Patterns Of Screen Writing/Print version
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Contents
[edit | edit source]- Appendices
Intended Audience
[edit | edit source]Scope
[edit | edit source]The book has much to offer both beginner and experienced writers alike. Most screenwriting techniques can be adapted to other media once the difference each is understood. These can be the traditional forms like a short story, a novella or theatrical play. It can also arise in less traditional settings like a computer game; a business presentation or an animated commercial. As media, diverge underlying assumptions may change. In screenwriting, storytelling is principally visual.
Visual Storytelling
[edit | edit source]Visual storytelling has subtle restrictions dictated by the media of film. The advice most commonly heard by new screenwriters is "show, don’t tell". This means dramatizing any aspect of the story that is not already in the action. The difficulty is to use the available devices to illuminate a character's inner world. You might consider using a disembodied voice to instruct the audience of some thought going in the heroine's mind using voice over narrationnarration? This might be possible but there are other techniques possible. In a movie, the eye assimilates 90% of the information and the ear the other 10%. For the stage, the assimilation of information reverses. This is the root of most difficulties adapting problems faced in adapting plays to the screen. Even the outstanding to dialogue dialogue and monologues quickly become artificial and tiresome without visual action that the eye expects. The problem does not end here. A single talking head alone on-screen has very limited visual possibilities. The eye exhausts the visual information in a good shot in two seconds after which it will start to wonder. Few actors can deliver their narration as effectively as Woody Allen [P 1] the standup comedian; screenwriter; actor director . When speaking off-screen his expressiveness diminishes, his dialogue loses its subtext and soon his audience grows restless. When less gifted actors deliver his narrations, the effect is disastrous. Show, don’t tell. The stringent requirements of visual storytelling do not bind other prose writers. They can freely enlist metaphor; listen in on a character's inner voice and shape structures of complexity that is unworkable into 120 pages120 pages of a screenplay. This is not a place to analyze the differences of each media. It appears that the discipline and economy of screenwriting will benefit to any creative writer. Even with the differences in media, most of the patterns would serve any storyteller. Where medium specific aspects of film making are encountered they will be accompanied by this icon
Planning Patterns
[edit | edit source]Hollywood folklore is rife with stories about a professional writers pressured by an impossible deadlines into writing a screenplay for an award-winning movie. In reality, professional screenwriters require between three months to a year to write a quality screenplay. If you are not yet making a living from writing you will need to spend more time to polish and tighten your stories.
What Are Planning Patterns?
[edit | edit source]The common denominator of planning patterns is an aim to manage your project in a way that minimizes risks. These risks include commercial issues related to marketing, missing deadlines, creating an untenable structure, improving story quality.
Reducing Risks
[edit | edit source]The risk involved in writing a screenplay are manyfold. A writer will have to invest time and effort in researching, planning and writing. It might be done as a speculation or under contract for a client. So once the writing the writer needs to sell it, and a success will mean further requirements and further rewrites.
By taking professional attitude it is possible to that reduce the above risks so that the efforts will turn out to concrete results. You will get a second round of benefits once you close a deal that requires work with a development or production team.
For each hour spent planning, you will save tenfold on unproductive activities. With a fully planed story on the drawing board, the second and third acts will write themselves.
You will still need great tenacity and rewrite several drafts. The difference is that you will have the confidence to shape the story, improve structure, strengthen characters, and intensify conflict, deepen emotional impact and send the viewers a coherent and meaningful statement.
Finally, it is superior planning which will enable you to unleash your full creative potential.
Focus
[edit | edit source]- How to tap into your creative potential for original ideas; fresh points of view and understand breakthrough in genre. (Brainstorming)
- Succinctly define a dramatic premise in such a way that it can permeate all levels of story crystallizing them into a coherent structure. (Logline; Moral Premise)
- Work out the narrative and the necessary back-story.(The Board; Storyboard )
- Build up interest by a rhythmically varying their perspective between suspense mystery and dramatic irony.(Viewer's Perspective)
- Enhance your creative output. (Concept of Artistic Limitation;Law of Variation)
Patterns in later sections such as structure, character, conflict, and dialogue will also collaborate with these planning patterns by contributing much detail to the plan, subsequently reducing the scope of later planning tasks. However, it is the patterns in this section, which form the foundation of the story structure. Why are they so important?
Essentially, planning patterns assist you to reduce the risk of ending up with partial project or an unsalable-draft. They will allow you organize your work logically; Break up big daunting task into easily managed ones; economize your time and maximize the impact of you effort. Finally planning is a part of establishing a routine of disciplined writing.
The Patterns
[edit | edit source]- Brainstorming
- Logline
- Moral Premise
- Viewer's Perspective
- Concept Of Artistic Limitation
- Law Of Variation
- The Board
- Storyboard
==Case Studies==
Patterns Of Screen Writing/Planning/Viewer's Perspective
[edit | edit source]“ | There is no terror in the bang, only in the anticipation of it. | ” |
—Alfred Hitchcock |
Intent
[edit | edit source]Make and break information asymmetry between audience and the characters.
