• Analyzing the new OVERBOARD

    Overboard movie poster

    So OVERBOARD (1987) with Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell is one of my favorite movies, but I still wanted to see the new OVERBOARD (2018) and to spend some time analyzing it. (It’s free right now on Amazon Prime). And I enjoyed it in the end, but on its own terms. Since I’m writing a romantic comedy, and since I love watching romantic comedies, I also love discussing and analyzing romantic comedies. And there were some interesting lessons.

    Analyzing the New OVERBOARD

    Here are some of mythoughts on the new OVERBOARD:

    • Still like the set-up of the scam
    • Shows how to make an unlikable love interest likable
    • Uses double entendre in comic scenes – based on the scene with the male buddies
    • Missing the chemistry of the original OVERBOARD

    The Comedy Scam

    According to John Truby, “the plan is always a scam in comedy.” So that’s the case in OVERBOARD, since Anna Faris’s character decides to pretend that Eugenio Derbez is her husband. This also brings in the “fake dating” romcom trope, which is one of my favorites. Only, OVERBOARD has a clever twist since only one of them is aware that they are “fake” married.

    P.S. I highly highly recommend John Truby’s course on Comedy. It is one of the best courses on comedy I have taken so far.

    Making an Unlikable Love Interest Likable

    I REALLY disliked Eugenio Derbez’s character initially. He was so so awful. He had to be awful so you sympathize with the Anna Faris character taking advantage of him. So I was impressed with the scriptwriting because I started to like him. BUT am I really that easy? He makes lunch for her and I’m like, okay, I guess you’re a good guy. I guess I am really that easy. His amnesia, though, also allowed the audience to give him a fresh start.

    My Favorite Scene in OVERBOARD

    My favorite scene was actually when Eugenio Derbez was hanging out with the guys and he says: “I don’t think this is my life. I don’t have sex with my wife.”

    The other guy says that the last time he had sex with his wife was 9 months before our daughter was born. And our daughter is now 2. (So there you have the set-up, the joke, and then the topper (and now our daughter is 2).) And that nobody thinks that this is their life.

    Eugenio says that he feels that he should be the guy owning the pool, not building the pool. And all the guys say that they think that.

    So it has the double entendre aspect because you know that this is not Eugenio’s life (and that in his former life, he did have sex all the time and was the guy owning the pool) and that makes that funny. But the conversation also has truth to it (everybody thinks that), which adds to the humor.

    Missing the Chemistry of the Original OVERBOARD

    I think that from a romantic point of view, it was missing the chemistry of the original OVERBOARD. Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell definitely had more chemistry. Maybe that’s because they have chemistry in real life, but I also think that the OVERBOARD (2018) script had less flirtatious banter between the leads. I’ll have to go watch the original again to see if my theory is correct. 🙂

    I remember that I wrote one scene in my draft novel where the male romantic lead was doing the dishes and my writing tutor in my Penguin UK Constructing a Novel Writer’s Academy course found this boring and said I needed to add more sparks. Meanwhile, as someone who hates doing dishes, I thought that the male romantic lead doing the dishes was sexy. Lol.

    Sexy man doing dishes

    But she was right and I did add more banter to the scene.

    Meme that I want you to want to do the dishes from The Break-Up

    Exactly. Why would anyone want to do the dishes?

    Three Take-Aways from Analyzing the New OVERBOARD

    • Use a scam in your comedy. Add a twist if you can.
    • Make sure there is flirtatious banter between the leads
    • Comic scenes that play with double entendres work.

    Let’s Talk

    Have you seen the 2018 OVERBOARD? Did you like it or hate it? What was your favorite scene? What was your favorite scene in the 1987 OVERBOARD?

  • RomCom Writing Tips

    Here are links to my various posts with tips for writing a RomCom or Romantic Comedy.

    The Romantic Comedy Protagonist

    Bridget Jones

    For tips for writing the RomCom Protagonist, see this post. Here’s the summary list:

    The RomCom protagonist should be:

    • a NonHero/incomplete;
    • likable (my own take) or at least empathetic;
    • have a WANT that is the opposite of what they NEED;
    • complex;
    • obsessed with something – the WANT;
    • funny;
    • trying very hard to obtain what they want;
    • honest and true-to-life at the core.

    And check out this post about Defining Your Comic Character Clearly.

