Directing the Story by Francis Glebas

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Contents

The Goal: Why Do We Watch?

Why do we watch movies?

  • live vicariously through characters
  • learn things
  • see spectacles
  • see other worlds
  • hear a good story
  • escapism (from boredom)
  • to be entertained

none of these necessarily tell us HOW to entertain.

1001 Nights of Entertainment

A fantasy setting is nice, but not a story.

Action, a power dynamic adds interest, but is not a story

Tension and conflict creates energy, but is not quite a story

The secret of storytelling is postponing the resolution of the tension - is delaying the story!

1001 Arabian Nights - a character delaying her own execution and helping the mad sultan by writing morals that couldn't be presented outright into stories- always

cliffhangers that kept her from being killed.

You have to watch a movie or magic trick twice to see how it works - you're immersed in the story the first time.

Come up with ideas using an unconscious search - ask questions, and see what your brain fills in - relax, no forcing, interfering, judging - sense of play.

Pledge that the audience will be rewarded for following along. Identifiable characters. Keep people guessing what will happen. Allow the audience more knowledge than the characters of what will happen.

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

The story must be about something big, important, significant - even if the scope is small and local.

Show your audience what's at stake, don't tell - show WHY not just what your characters do what they do.

Prove that investing in the journey is worth it to your audience - by making it seemingly impossible for your characters (and yet they go anyway) - obstacle after obstacle.

Dramatization through Questions

Exaggerate the significance of events - they feel like life and death to the characters.

Simple dramas are made story worthy by interconnection through a sequence of cause and effect actions.

The characters have to get themselves into trouble then find ways to get out of it - presented to the audience in the form of questions and imaginative answers.

my note: wonder if that means we should present why getting them into trouble is the best solution they think they have at the time?

Critique: Is it too late to turn back?

Don't make the audience wait to see if something is going to happen - present backstory dramatically.

Entertainment Explained

Everything we do is to avoid pain and gain pleasure - biologically driven.

Watching a character learn to avoid pain through tension and conflict is learning - which is pleasurable.

Delayed gratification increases gratification.

Watch to feel good - to have an emotionally satisfying and meaningful experience.

Give the audience what they want - but not the way they expect it, so they are pleased by novelty and not bored.

Raw emotions on screen provoke reactions to those emotions, not the emotions themselves.

Bringing an audience on a journey to the place where they see why emotions are happening and empathize with them is story.

Aim for the heart by working at a structural level - all you have is pictures, words, sounds, music

What is the audience doing?

Think about the film from the audience's point of view - are they bored, confused, or engaged?

Second most important question besides "Why Do We Watch"

Reverse-engineering approach

Reverse engineer the audience - they aren't just watching! They're thinking through the movie in the mechanics of understanding not wordy thinking, starting even before they arrive to watch, based on their expectations for the show.

1. Bring their expectations and pay attention 
Have to present the story in a way that exceeds expectations
2. See the images clearly 
Design, composition, perspective, lighting
3. Reads the images, see characters things signs movement action symbols 
choose what to show and show how it's significant
4. builds a concept of the story and meaning in their head 
help them follow the story with sequencing and storytelling structure
5. Emotions arise out of meaning automatically 
identifying characters, story viewpoint, genres, narrative questions
6. Feel relief when the narrative questions close 
resolution, chekov's guns. Even a "we'll do it in the next movie" IS a resolution as they know we didn't forget it.

Promise to the reader: intuition illuminated!

Experience is a good teacher, but tactics and techniques are a good help rather than starting from scratch.

The goal of storyboarding skills is for them to disappear into the art of storytelling.

The secret of storytelling is story-delaying

And there are a lot of ways to do it.

Have to put your heart into the work - you want to move the audience.

Escaping boredom is universally funny because it's an unspoken truth - we want our lives to be exciting (we keep them boring to be safe)

Shows are a safe way to experience an exciting life for a bit!

Characters and people are made out of stories.

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?

It's easy to fix drawing problems. It's harder to learn to fix story problems.

We learn to tell stories of what happened to us everyday - but not how to tell them visually.

The skills involved in visual storytelling also have to be learned.

A well-executed movie is seamless - it's easier to learn problems by watching a bad one!

The catch-22 of the character-driven intuitive approach

Most stories are a mix of action and character - but you have to make sure that the character side is there!

