ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Elementary and Middle School Videos 619 videos

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 1
14041 Views

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?

ELA Drills, Beginner: Textual Analysis 1
404 Views

ELA Drills, Beginner: Textual Analysis 1. The purpose of the instruction manual was...what?

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3
85 Views

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3. Which sentence in the passage best shows the narrator's point of view on the topic of Chelsea Simpson?

See All

ELA 3: Dialogue 311 Views


Share It!


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.

Language:
English Language

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.

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…

Related Videos

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 1
14041 Views

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?

ELA Drills, Beginner: Textual Analysis 1
404 Views

ELA Drills, Beginner: Textual Analysis 1. The purpose of the instruction manual was...what?

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3
85 Views

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3. Which sentence in the passage best shows the narrator's point of view on the topic of Chelsea Simpson?

Science 3: Sedimentary Rocks and Ancient Buildings
115 Views

We wanted to make a video about sedentary rocks, but we couldn't get lazy uncle Rocky off the couch. Oh well. We'll teach you about sedimentary roc...

Science 3: How Living Things Become Fossils
137 Views

Today we're bringing you the opposite of Jurassic Park—how living things become fossils. Okay okay, it might not be quite as fun...but hey, at le...