    The Romantic Comedy Plot

    For the RomCom Plot beats, see:

    The Romantic Comedy Triangle

    For Romantic Comedy Triangles or How to Use the Wrong Guy/Girl in a Romantic Comedy, see these posts:

    • This post on Crafting the RomCom Bellamy
    • This post analyzing ALWAYS BE MY MAYBE to show how to use the Wrong Guy/Girl in a RomCom

    The Comedy Set Piece

    For thoughts about crafting the Comedy Set Piece, see:

    Comedy Tips

    For posts with comedy tips, check out:

    • my post on OVERBOARD (and using a scam to create comedy)

    More RomCom Writing Tips Resources

    • Writing the Romantic Comedy by Billy Mernit
    • How to Write a Romantic Comedy by Jane Lovering and Rhoda Baxter
    • “You had us at Hello” Podcast with Billy Mernit and Tess Morris
    • The Comic Hero’s Journey by Steve Kaplan
    • Steve Kaplan’s videos on the comic hero’s journey
    • The Comedy Audio Course by Steve Truby
    • Masterclass article on writing the romantic comedy
    • This American Life episode on Rom-Coms
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  • Tips for Writing the Comedy Set Piece

    Writing the Romantic Comedy in our guest chair

    Here are some tips for writing the comedy set piece. But first you may ask, what is the comedy set scene?

    “A set piece is an extended scene or sequence that exploits the setting or world of the movie to build from one joke or thrill to a series of same, climaxing in a satisfyingly big payoff topper.”

    Writing the Romantic Comedy, by Billy Mernit at p. 275.

    Billy Mernit writes that,

    “What a set piece has come to mean in movieland is the thing everyone talks about when they’ve seen the movie.”

    Writing the Romantic Comedy, by Billy Mernit at p. 276.

    Here are a list of tips:

    • Start with a Comic Premise,
    • Create the set piece as an “inspired collision between character and circumstance” (Id. at p. 276-277),
    • That forces an emotional turning point.
    • Most importantly, be HONEST (honestly emotional, vulnerable, true-to-life) in the set piece. The comedy will come from readers/viewers recognizing the truth of the scene. Like the scene in the new OVERBARD when the men are discussing married life in my prior post. Ok, it’s a bit exaggerated, which is part of creating comedy, but you get what I mean.

    START WITH A COMIC PREMISE

    The Internship – brilliant comic premise

    If you have a comic premise, the story writes itself. At least, that’s what Steve Kaplan says in his book The Comic Hero’s Journey, at p. 39. That makes sense. Think of SPY, with Melissa McCarthy and the comic potential in that premise (the desk-bound CIA analyst becomes the OO7 spy). At the very least, the comic premise should provoke ideas of funny scenes. Which may very well become our set scenes. But you only need start with the comic premise, according to Steve Kaplan. From there, you follow the character and do what the character would do. Don’t try to write funny scenes.

    “Once you introduce the comic premise, you need to trust that the characters–their wants, needs and fears will create more than enough action and plot to keep the narrative rolling along.”

    The Comic Hero’s Journey, by Steve Kaplan at p. 68.

    So I actually found that encouraging, because it is daunting to try to think of a “set piece.” Sometimes I have the inspiration for a funny scene, but sometimes I have to write the scene and find the humor.

    Another way to make it funnier is for everything to end in disaster. Which follows the basic writing advice of writing guru Jack Bickham: “He must leave in worse shape than he was when he went in.” Scene & Structure, by Jack M. Bickham, at p. 27.

    So here are some ways to think of comic premises:

    • Fish out of Water
    • Comic Opposites
    • Normal Character vs. Crazy Characters

    Fish Out of Water

    One of my favorite comedy movies is THE INTERNSHIP. That definitely uses the fish out of water trope. Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn sell watches, but nobody buys watches anymore now that they have phones. So they apply for a Google internship, successfully and are competing against tech-savvy young millennials for a shot at full-time employment. One of my favorite scenes is when they are interviewing for the Google internship–in the public library–and they are not tech-savvy. Here’s a clip of that scene.

    Comic Opposites

    According to John Vorhaus, ask “who could give this comic character the worst possible time?” The Comic Toolbox by John Vorhaus at p. 52.

