Script Analysis: “Living” — Part 5: Dialogue

A week-long analysis of the screenplay for the award-winning drama. Download. Read. Discuss.

Script Analysis: “Living” — Part 5: Dialogue

A week-long analysis of the screenplay for the award-winning drama. Download. Read. Discuss.

Reading scripts. Absolutely critical to learn the craft of screenwriting. The focus of this bi-weekly series is a deep structural and thematic analysis of each script we read. Our daily schedule:

Monday: Scene-By-Scene Breakdown
Tuesday: Plot
Wednesday: Characters
Thursday: Themes
Friday: Dialogue
Saturday: Takeaways

Today: Dialogue.

My working principle is this: Dialogue equals conversation with purpose. What monologues, sides, or exchanges in Aftersun stood out for their purposefulness with regard to the overall story?

Today, we discuss dialogue in the script for Living. You may read the script here.

Written by Kazuo Ishiguro, based on the film “Ikiru” written by Akira Kurosawa & Shinobu Hashimoto and Hideo Oguni

Plot summary: In 1950s London, a humorless bureaucrat decides to take time off work to experience life after receiving a grim diagnosis.

Major kudos to Andrew Lightfoot for doing this week’s scene-by-scene breakdown. Many thanks, Andrew!

To download a PDF of the breakdown, go here.

For Part 1, to read the Scene-By-Scene Breakdown discussion, go here.

For Part 2, to read the Plot discussion, go here.

For Part 3, to read the Character discussion, go here.

For Part 4, to read the Themes discussion go here.

To access over 100 analyses of previous movie scripts we have read and discussed at Go Into The Story, go here.

I hope to see you in the RESPONSE section about this week’s script: Living.