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Storytelling in Hollywood

Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

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Page 1: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Storytelling in Hollywood

Page 2: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Page 3: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Basic Plot Map

Page 4: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

But Who Says?

• WHY do stories have to be told in this linear fashion?

• So DO they HAVE to?

• Where have you seen films NOT follow the plot map?

Page 5: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Examples

• Pulp Fiction

• Memento

• Sliding Doors

• 500 Days of Summer

• Slumdog Millionaire

• Love Actually

Page 6: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Pulp Fiction - Emotional

Page 7: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Pulp Fiction - Chronologically

Page 8: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Challenge?

• Want to tell their story

• Want to tell it in unique manner

• Can’t confuse the audience!– Not saying they need to “dumb it down”

Page 9: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

History of Storytelling (in Hollywood)

• Beginnings (1910 – 1930)– Independent producers / directors banding

together

• Studio Era (1930 – 1940)– 12 films a year– Actors with long-term contracts– Similar stories– Guidelines to follow

Page 10: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

• New Hollywood (1960s – Present)– Change in studios

• Auteur (within the New Hollywood)– Directors being individuals– Telling stories artistically– Spielberg, Coppola, Lucas, Altman

Page 11: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

• Return to Classical Storytelling (70s – Present)– Pattern you already and subconsciously know…

Page 12: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Plot Defined

• Chain of events occurring in time and space that are linked by cause and effect.

– Events and actions don’t happen randomly

Page 13: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Easy to Follow?

• Classical storytelling may be easy to follow.

• But….that does not make them SIMPLE or childish!

Page 14: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Patterns

• Classical Storytelling– Plot Mountain

– Three Act Structure• Intro, Body, Conclusion

– Hero’s Journey• Remember from World Studies?

Page 15: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Understandings

• Movie making is TIME intensive

• Most scripts don’t make it to production

• Multiple revisions over scripts

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Understandings

• Items are WELL thought out.

• Pretty much everything IS intentional– Words said– Order– Inflection– Costuming– Framing

Page 17: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Characters

• Traits assigned at first viewing

• Characters follow their traits

• IF they break traits, it must be explained why / how

• Characters are “round” and “consistent”

Page 18: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Double Goal Orientation

• Character has one goal

• Often forced to CHANGE to another

• Second line is often a love-interest line

Page 19: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Examples – Double Goals

• The Proposal– Margaret need to marry Andrew to become “legal”– Falls in love…for real

• Titanic– Jack wants to get to America– Falls in love with Rose

• Alien– Ship is heading home from space– Must fight off the Alien– NO love interest

Page 20: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Cause and Effect

• Character has a goal or set of goals.– Most have 1 or 2 related goals

• Something gets in the way of the goal.

• Time crunch for completing goal(s)

Page 21: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Examples – Time Crunch• The Proposal

– Must be married and have info on new husband before being deported

• Titanic– Ummm….the ship is sinking

• Back to the Future– Must reach the goals before his messed up history causes him not to be

born (fading picture)

• Star Wars– Must destroy Death Star before Rebel base is in firing range

Page 22: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Tools to Make These Understandable

• Rule of Three– Important items will be repeated at least THREE

times– Biblical (Think back to archetypes!)

– May not be in the SAME EXACT method

Page 23: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

180 Degree Rule

Page 24: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Sound Bridge

• Sound from one scene bleeds over to other scenes.

Parents talking about daughter’s piano playing ability

Shot of daughter practicing

Piano music starts playing before the scene of parents ends.

Hear END of parents’ talking while visually seeing the girl practicing.

Page 25: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Dialogue Hook

• Character will say something….

• That “something” pops up on the screen

• Silence of the Lambs– Lecter: “Our little Billy must already be searching for that

next special lady…”– Next scene: Woman who will be the murder’s next

victim

Page 26: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Dangling Cause

• Something you see / hear early in the film.

• But….takes a while for it to return to importance

Page 27: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Dangling Cause Examples

• Raiders of the Lost Ark– Indy HATES snakes (plane)– In vault – snakes everywhere

• Back to the Future– Plutonium reported missing (stolen by Libyans)– Radiation box seen (in Doc’s room)– Plutonium needed to power the time machine– WHO comes to kill Doc?

Page 28: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

• How to Lose a Guy in Ten Days– Andie decides she will do more research on an

article she wishes to write called "how to loose a guy in ten days."

– Benjamin makes known the opinion that he can make any woman fall in love with him in less than ten days.

Page 29: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Motif

• Repeated idea, image, pattern

• Colors = red (Raiders)

• Phrase = “pop quiz” (Speed)

• Item = barrels (Jaws)

Page 30: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Motif to Progress Plot

• Jaws…– Shoot the shark with barrels to bring him to the surface.

– We see the gradual adding of barrels.

– Don’t see the shark…just barrels!

Page 31: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Plot Holes

• When a dangling cause is not resolved

• When a character changes unexplainably from his or her initial set-up– A dumb character disarms a bomb– Minority Report - precogs

Page 32: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

The Four Stages!

• Not to be confused with…..

Page 33: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

The Set-Up

• Meet characters

• Get a feel for who they are

• Establish the “double goal” structure

Page 34: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Complicating Action

• Action goes in a new direction

• New situation that the protagonist must cope with

Page 35: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Development

• Goals are all in place

• Many incidents that create action, suspense, and delay

Page 36: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

Climax and Epilogue

• Straight forward progress toward a resolution

• Build steadily toward a point of high action

• Will protagonist’s goals be achieved or not?

• Nothing new should be introduced

Page 37: Storytelling in Hollywood. Everyone Has a Story to Tell

4 Stages

• Roughly balanced in terms of time

• Cause and effect pattern