Listen if you want to understand how narrative POV, screenplay format, and dialogue craft can elevate a contained biopic into an Oscar-nominated film
BLUE MOON is a talky, period-drama that film about an obscure songer-writer in the 1940s. Yet, it attracted world-class talent AND Academy Award nominations, including for it's script. Join Chas & Mel as they explore how narrative POV, interweaving relationships, hooky dialogue, and even the screenplay format itself make the script for BLUE MOON so great.
While Stu is still on show and we are between the 2026 Oscar nominations and the actual ceremony, our patreons selected BLUE MOON for this one-shot and boy are Mel and Chas glad they did. They dive into many lessons learned in previous episodes, like our character-driven episode… or analysis of French scenes in Adolescence… or the story-telling power that comes from the audience knowing the ending from biopics.
As always: SPOILERS ABOUND and all copyright material used under fair use for educational purposes.
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→ Read the transcript for this episode.
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"When I say rules, I mean the prescriptive rules of when someone posts something on screenwriting and everyone goes *Oh, you broke all the rules*. I'm saying this is good. I'm saying most of those rules are suggestions or most of those rules are given to you when you are learning how to write for a reason." — Mel Killingsworth @ 00:38:42
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CHAPTERS
00:00:00 – Cold Open
00:00:32 – What Makes a Contained Biopic Compelling?
00:02:19 – Flashforward Insights: POV, French scenes, dialogue craft, and structure
00:04:32 – BLUE MOON: Plot Summary and Structural Overview
00:08:00 – › How script format signals emotional breaks in a real-time story
00:13:34 – Controlling narrative POV
00:17:13 – › Tragedy versus the life he would have chosen
00:24:09 – › Narrative POV as the film's core structural tool
00:27:49 – Using screenplay FORMAT to reflect the emotional story
00:31:56 – › French scenes and real-time spatial staging
00:35:40 – › How rule-breaking formatting signals emotional truth
00:39:27 – Interweaving relationships: Hart's Relationships as the A, B and C Stories
00:44:50 – › Hart and Rogers: the collision of artistic integrity and commercial success
00:49:14 – › Hart and Elizabeth: desire, repetition, and the just-not-that-way callback
00:53:08 – › The bar regulars as audience surrogates and mirror to Hart's self-awareness
00:56:46 – Repetition and pop culture references in dialogue
00:59:48 – › Repetition as lyrical structure in dialogue craft
01:03:49 – › Tonal variety and mixing registers in witty scripts
01:07:54 – Key Learnings
01:09:48 – › The hidden craft beneath real-time, single-location scripts
01:13:42 – › How cultural touchstones establish stakes without exposition
01:16:02 – Thanks patreons and Oscar-nominated listener!
FILMS
BLUE MOON (2026) — (w) Robert Kaplow (d) Richard Linklater
LINKS
Read: BLUE MOON - Scene Headings Breakdown
RELATED EPISODES
DZ-01: Do Screenplay Gurus win you Oscars?
DZ-68: Using POV to structure KNIVES OUT
DZ-118: ADOLESCENCE -- How Questions Create Dramatic Tension
DZ-90: Setups & Payoffs in EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE
DZ-35: Driving Characters or Character Driven?
DZ-63: Tools for Better Dialogue 2 - Hook and Eye
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Full show notes at: https://draft-zero.com/2026/dz-125/