Identifying with a character = identifying with their desires

Characters act to get their desires, and make mistakes based on their personalities and experience - this creates plot.

Different media does different things well:

Novels 
what people think
Plays 
dialogue
Movies/TV 
action!

Character-driven stories are about characters taking action to get what they want.

Character motivations don't help you structure visual storytelling.

What Can Possibly Go Wrong?

Even pros have issues sometimes.

Speaking Problems

Need to be able to control our pictures to say what we want.

Filmic equivalent to speaking problems:

Say one thing at once 
Often beginner boarders have too many things going on at once.
Run-on sentences 
when you get to the end, stop. Animation doesn't need coverage!
lack of punctuation 
let your jokes hit before moving on to the next gag.
Shaggy dog story 
tangents that don't drive the story or are irrelevant
Bad grammar 
poor sequencing of visual images
Nothing to say 
knockoff films, "kids stuff"

Catch-22 Revisited

You're not actually starting out from nothing - you have life experience, communication, TV and movie watching.

And now digital stuff is inexpensive and widely available.

What Do Directors Direct?

Directors direct the elements of the film, in order to direct the emotions - by means of directing the attention of the audience

Enemies of Good Design

  • boredom
  • confusion

A Fine Mess

Storyboard is creating a thread of images (not just drawings) and deciding when to show them to the audience

Clear and Dramatic Fights Confusion and Boredom

KISS - clarity fights confusion.

Boredom > lack of dramatic questions - what's going to happen next!

The Speaking Metaphor

We tell a story with pictures as if we were speaking it with words.

Noun and verbs into series of pictures.

Each new idea an image, one at a time.

Show and Tell

A series of images are needed to show condition, action, result - also context

Every Shot Is A Close-Up

Shot size usually refers to the human subject of a frame.

In story context of a shot, EVERY shot is a closeup - focusing on only one thing, but that can be from a massive spacious environment to a tiny detail.

What Is a Story?

A story is the telling of a series of events about a character who wants something, and has to overcome obstacles to get it.

A story has opposition for contrast and meaning.

Something (maybe an idea) has to die in the conflict.

A play hypothesis, a quest in the form of a question, seduction in the shape of a war.

Internal character conflicts played out as an external war.

Seduction that begins with "What If" that gives the audience the experience life's struggles are wroth it

  1. vizualize a story
  2. tell/show the story engagingly

clear pictures to grab attention, dramatizations to keep attention.

Events of the Story

Aim at the heart by working at the structural level.

Plot/events/content vs fable/story/discourse/form.

The events are what is on the screen, the story is what, written into those events, reforms in the minds of the audience.

Events of the story
Structure of the telling of the story

An Experiment

The story is what we remmber, the structure is how it's told.

Done right, the structure, while totally visible, becomes totally hidden by our involvement in experiencing the story.

Suspension of disbelief is automatic in the willingness to entertain a story being told.

Structuring Stories

Structure - the relationship between the parts of a story: The narrative questions and the delays (gaps) and answers to those questions - how they're presented.

The story is misdirection to prevent us from noticing how it's being presented.

Chart of Story Events and Structure
The events of the story are what happens
Thershold of awareness: dividing what's noticed vs not
Structure - how the story is told.

What is Character?

character - a person represented on screen

Characters aren't real people - they're caricatures or crystalization of the essences of aspects of people

Look at what rules govern a character's behavior

Visually show characters, their goals and limitations, decisions, changes, etc.

Keith Johnstone describes wonderful ways to develop characters in Impro and Impro for Storytellers.

Johnstone says stories should contain moral choice - especially if it's the wrong choice at first!

Nervous actors block because "Making a moral choice alters you, makes your character experience relief, or sadness, or despair, or whatever, so moral choices are avoided"

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

Planning story:

script
verbal plan
storyboard
visualization plan

comic strips are teeny storyboards - study how they make people feel good

History and Function of Storyboards

Disney storyboards started as showing the composer the flow of the story for music, and migrated onto boards.

Winsor McCay may have created the storyboard to plan live-action interaction films like Gertie.

Hitchcock - "If it won't work [on the board], it won't work on film."

Expedient, and saves money.

