Nib #98 The Best Movie (Scene) About Writing
There are no great films about writing.
It’s understandable. Writing isn’t very cinematic. So movies “about writing” tend to glaze the grind in sentimentality (like Finding Forester) or hide it in weirdness (like Adaptation).
But we don’t actually need a great movie about writing. Because there is one great movie scene that covers the subject.
A few minutes into A River Runs Through It, we get a 90-second vignette of future author Norman Maclean learning how to write under his minister father’s tutelage. It’s the best:
Any writer will tell you: it’s all there. No glamour. No fun. No soaring music. No superhero stakes. Just a few frustrated sighs. The scratch of a pencil. The torture of the redlining. The agonizing justice of “Half as long.” The elation of finally being done.
And — best of all — the “Good, now throw it away.” Waste not another thought on the last thing you wrote. Move on to the next thing. Grind even harder, write even clearer and tighter next time.
The rest of A River Runs Through It is great, too — the movie and the book that little boy eventually wrote. Both are well worth young writers’ time this Thanksgiving break!
Until next week… keep writing!











