Lesson 8 should be in your inbox in less than 90 seconds.

Until then…

The Late Night Talk Show Test

You should focus on nice, simple scenes right now. Don’t put too much pressure on yourself.

Just get it done. Do the reps. Build confidence.

But as you do, you’re going to want to move from okay scenes to good scenes. Then from good scenes to great scenes.

The Late Night Talk Show Test is a simple exercise I do to test if a scene is working the way I want to.

It’s a simple test. Silly, yet powerful.

The idea behind it is that every scene should be interesting in its own right.

There are no throw-away scenes.

A scene should not be there just to get to the next one. Is there tension? Is there drama? Are there laughs? Stakes? Is there a dramatic question that we’re invested in? What is entertaining about this scene?

Keep in mind that every film has its own brand of entertainment, largely dependent on the genre. And some scenes are certainly easier to make entertaining than others.

A protagonist confronting the antagonist is going to be naturally more compelling than the detective getting crucial information from the coroner, a scene we’ve witnessed a hundred times. But the burden to make the scene engaging remains.

Witness the expositional scenes in JURASSIC PARK. In one, Dr. Grant gives us all the exposition we need about Velociraptors by scaring the hell out of a bratty kid.

Next, we get all the details of how dinosaurs were brought back to life by the interaction of Hammond with a cartoon á la an old Disneyland ride.

Early on in THE AVENGERS: END GAME, the characters, and the audience need details about where Thanos is, but the most memorable part of the scene is the emotional toll that failure has taken on all the surviving Avengers.

These are big-budget action examples but the principle remains the same with smaller character-driven films.

Every scene has a job to do in the narrative, but it also needs to be engaging and interesting in its own right.

So when in doubt, ask yourself this:

If an actor from your movie is doing the press rounds and they’re on the Tonight Show or any other show where they plug the film, and they show this scene to the audience…