Also Known As
[edit | edit source]Mystery; Suspense; Dramatic irony; Tension release laughter; Comic distance; Emotional Rhythm
Motivation
[edit | edit source]It is necessary to be aware which crucial elements of the plot have been revealed to which characters and if the audience is also in the know.
It is possible to create a powerful dynamic within the story simply by controlling the flow of information regarding (an incident). In the most basic form it is possible to dramatizing the effect as it is revealed to a sequence of characters. In the next level of sophistication individuals will face a dilemma whether to disseminate or to withhold crucial knowledge.
A single incident can elicit curiosity, mystery, suspense, dread, and comic release. The emotional reactions created depends on how the action is presented to the viewers. These are discussed in detail in /pathos/mystery /pathos/suspense and /pathos/dramatic irony patterns.
Many aspects of the viewers point of view , the largest and most readily perceptible is information. It depends on different Ideally, each is present in some degree in every story. These ingredients can be created by manipulating the view’s point of view. By auditing the information made available to the viewers you can change their point of view.
Many of the dramatic effects in a story depend on how the story unfolds.
Applicability
[edit | edit source]- Emotions
- limited gamut of emotions
- Exposition
- too much or too little information
- Scenes
- too predictable
- undermined by insufficient emotional variety
- Conflict
- jumping conflict
- foreshadowing too brief
Structure
[edit | edit source]If X is the character, whose point of view owns the current narrative line, then:
Technique 1. Narrative Perspective
[edit | edit source]When the audience discovers information together with character X we say they are in narrative perspective. This perspective generates suspense. This by far the most common technique used to hold the compel the viewer’s interest. They have anxiety over the ending and fear for the protagonist fate.
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Technique 2. Inferior Perspective
[edit | edit source]When the audience knows less than characters X say they are in inferior position to X. This perspective elicits curiosity and mystery. Breaking to narrative perspective by revealing the missing information end the mystery. It is possible to create a false sense of inferior perspective, by offering the audience a false clues using an intermediatory (an unreliable narrator) or directly (confunding). It is difficult to sustain mystery overtime unless you are working on a Murder Mystery.
Technique 3. Superior Perspective
[edit | edit source]When the audience knows more than characters X say they are in superior position to X. This perspective produces suspense and dread of the discovery of what we already know. It can also sustain curiosity since the viewer’s information is limited. The question is how it will happen? the question of how Breaking to narrative creates relief, but before we break we could increase out superior perspective make his situation effectively worse a couple of times
Technique 4. Foreshadowing
[edit | edit source]The Exposition/Foreshadowing/ pattern is yet another method that can be used to alter the viewer's perspective. Since foreshadowing is the promise future conflict it should be used to build up the action gradually.
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Technique 5. Comic distance
[edit | edit source]The comic perspective means suspending empathy.
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One of the main aspect of comedy is that no matter the misfortune inflicted on the characters we can look at at it and laugh. If empathy would not be suspended we would cry at their misfortunes.
Technique 6. Diminishing
[edit | edit source]Repeated application of the same techniques twice will have diminished results the second time. The third time it can have a reversed effect. In some genres, this has become a convention. Hitchcock NNW uses this type of pattern. Following the second set piece. It ends in an impasse that Thornhill must overcome though action.
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Technique 7. Reversal into Laughter
[edit | edit source]Repeated application of the same techniques more than twice will numb the viewers and can be used to produce comic distance. When this is the intended effect it is called a reversal into Laughter. In some genres, this has become a convention. Hitchcock NNW uses this type of pattern. Following the second set piece. It ends in an impasse that Thornhill must overcome though action.
Technique 8. Unreliable Narrator [1]
[edit | edit source]“ | A lot of recent films seem unsatisfied unless they can add final scenes that redefine the reality of everything that has gone before; call it the Keyser Söze syndrome. | ” |
—Roger Ebert [2] |
A narrator who misinforms his listeners is called a unreliable narrator. The misinformation places the audience in an inferior position. Such a situation can then be dramatically reversed as follows:
- By revealing the narrator's lie without revealing the secret. (maintains inferior position).
- By revealing the lie and revealing the truth but only to the viewers. (Switching to superior position).
- By revealing the lie to the viewers and the point of view character. (Switching to narrative position).
- By creating ambiguity by creating revealing alternative version of the truth without passing judgment on the narrator. (maintains inferior position).
Some classical examples illuminate these possibilities:
A mentally impaired narrator may describe the world as they perceive it rather than as it really is. A similar effect can be arise from the narration by a child (naive) Except that a child's point of view is much more amiable to empathy - we were all once more naive and can take some humour from this point of view while a mentally defective point of view is harder to empathise with.
The most elusive and probably the hardest to or perhaps the most elusive - is a reluctant narrator - one who is unreliable because he or she chooses to ignore the truth.
