Sunday, September 2, 2012

THE ART OF GETTING A CHARACTER GOING

Even if you don't have the foggiest idea what your story is going to be about, or what will happen or exactly when and where it is to be set, it would be helpful if you could at least complete the following: "My main character wants _________ more than anything else in the world."


What does your character WANT? Love, respect, courage, revenge, a kidney for his kid sister, to find the son that was given up for adoption? If you want to write a DRAMATIC screenplay, the minimum requirement is that you have a character that wants something.

At about the same time you allow yourself to start discovering what your character wants, and  who or what opposes them, you'll begin to find out where your story is going, and what it’ll be about, both narratively and thematically.  Dramatic characters can only be dramatic insofar as they are fighting for something.

Fighting does not necessarily mean using fists or guns or joining an army, but they must be striving for something that is not easy to attain. In short, dramatic characters are goal-driven, and in order to achieve their objectives they have to act.

A character’s actions involve both confrontation and avoidance. Avoidance? Yes! Characters also want/need to avoid things, like being killed, or captured. But whatever it is that the character is avoiding, it only has meaning (i.e.: emotional power) if it is enacted within the context of what it is that the character hopes to win, gain or achieve.

What scares your characters? Humiliation, disfigurement, pain, terminal illness, poverty?
What lengths will they go to to avoid what they fear?

What have they already done to avoid their greatest fears?

Discover what it is that will cause your characters to wake up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat, hands clutching the covers, body rigid with terror.

If you want to really make your characters come to life, choose something that terrifies YOU! -- you'll find that when you write something that makes you shake, you'll also make your reader shake.

A rule of good storytelling is that the protagonist will confront the thing s/he fears the most and overcome it in order to win the thing s/he desires the most.

This isn't a hard-and-fast rule. For every 100 successful dramatic films where the writer followed it, you'll find at least one successful drama where the writer ignored it completely. 


READ MORE ABOUT CHARACTER

Saturday, September 1, 2012

WRITING TREATMENTS FOR DOCUMENTARIES

 

the BIG idea

What is the film about? What makes it different? What makes it fresh and evocative? What is the filmmaker’s purpose or goal? Why THIS film?

the Conflict

What is the source of conflict in the story?  What is the struggle of the main character? Who or what is pitted against them? What obstacles must they overcome? What threats do they encounter?  What are the source of this threats? Do they come from others or from the character herself?  By what means is this conflict presented and played out in the film?

the Presenter / or Main Character/s
What special qualities does the presenter (or main character/s) bring to the film?

the Audience

Who is the film addressed to?  To whom is the filmmaker speaking?  ‘Everyone’ is not sufficiently specific. Who you are talking to has a very important bearing not only on what you present but the way in which you present it.

the Actual Treatment

Begin with a one-sentence description of the basic story that presents the central character and the story that the character/s, images and sounds dramatise during the film, from beginning to middle to end.  

This “topic” sentence, which introduces in general terms the central character, dramatic issue/s and ultimate outcome (or resolution) of the film, may require some elaboration in the introductory paragraph. 

Describe in detail the person or persons that are interviewed, the places that will be visited, the topics that will be discussed,  the areas of conflict that will help to bring the story to life.

Written in the present tense.  (e.g.: “Christina talks about her life as an artist…”, rather than “Christina will talk…”  or  “Christina was an artist for many years…”) 

Hence, one might write:  ‘The film opens with the central character/presenter, Christina Conrad (67), in the middle of a wild cactus garden, attired in rather eccentric, hand-made clothes. She shakes one of the large cactus plants with her hands as in VOICE-OVER we hear her tell us of an injustice that was perpetrated on her when she was in her early 20s.”  … and so on.. 

Treatments are usually a narrative, and do not use technical language or jargon. There is no need for camera angles or similar detail. It is an outline of the content, and the emphasis should be on making it as interesting and compelling as possible. 

the Resolution

What point does the film make? What do you want the audience to go away feeling or thinking about at the end of the experience they’ve had watching the film?
  Read more about the drama of documentary at WHERE'S THE DRAMA?