profile

Neil Chase

Neil Chase is a story and writing coach, award-winning screenwriter, actor, and author of the horror-western novel, Iron Dogs. Neil believes that all writers have the potential to create great work. His passion is helping writers find their voice and develop their skills so that they can create stories that are both entertaining and meaningful. If you’re ready to take your writing to the next level, join the email list for writing tips and inspiration!

Featured Post

The BIGGEST Mistakes Writers Make with Character Contradictions

Hi Reader, Last week, I talked about how character contradiction can make your screenplay characters richer, more layered, and more human. But I realized I didn't cover the other side of it: how writers get it wrong. And that's so important, because contradiction is a great tool, but only when it feels intentional. Done well, it adds depth. Done badly, it creates confusion. Honestly, I’ve seen this go wrong in a lot of scripts (and movies). A writer knows they want a character to feel...

Hi Reader, I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the kinds of characters that really stay with us. You know the ones. The characters who feel bigger than the story they’re in. The ones who surprise us, but never in a way that feels fake. They reveal new layers, and each new layer makes them more interesting instead of less. And usually, when you really stop and look at those characters, one thing stands out - they’re full of contradiction. They may be brave in one area of life and totally...

Hi Reader, One of the most common things I hear from writers is: “I know my script needs help… I’m just not sure what kind.” And honestly, that makes sense. “Help” can mean a lot of things. Sometimes you need someone to help you figure out what the story actually is. Sometimes you’re deep in the draft and need help scene by scene. And sometimes you’ve finished the script, but it still isn’t landing the way you hoped - and now you need to figure out why. Those are all very different problems....

Hi Reader, Let’s talk about something that can quietly make or break your script: character backstory. I'm not talking about the flashy stuff. Or the big twist. Or even the trailer moment. I’m talking about the life your character had before page one. Recently, I provided coverage on a few scripts, and one issue kept showing up again and again: the characters felt like they had no real personal history. They existed in the moment, sure. They said lines, made choices, moved through scenes. But...

Hi Reader, This past week reminded me of something I think every writer needs to hear: You cannot grow in a vacuum. As much as writing is a solitary process, the truth is that we need other people’s stories if we want to get better at telling our own. Over the last few days, I had the chance to do two very different things: act in someone else’s series pilot, and provide extensive coverage on someone else’s feature screenplay Two totally different projects. Different tone, different genre,...

Hi Reader, Let’s talk about one of the biggest story problems I see in screenplays: plot-driven storytelling vs. character-driven storytelling. This is one of those things that can make the difference between a script that feels alive and one that feels like it’s just being pushed from scene to scene. And if you’ve ever watched a movie and thought: “Why would they do that?”“Why are they still there?”“Why does this feel like it’s happening to the character instead of because of them?” …then...

Hi Reader, On the heels of my last newsletter (where I spoke about risk in storytelling), I’ve been thinking a lot lately about why some movies connect… and why others just don’t. Not just in terms of box office or streaming numbers. I mean on a deeper level - the level where audiences either lean in and say, “I’m in”, or quietly check out. That’s what got me thinking about two recent movies: Netflix’s War Machine and the theatrical release, The Bride! On paper, both had what it takes to...

Hi Reader, Let’s talk about risk in storytelling. Because “taking risks” is one of those phrases everyone loves to say… but not everyone means the same thing when they say it. These days, “risk” often gets confused with one thing: shock value. A twist for the sake of a twist. Subversion just to be subversive.A left turn just to prove the writer is “bold” or "defying conventions".A moment designed to make people gasp - and then immediately forget it happened. That’s not real risk. That’s a...

Hi Reader, I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the future of movie theatres - and why it feels like we’re at a tipping point. Because here’s the uncomfortable truth: If theatres are going to survive (and if indie films are going to have a real shot), a mindset shift has to happen. Not just from audiences. Not just from filmmakers. But from the people who act as the first big filter in the system - film festivals and distributors. The festival-to-theatre pipeline (and why it matters) For...

Hi Reader, Let’s talk about a word that makes writers nervous: Exposition. In a nutshell, exposition is the background information that explains your story’s world, characters, or plot. It’s the stuff your audience needs to help understand what’s going on… but it’s also the stuff that can kill your momentum if you dump it on the page like a boring textbook. And we’ve all seen it done badly. You’re reading a thriller… and suddenly you’re trapped in a three-page lecture about how a lab works....