    So, in BRINGING UP BABY, you have workaholic paleontologist Cary Grant paired with fun-loving, free-spirited socialite Katharine Hepburn. In the Odd Couple, you have neat Felix paired with messy Oscar. This creates the comic moments and the tension.

    Or WHEN HARRY MET SALLY. As Nora Ephron writes in the Introduction to the screenplay (it’s such a brilliant introduction with such much wisdom, I highly recommend reading it – I love Nora Ephron):

    “So I began with Harry, based on Rob. And because Harry was bleak and depressed, it followed absolutely that Sally would be cheerful and chirpy and relentlessly, pointlessly, unrealistically, idiotically optimistic. Which is, it turns out, very much like me. I’m not precisely chirpy, , but I am the sort of person who is fine, I’m just fine, everything’s fine.”

    When Harry Met Sally by Nora Ephron, at p. X.

    Normal Character vs. Comic Character

    Another comic set-up is a normal character vs. a comic character. See The Comic Toolbox by John Vorhaus at p. 24. “The gap between their personalities is the comic premise of the show.” Id. at 24. But note that the characters have an emotional bond. They care about each other.

    The Character vs. His World

    As noted above, Billy Mernit describes a set piece as an inspired collision between character and circumstance. This parallels Steve Kaplan’s advice that you have to be true to your character. But now, add your character’s world that you’ve created. Here’s Billy Mernit’s tips for creating set pieces:

    “consciously comb your story for potential set-piece situations. Explore the world you’ve created and see what’s there to tap into.”

    Writing the Romantic Comedy, by Billy Mernit at p. 279.

    I’m in the middle of watching PRIVATE BENJAMIN with Goldie Hawn, but the set pieces arise out of the obvious collision between pampered Goldie Hawn and the US Army world. My novels are all set in New York City, but I’ve still created my own NY world.

    Force An Emotional Turning Point

    Set pieces should force an emotional turning point. As Scott Myers writes, the set piece is tied to a plot point. In DESK SET, when she and Spencer Tracy are having dinner at her apartment and Gig Young shows up, it’s the first time Katharine Hepburn is not thrilled to see Gig Young. In ALWAYS BE MY MAYBE, Sasha realizes her boy friend Kevin is a jerk and goes home with Marcus.

    Let’s Talk: Do you have any tips for writing that comedy set piece?

    What are some of your favorite comedy scenes?

    I’d love to hear about what you find funny.

  • My Favorite Romantic Comedies


    Here are some of my favorite romantic comedies (in alphabetical order).

    ALWAYS BE MY MAYBE

    I highly recommend this film. The dialogue is smart and witty. I loved the relationships between all the characters.

    See my post about how the wrong guy/girl in ALWAYS BE MY MAYBE propels the plot.

    BABY BOOM

    I love Diane Keaton. And Baby Boom has many empowering themes. The set-up is well done, showing how her relationship is lacking with her current boyfriend, the competitive atmosphere at the office, and how she has clipped this newspaper ad for this farmhouse in Maine. There’s the back-stabbing male colleague, her attempt at diapering the baby, her buying the falling-down farmhouse and building up her baby food business. And there is sizzling chemistry between Diane Keaton and Sam Shepard.

    BRIDGET JONES’S DIARY

    Love, love, love! I love her character and her friends, the chemistry with Hugh Grant and with Colin Firth sizzles, and the the triangle is brilliantly done. Brilliant dialogue. I think it’s so brilliantly based on Pride and Prejudice. Love everything about this movie. It’s a classic!

    CLUELESS

    Another classic. Based on Jane Austen’s Emma. Memorable dialogue! Some of my favorite movie lines ever.

    “Whenever a boy comes, you should always have something cooking.”

    “Ugh. As if.”

    And so many more!

    DESK SET

    See my post about how the wrong guy leads to a set piece.

    I love Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy. One of my favorite scenes is their first lunch where she shows how intelligent she is and he is impressed, calling her a rare bird. And then the scene were Gig Young (her current “boyfriend”) shows up to find her having a cozy dinner with Spencer Tracy.

    This screenplay was written by the parents of Nora Ephron.

    HOW TO LOSE A GUY IN 10 DAYS

    How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days

    Brilliant and funny premise. She has to write a women’s magazine article about how to lose a guy in 10 days and he has 10 days to persuade her to fall in love with him so he can win the right to pitch an advertising campaign about diamonds. So many laugh-out-loud scenes. Smoking hot chemistry. One of my favorite movies!

