No Fred. Not at all. This is a "master's" advice. Of course at first it makes sense to have the script. Of course it does. I relaly can't see any reason why not if you did not know otherwise. But a well oiled "film composing" machine can work a lot better when there is less in the way. I guess I didn't explain the seperation of literature and movies clearly enough.@Fred Story said:
But the thing I just don't get is, how in the world can reading a script prior to scoring a film impede the process in any way? I must be totally ingnorant or dense on this.
When you read a script, it has inherent emotions, especially those more easily communicated BY TELLING YOU. The film on the other hand has to do that with just image and music (there are a few other crafty tricks, not to mention NARRATION which is often considered a "cop-out"). What happens then is, the film must stand on it's own. It's an art thing really. It's about respecting the purity of the medium, Cinema. 9 out of 10 directors, maybe more, will agree with this. Unless of course if they wrote the screenplay as well, which is a recipe for disaster, for the exact same logical reasons why a script should not be considered as reference material for the post locked film environment.
I am tired and having a hard time making sure I am answerring this correctly. Please tell me how I am being unclear. I like your questions, Fred. [:)] please.
Evan Evans