From the very beginning, I always tried to make dialogue flow comfortably; I always did that to make it seem more authentic.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Sometimes I find it tiresome to write actions and describe the scene in a very intricate way so that every crew member understands where we are going - that I can find a little bit long and tiresome. But dialogue is just all my life. There's no way I could ever be challenged, not challenged, but I'm always so happy to write dialogue.
I think actors always find the dialogue doesn't quite fit, so you always have to play with it.
I'm terrible at story and structure, but I'm not so bad at writing dialogue.
I know it may seem surprising to people, but learning dialog that has a conversational flow to it is not that difficult.
It's much easier to read the stories that have a lot of dialogue; of course, they flow much more easily into speech.
Good dialogue is very important.
I've found that good dialogue tells you not only what people are saying or how they're communicating but it tells you a great deal - by dialect and tone, content and circumstance - about the quality of the character.
I'm not at all sure dialogue is meant to advance the story; I know that sometimes it is the story.
Honestly, dialogue is a weird area for me. It just comes naturally; I know I'm quite good at it, but I can't actually tell you why or how in any detail.
For me, the dialogue is the easiest part of writing. It just always seems so obvious what a character will say. Maybe it's because I talk too much!