Difference between revisions of "Directing the Story by Francis Glebas"

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==What is Character?==
 
==What is Character?==
 
==Critique: Introducing Scheherazade==
 
==Critique: Introducing Scheherazade==
==Points to Remember==
+
==Points to Remember: Common Beginner Problems==
 
* Make sure your story is character-driven by their desires
 
* Make sure your story is character-driven by their desires
 
* Be aware of potential speaking problems that may bump your audience out of being "lost" in the story
 
* Be aware of potential speaking problems that may bump your audience out of being "lost" in the story

Revision as of 01:26, 30 May 2020

Contents

The Goal: Why Do We Watch?

Why do we watch movies?

1001 Nights of Entertainment

What's at stake is nothing less than life and death

Dramatization through Questions

1001 Nights Entertainment Revisited

Critique: Is it too late to turn back?

Entertainment Explained

Opportunity from criticism

What is the audience doing?

Reverse-engineering approach

Why do we watch and more

Promise to the reader: intuition illuminated!

The secret of storytelling is story-delaying

Points to remember: Why Do We Watch

  • We watch movies to feel good - meet that need in your audience
  • Make sure your story is about something that matters
  • Aim at providing an emotionally satisfying experience for your audience, but work at the the structural level
  • The secret of storytelling is story-delaying. Learn the different tactics to tease your audience by making them wait
  • The next time you're at a movie pay attention to what experiences you are going through as you watch. Notice what triggers your emotions.

Common Beginner Problems

Where do you begin?

The catch-22 of the character-driven intuitive approach

What can possibly go wrong?

What do directors direct?

The speaking metaphor

Show and Tell

Every Shot Is A Close-Up

What Is a Story?

What is Character?

Critique: Introducing Scheherazade

Points to Remember: Common Beginner Problems

  • Make sure your story is character-driven by their desires
  • Be aware of potential speaking problems that may bump your audience out of being "lost" in the story
  • Remember the speaking metaphor: Clearly show one thing at a time
  • Fight boredom by weaving interesting narrative questions that create dramatic characters in escalating conflict
  • Fight confusion by focusing the audience's attention to one thing at a time as you tell the story
  • Treat every shot as a close-up of what you wish to show the audience
  • Make sure your images clearly show the story ideas that you intend to convey
  • Aim at the heart by working at a structural level.

The Beginning Basics

History and Function of Storyboards

Various Types of Storyboards

Production Process

The Beat Board

Storyboarding Overview

Story Reels

The Refinement Process

Pitching

The Gong Show

How to Tell a Story with Pictures

Breaking Down the Script: What Are Story Beats?

How to Storyboard a Scene

Staging the Action

Critique: Scheherazade's Storytelling

Points to Remember

  • Draw BOLD! Make your images easy to see as a billboard.
  • Number your drawings
  • Pitch clearly and passionately
  • Storyboards are always a work in process. Start out rough and don't be afraid to throw away drawings. Keep at it until you find the image that best tells the story.
  • Avoid relying on "talking head" shots. Tell the story visually. Invent visual devices.
  • Watch the Wallace and Gromit shorts: A Close Shave and The Wrong Trousers as an example of great visual storytellign.
  • Watch old silent movies to see how they tell stories without words.

How to Draw for Storyboarding: Motion and Emotion

Only 99,999 to Go

From Stick Figures to Balloon People

Walt Stanchfield's Gesture Drawing Class

Caricature

Designing Interesting Characters

The Story Drive of Emotions

Drawing the Four Main Emotion Groups

Miscellaneous Drawing Tips

Drawing for Clarity and the Use of Clear Silhouettes

Mort Walker's The Lexicon of Comicana

Technical Aspects of Storyboards

Critique: 1001 Drawings

Points to Remember

Structural Approach: Tactics to Reach the Goal

Once upon a time

Critique: Developing Character Relationships

Points to Remember: Drawing for Storyboarding

  • Carry a sketchbook and sketch, sketch, sketch!
  • Sketch some more.
  • Draw the story
  • Use gestures to help tell the story
  • Learn to draw the essentials fast
  • Try scenes a dozen different ways to compose them
  • Film always says one thing at a time, and everything must relate to that one thing
  • Draw the pose, not the parts. Don't blow it with too many details
  • Draw verbs (actions) not nouns (names of things)
  • Don't stiffen up your poses. Think diagonals.
  • Watch the Disney aniamted classics for examples of great drawings.
  • Watch Hayao Miyazaki's films such as Kiki's Delivery Service or My Neighbor Totoro for great visual storytelling and drawing.
  • Study comic books for great drawing and visual storytelling.