Various Types of Storyboards

  • Animation boards create the acting/staging.
  • Live action boards are a scene setup guide for the actors/cameras, don't have to represent final picture cases.
  • Live shows are edited live from multiple cameras, don't use storyboard.
  • Television boards must be on model and detailed - used for the animation order, with full continuity hookups
  • Animatics for construction of animated film - emotional road map
  • VFX storyboards - to help the effects artists and actors anticipate what the final shot/timing should look like

Production Process

  1. Need a story - from scripts or loose treatments (plan for script)
  2. Collect reference/inspiration images
    • from library/internet
    • from magazines or take photos
    • from personal collection of reference you build
    • from movies and tv
  3. Viz dev - the realm of art director & prod designer, but storyboard often hapens first

The Beat Board

Single drawing per scene to tell the story, for pitching to execs, investors, crew review

Storyboarding Overview

Read the script, analyze key storytelling beats - identifying starts, twists & turns, payoffs, interests for audience

Develop appealing characters w/unique personalities - whose point of view to express the material

Worry more about story than continuity in initial thumbnail/rough pass. Experiment and replace drawings as needed.

Ref number on drawings

Story Reels

Animatic. Full continuity, including entrances/exits of characters and shot hookups.

The Refinement Process

Edit and update the board in the storyreel to make the ideas work and the gags/tensions of the film to hit properly.

Pitching

Show someone your boards realtime, narrating the audio (why not just show them the story reel?)

Rehearse beforehand.

Pitch with passion but not out of control. Don't stand in front of the boards. Don't narrate what the camera does.

Bold drawings that read across a room

The Gong Show

storyboards are used to pitch new films/shows to execs

How to Tell a Story with Pictures

Most important thing to remember is to make sure your sequence of images is telling the same story that you think you are telling.

Many ways to tell any story and so equally many ways to storyboard.

Breaking Down the Script: What Are Story Beats?

Script page 
written description of action and dialog
scene 
small unit of conflict in the story, a larger cumulative change that steps the story along and changes the location or time or POV.
story beat 
idea or little action. The tiny changes that makes up the scene

How to Storyboard a Scene

Break script into main story beats

Look for main narrative questions, underlying theme

Create a shot/beat list

Storyboarding - almost a rewrite, using images to show rather than tell.

The first pass at directing the film.

Staging the Action

Staging: overall layout of the characters and background/foreground on the scene.

Planning diagram first! Block out where everyone moves when.

First pass in thumbnails.

May not be able to change the script, but subtext is free reign

Ignoring the 4th Wall

A trick in storytelling is to tell someone else the story, or present the story without appearing to consider the audience- therefore the audience doesn't feel noticed- and instinctively watches more.

Points to Remember: Beginning Basics

  • 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 storytelling.
  • Watch old silent movies to see how they tell stories without words.

How to Draw for Storyboarding: Motion and Emotion

Only 9,999 to Go

Anyone can draw like a child.

The impulse to draw is repressed through education.

Schools teach what society values.

Drawing contributes to cognitive development.

Drawings create new worldviews, even if we set out to explore ideas within our own view.

Drawings create insights that were not necessarily sought.

Drawings are great for beginning to visualize a film.

Practice makes perfect - the 10k drawings Nicolaides quote.

Draw gestures everywhere you go in a tiny sketchbook - a post-it note pad will do.

From Stick Figures to Balloon People

Stick Figures

Directors have directed successful films with stick figures.

Hardest part about storyboarding isn't drawing, it's thinking - how to visualize the story into a series of shots.

Downsides to stickfigures:

  • hard to see, so thin
  • hard to tell which way they're facing
  • most are stiff-looking, don't appear to be moving.

First solution is to use curved lines in the stick figures, to create expression

Balloon People

"blow up" the rest of the lines besides the head to give them volume.

Simple Skeleton

Add a simple skeleton - shoulder and hip lines.

Tend to move in opposite directions.

Head lines up over the foot supporting the weight (center of gravity)

Line of Action

Line of action that represents the main thrust of forces.

ed: curve from the support, to where it's going, modified by forces in play. See also Laban Movement Analysis

Star people, blob people, flour sacks, all work because of the LOA.