Participants
[edit | edit source]Exposition; Pathos/Mystery; Pathos/Suspense; Structure/Rhythm; Structure//Intensity;
Collaborations
[edit | edit source]Character/Dimension; Character/Center Of Being; Pathos/Empathy And Sympathy
Consequences
[edit | edit source]By tracking the viewer's perspective in relation to each character you will:
- Detect and eliminate illogical story holes due to information.
- Root your narratives dynamic in exposition as opposed to action. This is required to produce the most powerful turning points.
- Create interest by eliciting basic emotions.
Uses & Abuses
[edit | edit source]Once the auteur is in full control of his medium, he will utilize these basic techniques as well as other aspects like music, cinematography and so on to layers of emotions. This way the emotional message can be pure color, uses many hues of the same color or create secondary or tertiary effect by mixing different or even conflicting effects. While today this type of layering is still outside the realm of the screenwriter, a solid foundation in weaving the emotional overlay will allow the script to suggest more advanced emotional layering.
Related Patterns
[edit | edit source]Law Of Variation
[edit | edit source]“ | fly like a butterfly sting like a bee | ” |
—Muhammad Ali |
Intent
[edit | edit source]To maintain the viewer's interest and maximize the emotional effects.
Also Known As
[edit | edit source]Avoid cliché, Avoid Stereotypes, Develop Symbol systems, Rhythm, Intensification, Irony,
Motivation
[edit | edit source]If for some reason the viewer's interest is lost, the easiest fix is to introduce change. This applies to almost any aspect of screenwriting.
Applicability
[edit | edit source]- Emotions
- Emotional Highs and Lows (as discussed below)
- Exposition
- Transpose Exposition and action
- Scenes
- Long and Short scenes
- Conflict
- Present opposing points of view
Structure
[edit | edit source]- Variation – do not repeat, recycle material, adopt clichés, use stereotypes, change scene length.
- Intensification – conflict, action, risks, stakes, pace, and intensity all need to become more intensive.
- Reverse Expectation – "fly like a butterfly sting like a bee"; before success, the deepest abyss.
- Surprise – the unexpected is the acme of variation.
- Maximize - the scope of variation and you will be maximizing its effect.
Technique 1. Inside Outside
[edit | edit source]Follow an indoors scene with an outdoors scene.
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Technique 2. Short Long
[edit | edit source]Follow an short scene with a long scene.
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Technique 3. Action Exposition
[edit | edit source]Follow action with a exposition.
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Technique 4. Emotional Highs And Lows
[edit | edit source]- Maximise the emotional effects of scenes by planning a sequence of increasing climaxes.
- As you build up a climax use a wide mix of emotional effects.
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Technique 5. Covert Overt
[edit | edit source]Show and later explain. This technique is used in some of the greatest movies. The moral message is dramatised subtly symbolically in several ways. Once the viewer has become emotional invested in the premise, it will be restated enunciated explicitly, unequivocaly in dialogue or voiceover. The latter version of the message might be controversial, but the use of variation helps to carry it past the viewers resistance.
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Technique 6. Character's strength and Weakness
[edit | edit source]To make a character more accessible to the audience you need to show incidents in which expose his strength his weakness and how he develops to over come his weakness. This variation of success and failure due to a character flaw is another element whose variation should be planed to increase the viewer's stakes. Such incidents should have a unifying theme and should refer to the moral premise.
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Participants
[edit | edit source]Collaborations
[edit | edit source]Consequences
[edit | edit source]Uses & Abuses
[edit | edit source]Related Patterns
[edit | edit source]
References
Books
Films
- ↑ Eastwood, C. (Director). (2003). Mystic River. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/0327056/.
- ↑ Lehman E. (Writer); Hitchcock, A. (Director). (1959). North by Northwest. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053125/.
- ↑ Kurosawa, A. (Director). (1950). Rashomon. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053125/.
- ↑ Bryan Singer (Director) Christopher McQuarrie (Writer). (1995). The Usual Suspects. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053125/.
- ↑ Peter Shaffer (Writer) Milos Forman (Director). (1999). Amadeus. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086879/.
- ↑ Jim Uhls (Adaptation) David Fincher (Director). (1999). Fight Club. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0137523/.
- ↑ Kazuo Ishiguro (Novel), Ruth Prawer Jhabvala (Screenplay), James Ivory(Director). (1993). The Remains of the Day. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0107943/.
People
- ↑ Woody Allen
- ↑ Sean Penn
- ↑ Tim Robbins
- ↑ Kevin Bacon
- ↑ Carry Grant
- ↑ Kevin Spacey
- ↑ F. Murray Abraham
- ↑ Brad Pitt
- ↑ Anthony Hopkins
- ↑ Emma Thompson
Others
- ↑ wikipedia article
- ↑ Fight Club, review by Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times, October 15, 1999, accessed February 15, 2008