What do Directors Direct?

How to Get Attention

The Map is Not the Territory

Selective Attention

Keeping Attention

Keeping Structure Invisible: Tricks of Attention

The Power of Suggestion

How the Brain Organizes Information: Gestalt

Director as Magician

Hierarchy of Narrative Questions

Critique: Scheherazade Directs Attention

Points to Remember

How to Direct the Eyes

Visual Clarity

What I Learned from Watercolor Artists: The Missing Piece of Design

Where Do I Look?

The Design Equation

Directing the Eye with Composition

A Magical Effect: How a Picture Makes You Feel

Light and Shadows

Points to Remember

Directing the Eyes Deeper In Space and Time

What is Wrong With This Picture?

What to Use: Telephoto or Wide-Angle Lenses?

How to use Framing to tell a Story

Camera Mobility

Alternative Approaches

A Trick for Planning Scenes

Proximity

Point of View: Subjective Camera

The Town of Dumb Love and SketchUp

Beware of Depth Killers

Points to Remember

How to Make Images Speak: The Hidden Power of Images

A Fancy Word for Clues

Why Should You Care about Clues?

How Movies Speak to Us

The Mind Makes Associations

Crime Story Clues and Signs

Significant Objects

How Images Ask Questions

Speaking Indirectly

Everything Speaks, If You Know The Code

Semiotic Square

Semiotic Analysis of the Scheherazade and "Dumb Love" Stories

Points to Remember

How to Convey and Suggest Meaning

Continuity and Causality: How we put Juxtaposed Images Together

Multiple Types of Causality

Screen Geography: Letting the Audience Know Where They Are

Eyeline Matches

Time Continuity

History of Film Editing

Why Do We Have to Tell Stories?

The Film as Time Machine

Why Cuts Work

Why We Speak the Narration to Ourselves

Points to Remember

Dramatic Irony

Who Gets to Know What, When, Where, How, and Why (Including the Audience)

Can You Keep a Secret?

Pendulum of Suspense

Places for Dramatic Irony

Critique: What Does the Sultan Know?

Points to Remember

The BIG Picture: Story Structures

Primitive Filmic Structures and Propp's Story Functions

The Hero's Journey or the Neurotic's Road Trip

Three Levels of Story Analysis

Mentors

Paradigms of Changing the Impossible to the Possible

Ending, Beginning, and Turning Points

Types of Scenes

What Happens if you Move the Structure Around?

Points to Remember

Aiming for the Heart

Do We Really Identify with the Hero?

Fears, Flaws, Wants, and Needs

Love Stories: What Keeps Lovers Apart?

What is So Scary about Horror?

The Rubberband Theory of Comedy: Aiming for the Backside of the Heart

So Many Crime Shows

Emotional Truth

Music and Color: Not Meaning, but Meaningful

What Is It All About?

Happy Ever After

Piglet's Big Compilation

Why We Watch Movies, Revisited

The Story Knot and the Formula for Fantasy

Emotional Engagement of a Story

Points to Remember

Summary: Recapitulation of All Concepts

Asking Questions and Getting Answers

Reference

Analysis and Evolution of the Scheherazade Project

Story Evolution: Making it Clearer and More Dramatic

Thematic Analysis and Dramatic Structures

Story Parallels and Repetitions

Hierarchy of Narrative Questions of the Scheherazade Story

Cuts for Length or to Make the Story Move Quicker

Changes Made to Make the Story More Dramatic or Resonant

Conclusion: Now We Must Say Good-bye

What They Don't Tell You

Tips for Keeping Your Dream Alive

Things Are Not Always What They Seem