What about drawing hands

Hands based on the things they do - Bridgman's shapes. Hook, claw, club, spade, spear

Walt Stanchfield's Gesture Drawing Class

See also Drawn to Life vol 1 by Walt Stanchfield and Drawn to Life vol 2 by Walt Stanchfield

Draw the Story

draw the essence of the pose - what the character is doing, the energy of that

e.g., someone standing under an umbrella, feeling for rain - the gesture of that, before worrying about the umbrella details

Keep sketchbook on you, draw in pen, to force you to get the gesture first.

Walt's quotes

  • Draw verbs instead of nouns
  • Bad tangents are poor alignments that flatten space because levels of depth seem to connect
  • Conflict, in the form of tension, adds interest to a drawing.
  • The body attempts to stabilize and balance, creating conflict or tension

Gravity and Force

Two forces always working on the body: gravity pulling down, and the body itself rising against the gravity.

  • The artist has to be passionate, and experience the gesture to draw it faithfully & expressively
  • Getting the feel of what the model is doing is more important than looking for the parts to draw
  • Should be fast and invigorating to analyze a gesture - decide what you want your character to do in a split second and get it on paper before you get caught up in details
  • Have something to say, and keep it simple

Getting Depth in Your Drawing

Wrap lines around volumes to represent depth

Different drawn sizes of same-sized objects.

Draw difficult poses from the side first, to figure out how it lines up.

Foreshortening trick - overlap your shapes, and exaggerate the scale

Use the Floor as a Stage

Draw a grid stage for action, helps place the character in space.

Use angles for twists and turns, avoid parallelism with the frame

The Body's Acting Performance

Body language shows how a character feels.

Part of the body leading defines the quality of that action.

Rhythmic flow in drawings - muscle groups alternating between sides, straight against curve

Caricature

Designing Interesting Characters

Proportions Make the Difference

Drawing Animals on Tiptoes

The Story Drive of Emotions

Drawing the Four Main Emotion Groups

Changes of Expression Shows Thinking

A Gallery of Emotions

Miscellaneous Drawing Tips

Drawing for Clarity and the Use of Clear Silhouettes

Basic Lighting

The Drama of Light: Theatrical Lighting

Mort Walker's The Lexicon of Comicana

Technical Aspects of Storyboards

Critique: 1001 Drawings

Points to Remember: Motion and Emotion

  • 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 animated classics for examples of great drawings
  • Watch Miyazaki films for great visual storytelling and drawing
  • Study comic books for great drawings and visual storytelling

Structural Approach: Tactics to Reach the Goal

Once upon a time

The events - what happens in the story?
The threshold of awareness - divides what the audience pays attention to/notices and what we don't
Structure - how the story is told

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?

Events of the story
Threshold of Awareness
Structural Level (work here) Directors Direct Attention

How to Get Attention

The Map is Not the Territory

Selective Attention

Keeping Attention

Keeping Structure Invisible: Tricks of Attention

Milton Erickson meets Bugs Bunny

Erickson's Techniques

The Power of Suggestion

How the Brain Organizes Information: Gestalt

The Mind F lls in the Bl nks

Grouping into Wholes

Figure/Ground

Good Continuity

Grouping by Proximity

Grouping by Similarity

Grouping by Common Region

Grouping by Connectedness

Symmetry

Utilization of Gestalt

Perceptual Difficulties

Director as Magician

Story events Magician's patter
Structure Mechanics of the trick

The Rules of Magic

  • Never reveal the secret to how a trick is done
  • Never repeat a trick
  • Use attractive magicians assistants as a distraction

Hierarchy of Narrative Questions

Types of Narrative questions

Sequencing of Narrative Questions

Critique: Scheherazade Directs Attention

Points to Remember: What Directors Direct

  • A director must wear many hats:
    • magician
    • hypnotist
    • ventriloquist
    • cheerleader
    • psychologist
    • mediator
    • shepherd
  • First and foremost a director directs the audience's attention and keeps directing it
  • Change the pace so your audience doesn't grow fatigued. Give them a chance to catch their breath and give them some new scenery
  • Misdirect the audience in order to entertain them. But make sure you are clearly directing their attention.
  • Learn the gestalt principles and make them work for you
  • Analyze the hierarchy of narrative questions, delays, and answers in your film.
    • Are the questions dramatically interesting?
    • Do they maintain dramatic tension throughout the story?
    • Would it be stronger if you moved some around?

