchy - Physical verbs - One-liners - Under pressure ## Dialogue Checklist - [ ] Could I identify the speaker without attribution? - [ ] Is there subtext? - [ ] Does it advance plot AND reveal character? - [ ] Have I cut every unnecessary word? - [ ] Does it sound speakable? - [ ] Are the voices distinct? - [ ] Is the rhythm varied? - [ ] Does it create tension? ## Common Mistakes 1. **Exposition dumps** - Characters telling each other what they both know 2. **On the nose** - Saying exactly what they mean 3. **Same voice** - All characters sound alike 4. **Over-explaining** - Not trusting the audience 5. **Perfect grammar** - Real people don't speak perfectly 6. **Pointless chitchat** - Every line must earn its place ## Quick Fixes | Problem | Solution | |---------|----------| | Too expository | Make them argue about it instead | | Too long | Cut to essential meaning | | Too similar | Add contrasting vocabulary | | Too formal | Add contractions, fragments | | Too perfect | Add interruptions, hesitation |