Four Spheres of Conflict
A tool for giving your characters a range of obstacles to overcome, which gives your story more dramatic energy and your characters more depth. To [...]
A tool for giving your characters a range of obstacles to overcome, which gives your story more dramatic energy and your characters more depth. To [...]
One of the cleanest and most common ways of encouraging the audience to project their feelings onto a character is called a Point of View Sandwich. The Kuleshov [...]
What does the audience want to know? Keeping them actively asking is the key to having them lean forward into the story. Editing for New [...]
The less you explain the underlying psychology behind your characters’ actions, the more the audience will engage. So, keep it to yourself. In 1936, German [...]
Cinema creates character psychology collaboratively. The filmmakers supply the dots, and invite the audience to draw the lines. We both contribute, so we share ownership. The difference [...]
Write cinema, not radio with pictures. Cinema is built on sequences, not scenes The basic unit of cinema is sequences built of shots, sounds, and [...]
Three key questions can help you shape your story, giving it substance, shape and a satisfying ending. Three Flavours of Narrative Narrative is shaped by one [...]
Weak villains make for weak heroes. That applies to the argument your story is telling as well. Powerful stories need powerful counterforces, across all arenas. Make your story earn [...]
Successful storytelling hinges on choreographing a dance between characters and audience, with information as the music. Controlling the Flow of Information As audience members watching a [...]
Invite your audience to work with you to add layers of meaning to your story through three kinds of subtext. When you are telling a story, [...]