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Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

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Page 1: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

Storyboards and Sounding BoardsGroup plotting Hollywood Style

Page 2: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

Disclaimer:I’m not a published writer, and I

don’t even get to play one on TV. What I have put together is a framework for plotting based on McKee’s Story and my experiences in Kennesaw State’s screenwriting class with Jeffery Stepakoff sprinkled with a few juicy nuggets from Goals, Motivation, & Conflict, and Break into Fiction.

Page 3: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

Second disclaimer:Tonight we’re talking about plot,

but good plots are inextricably related to character. The best plots are made better with tons of character development on the front end.

Page 4: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

Structure for the A.R.Beat = “an

exchange of behavior in action/reaction” (McKee)

Scene = 3-6 beats

Act = 12 scenesNovel/movie = 3-

5 acts

Page 5: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

Elements of a good storyInciting incident—it

must “radically upset the balance of forces in the protagonist’s life” (McKee)

Related to GMC because your characters will have goals that propel them through the story and determine their actions especially from this point forward.

Page 6: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

Progressive complications

“A story must mot retreat to actions of lesser quality or magnitude, but move progressively forward to a final action beyond which the audience cannot imagine another.” (McKee)

Turning points-related to the Twist Points in Break into Fiction

Page 7: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

Crisis (where the character must make a decision)

Climax—result of the crisis, should involve a reversal

Resolution

Page 8: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

Ways to Look at story. . .Burroway

Page 9: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

McKee’s example of the value changes associated with a story that has a happy ending. See also his “gaps.”

Page 10: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

An abbreviated Example. . .Finding NemoInciting Incident: Nemo gets snatched by the dentistMarlin’s goal: to find NemoProgressive complications: Dory can’t remember, the not-

so vegetarian shark, the fish who chases them in dark, directions from the flashy fish, the jellyfish, the whale, the gulls, Darla’s impending arrival (intersection of plot/subplot)

Crisis/Climax: Nemo and Marlin are reunited but Dory is caught in the net. Marlin has a decision: keep Nemo safe or believe in him and let him enter the net. His decision culminates in what appears to be Nemo’s death.

Resolution: In the last scene Marlin shoves Nemo out the door to school and tells jokes to the other dads successfully. Nemo then rushes back to give him a hug

Page 11: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

Your turn. . .Find a partner and construct a story.

Remember that you should have more ideas than you will use, and that this is a way to work out the kinks of a story before you start to write.

Beat = behavior with an action/reaction

Scene = 3-6 beatsAct = 12 scenesNovel/movie = 3-5 acts

Page 12: Storyboards and Sounding Boards Group plotting Hollywood Style

New Books for you to BuyStory by Robert McKeeBreak into Fiction by Mary Buckham

and Dianna LoveGoals, Motivation, Conflict by Deb

DixonThe Complete Writer’s Guide to

Heroes and Heroines by Cowden, LaFever, Viders

Time to Write and Think to Write by Kelly L. Stone