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Short Film vs Feature: Where a New Writer Should Start

By Bhavik Sarkhedi7 min read15 July 2026

A short is not a small feature. It is a different instrument. If you are starting out, the short is the smartest first move you can make, and here is the honest reason why.

Most new screenwriters make the same mistake I almost made: they sit down to write a feature first, because a feature is the real thing, the thing that gets made and seen and paid for. I understand the pull. But it is usually the wrong first move, and not because you cannot handle the length. It is because a short film teaches you the craft faster, cheaper, and with far less heartbreak. A short is not a baby feature. It is a different instrument, and it happens to be the better one to learn on.

Let me be clear about the difference first, because it is not just runtime. A feature has room to breathe: subplots, a full arc, a slow build, a world you can furnish. A short, anything under 40 pages and usually far shorter, has room for almost nothing. And that scarcity is exactly what makes it such a ruthless teacher.

A short is one idea, fully felt

The single biggest error in short films is treating them like compressed features. Writers cram in a full arc, three characters, a twist, a subplot, and the result is a rushed feature with the air let out. A great short does the opposite. It takes one idea, one moment, one shift, and gives it everything.

Think of it as the difference between a novel and a poem. A feature is a novel: many rooms, many people, a long journey. A short is a poem: one image held until it rings. The overviews at No Film School and ScreenCraft keep repeating the same lesson to short filmmakers, that the form rewards a single sharp idea and punishes ambition it has no room to hold. One want. One turn. One feeling, delivered completely.

Why the short is the better teacher

Here is the practical case, and it is the one nobody made to me early enough. A feature draft takes months, and when it fails, and your first one will, you have burned months to learn one lesson. A short takes days to draft. You can write five shorts in the time one feature eats, and each one teaches you the fundamentals: how to open, how to escalate, how to land an ending, how to make a reader feel something in a small space.

And there is the matter of actually getting it made. Nobody hands an unknown writer money to shoot a feature. But a short can be made with friends, a borrowed camera, a weekend. I learned more from making CLICK, my one produced short, than from any feature draft sitting registered in a drawer, because a made film teaches you things a page never will: what dies in the edit, what an actor cannot say, how a moment you loved on paper falls flat on screen. The short is the fastest path from writing to seeing.

Five shorts teach you what one failed feature cannot: how it actually feels when the page meets the screen.

The economy the short forces on you

With no room to hide, a short makes you a better writer whether you like it or not. You cannot explain a character's history in a monologue, so you learn to reveal them in a single gesture. You cannot build a relationship over an hour, so you learn to establish it in one exchange. You cannot pad, so you learn what actually matters. This is the discipline of showing rather than telling under maximum pressure, because in a short there is simply no time to tell.

That economy transfers straight back to features. A writer who has learned to make one scene carry three jobs, because a short forced them to, writes tighter, sharper features for the rest of their life. The short is not a lesser form you graduate out of. It is the gym where the muscle gets built.

What the feature demands that the short does not

None of this means a short prepares you for everything. A feature asks for skills a short never tests: sustaining tension across two hours, weaving a subplot that carries the theme, managing a large cast, building a second act that does not sag. These are real and hard, and you will have to learn them eventually. The point is not that shorts teach you everything. The point is that shorts teach you the fundamentals first, so that when you do write a feature, you are learning only the new, larger problems, not fumbling the basics at the same time.

Interestingly, some of the best features grew from shorts. Whiplash began as a short film that its writer made to prove the feature could work, and the short did exactly the job a short should do: it distilled the idea to its sharpest point and showed the world what it would feel like. The short was the argument. The feature was the expansion of a thing already proven.

What to write first, honestly

So here is my direct advice to anyone starting out. Write a short first. Not a small feature. A true short: one character, one want, one turn, one feeling. Aim for five to fifteen pages. Finish it. Then write another. Make one if you possibly can, with whatever camera and friends you have, because the gap between the page and the screen is where the deepest lessons live.

When you have three or four shorts behind you and the fundamentals feel like second nature, then the feature will be a question of scale rather than survival. The very first thing your short has to nail, the opening that grabs a viewer before they drift, is the same skill a feature lives or dies on, which I take up in the first ten pages and why readers quit. And whichever length you choose, the foundation underneath both is identical, so ground yourself first in the working method, where a person who wants something matters far more than how many minutes you have to tell it.

#screenwriting #short film #craft #beginners
Wr. Sarkhedi
Screenwriter · Ahmedabad

Bhavik Sarkhedi wrote 21 books and 2,000+ articles before he wrote for the screen. Six registered screenplays, one produced short. He writes here about the craft, the philosophy, and the stubborn human part of the work that machines keep failing to copy. Write to him.