How to Direct the Eyes

Events of the story
Threshold of Awareness
Structural Level (work here) Directors Direct Attention Directing the Eyes and Ears

Visual Clarity

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

Where Do I Look?

Seeing Things

Where do I put the Camera? Staging the Action

The Great Eye Learns to See

The Design Equation

Design Elements + Design Principles = Effects
What is actually on the page
  • Points
  • Lines
  • Planes
  • Edges
  • Shapes
  • Values
  • Sizes
  • Colors

How the elements are organized:

  • Balance
  • Position
  • Dominance
  • Unity
  • Alteration and repetition
  • Contrast and similarity
  • Symmetry
  • Rhythm
The representative illusions that viewers complete in their own minds

Elements of Design: What is on the Page

Principles of Design: How to Organize What is on the Page

Effects of Design: Illusions Created by the Elements and Principles

The enemies !?! of Good Design

mainly boredom and confusion

Directing the Eye with Composition

General Guidelines of Composition

Directing the Viewer's Eyes — Look!

Compositional Reading

Where are we Going?

Movie Composition Needs to be Very Simple

A Magical Effect: How a Picture Makes You Feel

Light and Shadows

Points to Remember: Directing the Eyes

  • analyze your compositions, exploring each design element at a time, as well as overall
  • Design and composition principles apply to every level of film construction from single shot composition to the overall structure of the whole film
  • As director you you are the conductor of the moving visuals.
    • You need to control graphic noise in order to make music.
    • Tone down graphic noise by lowering the contrast.
    • Punch up the contrast on where you want the audience to look
  • Use composition to create visual drama
  • Composition is subtext. It tells the audience how to feel. Make sure you know what you are saying
  • Strive for visual clarity, simple but dynamic
  • Experiment with moving the camera around to stage the best composition.
  • Make sure each shot has a focus or center of dattention. Make sure this has the greatest contrast of value.
  • Be aware of where your characters are in the frame and what their placement says about them.
  • Use elements of your composition as arrows and pathways to direct the viewer's eyes
  • Group and mass similar things to simplify your composition. Mass your darks together to avoid making the picture look spotty
  • Weave your compositions with dark over light and light over dark
  • Watch 300 to study its dynamic composition.

Directing the Eyes Deeper In Space and Time

What is Wrong With This Picture?

What to Use: Telephoto or Wide-Angle Lenses?

Telephoto Characteristics

  • Little distortion
  • Used for beauty shots
  • Flattens space
  • Narrow depth of Field
  • Verticals and horizontals remain neutral
  • Brings distant objects near

Wide-Angle Characteristics

  • At fish-eye wideness, extreme distortion
  • Unflattering to faces
  • Expands space
  • Deep depth of field
  • Verticals and horizontals shift to create dynamic diagonals

Telephoto Lenses Truck In

Wide-Angle Lenses Truck In

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

  • Lines that are parallel to the frame will tend to flatten space
  • Ignoring size consistency makes them fail to be visual cues
  • All-black shadows create holes, all-white highlights seem to be pasted on the image
  • Objects with different horizons for no reason

Points to Remember: Time And Relative Dimension In Space

  • Make sure to give your characters breathing room
  • stage from a simple plan and use arrows like a football play
  • Use camera movement and framing to help tell the story one idea at a time
  • for beauty shots use telephoto lenses
  • for dynamic excitement use wide-angle lenses to keep maximum movement through the frame. Shoot on teh camera's axis
  • Use proximity to determine the level of engagement with your characters appropriate for the stage of your film
  • Watch Lawrence of Arabia for a great exploration of screen space

How to Make Images Speak: The Hidden Power of Images

Events of the story
Threshold of Awareness
Structural Level (work here) Directors Direct Attention Directing the Eyes and Ears Reading Significance

A Fancy Word for Clues

Why Should You Care about Clues?

