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Storytelling

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Page 1: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Storytelling

Page 2: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Common issue:

Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Page 3: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Situation vs. Story

Situation: a single scene where nothing is happening

Story: potential for drama

Page 4: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

“Drama is life with the dull bits cut out.”

- Alfred Hitchcock

Page 5: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Example

Situation:

A man and a woman are sitting next to each other at the airport

Page 6: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Example

Story

A man sitting next to a woman at the airport quietly passes her a

note which makes her start crying silently to herself.

Page 7: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Common Mistake

It isn’t always good to “write what you know”

Why?

Page 8: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

You need DRAMA!

Because you can fall into the habit of writing things exactly the way they

happened

Page 9: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Where is the DRAMA?

Drama attracts people to the story and keeps them engaged

Page 10: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Easy way to remember…

Kenneth Thrope Rowe, writer of “Write That Play” published in 1939 gave the perfect definition:

“Life is not transferred to fiction

but transformed.”

Page 11: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Don’t hesitate to write what you have experienced, but make sure you take out the….

Emotional Essence

Page 12: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Emotional Essence?

Take out the feeling of the situation rather than the full actual experience.

If you only show the experience, it turns into a documentary rather than a storyline of a film.

Page 13: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

Drama thrives on the exaggeration of things you have experienced

Page 14: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

The “Recipe”

Page 15: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

The Recipe

Becoming a film maker is like becoming a chef

at first you follow a recipe exactly but as you get more experienced you add your own twist.

Page 16: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

The Recipe

There are12 Storytelling Musts

Page 17: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

A good way to think of a story is as a 3 act play

Act 1: exposition, introduction of protagonist, dramatic premise and most likely the dramatic situation

Page 18: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

A good way to think of a story is as a 3 act play

Act 2: drama increased by obstacle or introduction of problem, main character typically reaches lowest point during this act

Page 19: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

A good way to think of a story is as a 3 act play

Act 3: Climax of story, wrap up information, usually a sense of restoration reached during this act

Page 20: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

1. There must be a story

Page 21: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

2. Every story needs an instigating event

-instigating event: something that happens that makes the rest of the movie happen

Example: a murder, an affair, a kidnapping, a fight

Page 22: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

3. The instigating event leads to…

Major dramatic question.

examples: Will they find the murderer? Will they get a divorce?

Page 23: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story4. The instigating event and dramatic

question lead to The WANT.

The want is what motivates all of the character actions throughout the script until they get what they desire, this sometimes happens in the middle or end.

Page 24: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

5. Things can never be too easy for your main character, you need complications, obstacles and adversaries to give DRAMA to the story and make it interesting.

Page 25: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

6. There must be an ally (allies) to help the main character overcome the obstacles presented in the story

Page 26: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

7. The hero must FAIL before

they succeed

Page 27: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

8. There must be a dramatic moment in between the middle of the movie to turn up the heat (usually during the end of Act 2 or beginning of Act 3)

Page 28: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

9. There needs to be a crucial piece of new information about 2/3 of the way into the story. This is known as the “turning point” or Peripety (greek term).

Peripety: a sudden unexpected change of fortune

Page 29: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

10. No matter what genre, the last 1/3 of the story or Act 3 must be the most exciting and interesting part of the story

Page 30: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

Act I and II = the ride up the

roller coaster

Act III = the ride down

Page 31: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

11. There must be a change in the main character’s personality that brings them to a different (usually better) personality or situation.

In real life, people may not change, but in art, they typically do for the drama.

Page 32: Storytelling. Common issue: Many new screen writer’s have issues taking a situation and creating a story from it

12 ingredients of a good story

12. The ending doesn’t necessarily have to be a happy or sad ending, but must be satisfying.