    LOVE JONES

    Love Jones movie poster

    Described on the DVD cover as a “hip When Harry Met Sally.” A photographer and a writer get together, break up, get together again, and I won’t ruin the rest of the movie. The dialogue is meaningful and the friendships among this set of artistic friends are warm and supportive. And the soundtrack sets the mood! But note, it’s more of a romance than a romantic comedy.

    MAN UP

    Snappy dialogue, great premise, great comedic set scenes. He’s supposed to meet a blind date under the clock who is reading a certain book. He mistakes her for his blind date and she goes along with that. So, there’s the “scam” set-up.

    MIRACLE ON 34th STREET

    I like to watch this every Christmas. It’s about a divorcee who doesn’t believe in Santa Claus and doesn’t believe in imagination/love, so the neighbor next door tries to persuade her to give love a second chance and Santa Claus tries to persuade her little girl that he is Santa Claus. I like the career woman plot and the Santa Claus on trial plot. That trial scene is one of my favorite movie scenes.

    OVERBOARD

    Great chemistry, great premise, great comedy, great comedic set scenes, Goldie Hawn. Need I say more?

    I also wrote a blog post on the new Overboard. Although it’s not as good as this one, it’s not bad. And it has some funny scenes in its own right.

    TWO WEEKS NOTICE

    Two Weeks Notice movie poster

    Sandra Bullock and Hugh Grant. They are both such talented comedic actors. A dedicated environmental lawyer agrees to work for billionaire real estate developer Hugh Grant if he agrees to preserve her local community center. The movie opens with Sandra Bullock trying to stop the destruction of the community center with her own body. Way to start with action.

    WHEN HARRY MET SALLY

    Movie poster from When Harry Met Sally

    Nora Ephron (writer) is one of my idols. With Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal. On-point dialogue and one of my favorite films exploring male/female friendship and dating. Another must-see classic.

    Let’s Talk: Favorite Romcoms?

    What are some of your favorite romantic comedies? I am looking for some more romantic comedies to watch at night while #stayinghome, so I would love any suggestions. Why are those your favorites? Even as I write this, I can think of more favorites. It’s so hard to choose!

  • Favorite Romantic Comedies

    Here are some of my favorite romantic comedies (in alphabetical order).

    ALWAYS BE MY MAYBE

    I highly recommend this film. The dialogue is smart and witty. I loved the relationships between all the characters.

    See my post about how the wrong guy/girl in ALWAYS BE MY MAYBE propels the plot.

    BABY BOOM

    Baby Boom

    I love Diane Keaton. And Baby Boom has many empowering themes. The set-up is well done, showing how her relationship is lacking with her current boyfriend, the competitive atmosphere at the office, and how she has clipped this newspaper clipping for this farmhouse in Maine. There’s the back-stabbing male colleague, her attempt at diapering the baby, her buying the falling-down farmhouse and building up her baby food business. And there is sizzling chemistry between Diane Keaton and Sam Shepard.

    BRIDGET JONES‘S DIARY

    Based on Pride and Prejudice. Love, love, love! I love her character and her friends, the chemistry with Hugh Grant and with Colin Firth sizzles, and the the triangle is brilliantly done. Brilliant dialogue. Love everything about this movie. It’s a classic!

    CLUELESS

    Based on Jane Austen’s Emma. Memorable dialogue! Some of my favorite movie lines ever.

    “Whenever a boy comes, you should always have something cooking.”

    “Ugh. As if.”

    And so many more!

    CRASH LANDING ON YOU

    CRASH LANDING ON YOU

    I loved this! It was so addictive. And I really enjoyed the romance, comedy and suspense.

    DESK SET

    Desk Set with Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy

    See my post about how the wrong guy leads to the set piece.

    I love Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy. One of my favorite scenes is their first lunch where she shows how intelligent she is and he appreciates it.

    This screenplay was written by the parents of Nora Ephron.

    HOW TO LOSE A GUY IN 10 DAYS

    Brilliant and funny premise. She has to write a women’s magazine article about how to lose a guy in 10 days and he has 10 days to persuade her to fall in love with him so he can win the right to pitch an advertising campaign about diamonds.

    So many laugh-out-loud scenes.

    Smoking hot chemistry. Love this movie!

