Hollywood is famously dismissive of
writers. Jim Harrison, author of “Legends of The Fall,” taped a note above his
desk that read, “You’re just a writer,” to remember the putdown delivered by
one studio executive.
I
am a writer, but for a number of years I was one of those “suits”. My job was
to pull apart screenplays, determine what worked and what didn’t, and most
importantly, how to fix them. I honed my skills at intensives taught by
screenwriter guru Robert McKee and talked script development with A-list
directors and award-winning screenwriters. I’d always been an avid reader of novels,
both classic and popular fiction, but then I immersed myself in thousands of
scripts.
What I discovered
is that a well-crafted story transcends the medium. What works in film can
often work equally well in a novel. And when I began writing novels in earnest,
I used that knowledge to craft what I hope are tightly written, well-structured
books.
Here are a few
takeaways from my movie days:
ACTION OPENING
James
Bond is famous for it, action films depend on it, and you can use it, too. It
doesn’t necessarily mean an express train barreling off the tracks, but your
protagonist should be in movement. Action
and dialogue are married to quickly establish your MC, and what’s at stake.
As
I write, Sarah J. Mass’ “Court of Mist and Fury” is atop the Amazon bestseller
list. Here are the opening lines:
Maybe I’d always been broken and dark
inside.
Maybe someone who’d been born whole and good
would have put down the ash dagger and embraced death rather than what lay
before me.
There was blood everywhere.
We’ve immediately
established the narrator may be morally compromised (creepy fun!) and will risk
becoming more so as he/she wields that dagger (stakes). The landscape of blood
just upped the ante even more. This writer has me putting her books on my TBR
list with just three sentences, and we haven’t even gotten to the dialogue yet!
INTERCUTTING
We’ve
all wrestled with how to make the obligatory talking head scene more compelling
without allowing pacing to slow to a crawl. Take a page from the film editor’s
playbook and intercut your dialogue to keep the energy crackling and the viewer
engaged. Toss the dialogue ball back and forth between your characters (watch
an Aaron Sorkin film for pointers here). Cut the overly descriptive detail, and
what detail you do include should be organic to the scene. Dialogue tags should
be minimal. Less is more here.
BUTTONS
What
reader doesn’t love that aha moment, when a clue dangled early in a story
develops into a significant plot twist? If you’re writing a tightly plotted
novel, such as a mystery or thriller, you might want to plant a variety of such
set-ups and pay offs. Analyzing how they’re effectively used in film can help a
writer determine where and when they should be dropped into a story.
The rule of thumb
in film is the smaller the button (the pay off) the closer it should be to the
set up (and sometimes even in the same scene, especially if it’s a joke). You
don’t want to build up your audiences’ expectations only to disappoint them down
the line, or worse, have them forget the set-up. The opposite is also true: the
bigger the button (the hero’s secret identity, the twist ending) the more time
can and should elapse between set up and pay off.
An example of a
button that falls somewhere in the middle can be found in every James Bond
film; isn’t it canny that Q always knows exactly which gadgets the spy will
need to defeat the bad guys?
CONNECTIVE TISSUE
This
neat little trick can tighten a story’s through line by linking scenes. Used
correctly, this builds cumulative energy to sustain reader interest. An over-simplified
example:
Scene 1: Amy and Zoe get invited to
a party by Nick.
Scene 2: Amy and Zoe fight; Amy
likes Nick, but Zoe thinks he’s a jerk.
Scene 3: Amy tells her mom about
the fight; Mom encourages Amy to go to party.
Scene 4: Cut to party.
By carrying over something from a previous
scene into each successive one, it creates a natural and organic order to your
storytelling.
IF THEY CARE, THEY SCARE
If
you’ve seen an episode of Law & Order,
you know each one begins with a cold opening of people stumbling across a dead
body. Interesting, but you’re not emotionally invested in how the unidentified
corpse got to be that way.
But
what if we had met the murder victim three minutes before her death? What if we
knew this young woman was rushing to get her sick cat Mimi to the vet before
they closed? That she was a pre-school teacher willing to eat Ramon for a week
to pay for Mimi’s emergency treatment? Suddenly
we care about this woman’s fate, so when a man comes up behind her with a
knife, our heart races in fear.
All
this is a long way of saying if you want your readers to care about the fate of
any character in your book, even a very minor one, you need to hook them
emotionally before they meet their end.
This is by no
means an exhaustive list of the ways story telling in novels and filmed
entertainment intersect, but I hope you will find it useful.
Kes
Cool! Gonna experiment with these in my WIP...thanks a bunch!☺☺
ReplyDelete