How Movies Speak to Us

Denotation

Connotation

The Mind Makes Associations

Iconic Signs

Index Signs

Symbolic Signs

Crime Story Clues and Signs

Hitchcock's Rear Window

Hitchcock and his McGuffins

Significant Objects

How Images Ask Questions

Speaking Indirectly

Four Master Tropes

Metaphor

Metonymy

The symbol of something used to represent the whole (e.g. The White House used to represent the executive branch of government - in particular the President and their staff/cabinet)

Synecdoche

a part made to represent the whole (cut in, for example)

Irony

Speaking Indirectly in Time

Everything Speaks, If You Know The Code

Codes specific to film

Semiotic Square

Semiotics
the world of clues
Positive value Contrary
Negation of the negation Negative value

Semiotic Analysis of the Scheherazade and "Dumb Love" Stories

Points to Remember: Making Images Speak

  • Explore all the ways images ask questions to get powerful narrative questions
  • use semiotics to find ways to speak indirectly, thus engaging more participation from your audience
  • Stack your connotations so that if you present one aspect, it will trigger the whole thing in the minds of your audience
  • Everything speaks, it is impossible not to communicate. Remember, you have to teach your audience what the signs mean.
  • Be sure to check out Daniel Chandler's book, Semiotics: THe Basics and his online seminar, Semiotics for Beginners
  • Film is created like a dream. Slowly let it evolve layering significances and associations until you have a rich tapestry of signs

How to Convey and Suggest Meaning

Events of the story
Threshold of Awareness
Structural Level (work here) Directors Direct Attention Directing the Eyes and Ears Reading Significance Constructing Meaning

Continuity and Causality: How we put Juxtaposed Images Together

Rube Goldberg Meets the movie SAW

Seamless Continuity of Space and Time

Cut Up and Put Back Together

Multiple Types of Causality

Movies are a Signifying Systems Machine

Screen Geography: Letting the Audience Know Where They Are

Eyeline Matches

Time Continuity

History of Film Editing

Why Do We Have to Tell Stories?

Retroactivity

The Film as Time Machine

Pacing: The Expansion and Contraction of Time

How Time is Manipulated

Why Cuts Work

Editing: Constructed Significance

The Rule of Threes

Cutting: What part of the action do you show?

Motivated Cuts: Cut for a Reason

Why We Speak the Narration to Ourselves

Points to Remember: Conveying Meaning

  • Restructure to cut out boring passages and expand scenes to draw out dramatic moments
  • Tell the story through the juxtaposition
  • Follow classical continuity editing-- keep the structure invisible
  • Always cut for a reason
  • Utilize different types of causality and create story delays with Murphy's Law
  • Connect your shots logically as a sequence of causes and effects
  • Use storyboards to plan good continuity in space and time
  • Keep the pendulum swinging between hope and fear
  • Watch Miracle on 34th Street and It's a Wonderful Life to study uplifting supernatural causality. Watch I Know What You Did Last Summer to see the darker side of supernatural causality
  • Watch Back to the Future for its manipulation of time
  • Use Murphy's Law to create great obstacles

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

The Dramatic Ironiy of Retroactive Reading

Critique: What Does the Sultan Know?

Points to Remember: Dramatic Irony

  • Work out a chart of the key information. Map when different characters get to know this info and when the audience gets to know it
  • Use the chart for ironic commenting on the story
  • You, as director, control the flow of information about who gets to know what, when, where, how, and why. This applies to the characters and the audience.

Give your characters impossible choices.

  • Evoke desires and fears in order for your audience to fully invest themselves in the story
  • Watch Stranger than Fiction and Aladdin, and pay attention to how much more you know than the characters
  • Shakespeare also used dramatic irony in structuring his plays. Study them.

The BIG Picture: Story Structures

Primitive Filmic Structures and Propp's Story Functions

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

Aristotle's Plot Curve

What Does the Hero's Journey Have to Offer?

Classic Archetypal Structure or The Hero's Journey

Are We There Yet? The Neurotic's Road Trip

What is Wrong with the Hero's Journey

Three Levels of Story Analysis

Hero's Journey versus Aristotle

=Narration versus the Hero's Journey

The Hero's Journey and Levels of Events and Structure

Mentors

Paradigms of Changing the Impossible to the Possible

Ending, Beginning, and Turning Points

Types of Scenes

The Title

Once upon a time...

Before it All Began

Let's Get This Party Started

Here is what you need to know

What is at Stake

What Do You Want?

"Of Course You Know, This Means War!"

Discovery of the Rosetta Stone

Do I Have To?

We Can't Go Back Now

The Calm Before the Storm

Comic Relief

Crisis

Cut to the Chase

Shodown with the Shadow

The Aftermath: Happy Trails

Epilogue

What Happens if you Move the Structure Around?