    MAN UP

    Snappy dialogue, great premise, great comedic set scenes. He’s supposed to meet a blind date under the clock who is reading a certain book. He mistakes her for his blind date and she goes along with that.

    MIRACLE ON 34th STREET

    I like to watch this every Christmas (the 1947 version). I like the career woman plot and the Santa Claus on trial plot. That trial scene is one of my favorite movie scenes.

    OVERBOARD

    Great chemistry, great premise, great comedy, great comedic set scenes, Goldie Hawn. Need I say more?

    I also wrote a blog post on the new Overboard.

    THE PROPOSAL

    I just re-watched this recently and the dialogue is just so good. And there are so many good comedy scenes.

    WHEN HARRY MET SALLY

    This movie was written by Nora Ephron. With Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal. Great dialogue and one of my favorite films exploring male/female friendship and dating.

    Let’s Talk: Favorite Romcoms?

    What are some of your favorite romantic comedies? And why are those your favorites? Even as I write this, I can think of more favorites. It’s so hard to choose!

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  • Developing Supporting Characters

    So, I’m starting my second novel and developing the supporting characters. I’m also about to take my third Linnea Sinclair month-long class, which will be on secondary characters. So excited! I highly recommend signing up now for it. It’s only $30.00. She is an AMAZING teacher (and writer). So, I will have a lot more insights into this at the end of this month (but you have to take her class for those). But for now, here’s where I’m starting from.

    Only dolls would volunteer to be photographed for a “supporting characters” picture–which leads to some other advice I’ve heard: everyone thinks they’re the MC.

    Use Supporting Characters to Create Conflict and Add Dimension

    The best analysis I’ve seen so far on developing your supporting characters is Billy Mernit’s analysis of the TOOTSIE characters in his book, Writing the Romantic Comedy. And if you are writing a romantic comedy or love watching romantic comedies, I HIGHLY recommend reading his book. He has an amazing pictorial representation of the characters.

    “[T]he supporting characters are all in some way reflections of Michael [Michael is the name of the character who becomes Tootsie] and thus force him to confront his issues.”

    Writing the Romantic Comedy, by Billy Mernit (2000) at p. 76.

    So, as an example, in my current WIP, if my protagonist is going to be emotionally reserved, then another character has to be very emotional. Supporting characters should conflict and bring out different traits in the MC. Here’s an initial circle representation, based on Mernit’s picture for Tootsie.

    pictorial representation of contrasts/conflicts between characters
    Good luck reading my handwriting! Even I can’t read it sometimes 🙂 But you should get the idea.

    (To be honest, I keep going back and forth on whether she will be emotionally reserved. Emotional might be more fun.) In my first not-yet-published novel, Partner Pursuit, Audrey is a workaholic, while Jake, the love interest, is trying to live life to the fullest.

    Add a Friend

    Unless the person is a lonely introvert, then I suggest adding a friend. I always wonder about characters who don’t seem to have any friends. Also, this gives your protagonist someone to confide in. And then the buddy can give advice. As Billy Mernit says, “Buddies move the story forward.” (at p. 68). For example, in OVERBOARD (2018), it is Eva Longoria, the best friend, who suggests to Anna Faris that she should pretend she is his wife and he can work to pay off what he owes her.

    Assign “Tags” to Supporting Characters

    If you have a lot of supporting characters, and I’m reading late at night, tired, I might get lost and confuse them unless you give them a “tag” or dominant impression so that I remember who this character is. Here’s what writing guru Dwight Swain advises:

    “A tag is a label. You hang tags on story people so that your reader can tell one character from another. An impression, dominant or otherwise, is created by the tags a character bears.”

    Techniques of the Selling Writer, Dwight V. Swain, at p. 226.

    This is something I also need to improve in my writing.

    Let’s Talk

    Who are some of your favorite supporting characters? Why? What advice do you give about supporting characters?

    And let’s talk about the topic on everyone’s minds: I am trying to stock up for the coronavirus, but it’s practically impossible. The food seems to be eaten as soon as it comes in. It’s like the opposite of doing laundry–I empty the hamper and do the laundry and yet, it’s full again of dirty clothes. Here, I load up the refrigerator and the cabinets, and yet they’re empty. The only thing I can safely say is that we seem to have enough toilet paper. Hurray for that.

    Wishing everyone a great weekend. Keep washing your hands.