Points to Remember: Story Structure

  • Study your story in the script and storyboard stages, before you shoot.
  • Chart out your stories as a mapmaker would. A director has to see the forest and the trees. Study your story with every kind of analysis:
    • the hero's journey and the plot curve for the big picture
    • character emotions and plot functions for the mid-level
    • narration and narrative questions for the micro level
  • Watch:
    • The Fisher King
    • Starting OUt in the Evening
    • Groundhog Day
    • Star Wars
    • The Karate Kid

Aiming for the Heart

Events of the story
Threshold of Awareness
Structural Level (work here) Directors Direct Attention Directing the Eyes and Ears Reading Significance Constructing Meaning Emotional Responses (aim here)

Do We Really Identify with the Hero?

The Audience's Journey

What makes us Root for the Hero and Hiss at the Villain

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

  • Music can create a more convincing atmosphere of time and place
  • Music can be used to underline or create psychological refinements - the unspoken thoughts or unseen implications
  • Music can serve as a neutral background filler
  • Music can build a sense of continuity in a film
  • Music can provide the underpinning for the theatrical buildup of a scene and then round it off with a sense of finality

What Is It All About?

Happy Ever After

Piglet's Big Compilation

Why We Watch Movies, Revisited

Narrative questions
puzzle solving
Narrative closure
relief from tension and questions answered
Sharing emotions
vicarious experiences
Magic and miracles
faith and belief
To feel safe from terror
mastery
Comedy
laughter
Voyeurism
spectacles, seeing secrets, and beauty
Learning about how the world works
A desire to understand
Escape confusion and boredom
excitement
Omniscient Point of View
Dramatic irony, knowing more than people in real life
Punishment of evil
sense of justice
Magic, riches, flying, invisible
fantasies fulfilled
Rhythm
Musical support, harmonic tension, closure, beat drive
Spectacle
watching things blow up!
Chases and violence
adrenaline rushes of the rollercoaster effect
Role models to internalize
underdog becomes hero
Characters they can relate to and understand
empathy
Expectations met in unexpected ways
surprising twists, turns, and reversals
To learn how to overcome obstacles
win your desires
Ritual
a sense of belonging with the community

The Story Knot and the Formula for Fantasy

Emotional Engagement of a Story

Engaging Disengaging
Clarity, easy to follow Confusing, hard to understand
Surprising Boring, predictable
High stakes Nothing at Risk
Driven toward goal Going nowhere
Emotional Too much explaining
Action gets to the point Tangents, unfocused
Appealing characters Unappealing
Shows how it feels Holes in causality and motivation

Points to Remember: Aiming for the Heart

  • Find your theam and use it as your compass
  • Discover what fantasy you are trying to fill for your audience
  • We watch movies for many reasons but mostly to have emotionally satisfying experiences. This is your target as a filmmaker
  • Work at structure and keep it invisible by giving the audience reasons to love and root for heroes and reasons to hate villains
  • Engage your audience with close-ups; put them in the heart of the action
  • Make your audience wish for things to happen and let them imagine how events might have occurred. This makes them guilty participants of their own pleasures.
  • Present your audience with moral choices
  • Watch The Man in the Chair for how it develops its theme
  • Pay attention to how the music and color in films affect you

Summary: Recapitulation of All Concepts

Goal: Why do we watch movies?
Events of the story Want your audience lost in the story, at the edge of their seats, emotionally involved, what'll happen next?
Threshold of Awareness How the story's told shouldn't distract the viewer or be perceptible if they're watching
Work here: structural level Structure - HOW the story is put together, how it is told, clear and dramatic in world of illusion
Directors Direct Attention Directs attention to narrative questions, the GAP. One idea at a time. Magic, misdirection, hypnosis, gestalt organization
Directing the Eyes and Ears Design and composition, perspective, camera to lead the eyes/attention
Reading Significance Signs indicate meanings and create associations. What is it saying?
Constructing Meaning Edit causality and continuity to construct meaning
Aim Here: Emotional Responses Meaning evokes emotions - are they the right ones? Thematic analysis, psychology

Use the techniques, forget them, work intuitively, use them again to analyze to improve.

Asking Questions and Getting Answers

Writing is asking questions and getting answers.

The brain does this even if it doesn't make sense - censoring too soon will stop the idea flow.

Writer to consciously apply these permutations

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