Friday, 18 October 2013
Jim Harrison, The Great Leader
It was up to each generation to be duped into lassitude by their own music.
Tuesday, 8 October 2013
David Gerrold, On Creating A Tightly-Structured Plot
Irwin Blacker had taught a technique which I found very useful
now. Understand that every scene in a script is a confrontation
(either direct or indirect) between two or more people; the story can
be broken down into a series of one-line descriptions: “Spock tells
Kirk to use a better mouthwash. Kirk slugs Spock.” Put these on 3x5
cards and you have the whole story in front of you to shuffle around
as you choose.
The technique is especially helpful when you have two or more subplots to juggle, trying to fit them into a major plot. You can develop each plot line independent of the others and then assemble them for maximum impact and pacing. In this case, I was trying to build a story around the scenes depicting the fuzzies [Tribbles] breeding.
The first set of cards looked something like this:
Notice how the action builds toward a climax?
Having those cards to start with, then it is necessary to make up cards for the other elements of the plot and fit them in to see if they work.
At this point, a second set of cards is added:
This set of cards is shuffled into the pack and then perhaps a couple of extra scenes are written, scenes that are necessary to fill holes, smooth transitions, and provide necessary background material:
This technique can be called “Instant Story.” I know of no better method for breaking down a story into its component parts to see why it works—or, more often, why it doesn't work.
At this particular point in space and time, I had two thirds of my story. I had my major plot and I had one subplot masquerading as a major plot. Putting them on cards enabled me to see that I needed another subplot. I wasn't sure what it was yet, but I could see that I needed it. Later on, when I did realize what should go in the gaps, the cards would help me put them in the right places.
From "The Trouble With Tribbles" by David Gerrold
The technique is especially helpful when you have two or more subplots to juggle, trying to fit them into a major plot. You can develop each plot line independent of the others and then assemble them for maximum impact and pacing. In this case, I was trying to build a story around the scenes depicting the fuzzies [Tribbles] breeding.
The first set of cards looked something like this:
- Uhura is given fuzzy by Cyrano, implication that she will bring creature aboard ship.
- In Rec Room, Uhura's fuzzy has kittens. Second generation, eleven fuzzies. McCoy takes one.
- Third generation. 121 fuzzies. Establish that fuzzies are asexual—all of them can breed.
- Scene showing that fuzzies are starting to get out of hand. Fourth or fifth generation.
- Fuzzies in plague proportions. Kirk finds fuzzies in ship's stores, orders them off ship.
- Kirk finds fuzzies in grain. 1,771,561.
- Kirk makes Cyrano clean up fuzzies.
Notice how the action builds toward a climax?
Having those cards to start with, then it is necessary to make up cards for the other elements of the plot and fit them in to see if they work.
At this point, a second set of cards is added:
- Teaser: Enterprise answers emergency distress call.
- Distress call is false alarm. Kirk is annoyed at local official responsible. Start of a beautiful relationship.
- Kirk and local official have argument to dramatize the fact that they don't like each other.
- Kirk and local official have another argument, heightening tension between them.
- Local official is embarrassed at having assistant exposed as spy.
This set of cards is shuffled into the pack and then perhaps a couple of extra scenes are written, scenes that are necessary to fill holes, smooth transitions, and provide necessary background material:
- McCoy studies fuzzies, reports analysis of their biology.
- McCoy studies grain, reveals that it is poisoned.
- Tag. Uhura with fluff-ball earrings.
This technique can be called “Instant Story.” I know of no better method for breaking down a story into its component parts to see why it works—or, more often, why it doesn't work.
At this particular point in space and time, I had two thirds of my story. I had my major plot and I had one subplot masquerading as a major plot. Putting them on cards enabled me to see that I needed another subplot. I wasn't sure what it was yet, but I could see that I needed it. Later on, when I did realize what should go in the gaps, the cards would help me put them in the right places.
From "The Trouble With Tribbles" by David Gerrold
Monday, 26 August 2013
Money Quote: The Matter With Morris, David Bergen
Morris had been raised a Mennonite stoic in a tribe that wasn't a tribe at all, but more a failed cult whose main sources of entertainment were music, wordplay, and suffering.
Full Quote: The Matter With Morris, David Bergen
Doug, early in September at one of
the first meetings, had talked about the individual, and how, for all
the complaints about the plight one might find oneself in, most
people wouldn't change places with another even if begged or paid.
“Most of us are, healthily, in love with ourselves.” True, very
true, Morris thought, though he couldn't imagine why some of these
poor men wouldn't want to be him. He was fit, somewhat popular, not
bad looking, had money, drove a Jaguar, slept with escorts, had free
time, was intelligent, read and sort of understood Tillich, possessed
an okay jump shot, and with the aid of several ancient guides such as
Plato, he was slowly crawling up out of the cave. On the other hand,
when he looked at the men around him in the group, he wanted nothing
to do with their lives. Doug, the egalitarian leader? No, too old and
boring. Mervine? Too pitiful, too painful to consider. Peter, the
Filipino who lived with seventeen other family members? No, too
servile, too simple. Ezra, the fallen Jew? No, though there was
something attractive about the tribal camaraderie. Morris had been
raised a Mennonite stoic in a tribe that wasn't a tribe at all, but
more a failed cult whose main sources of entertainment were music,
wordplay, and suffering. He had shucked that off quite quickly. And
so on. If he would be forced to choose under the pressure of torture,
he would surrender to the possibility of something beyond this room,
into the realm of film. He would be Jason Bourne, and he would marry
Mia from Pulp Fiction, and they would live in humid bliss on a
small island off the coast of Cambodia.
Tuesday, 25 June 2013
The Great Code, Northrop Frye
Man lives, not directly or nakedly in nature like the animals, but within a mythological universe, a body of assumptions and beliefs developed from his existential concerns. Most of this is held unconsciously, which means that our imaginations may recognize elements of it, when presented in art or literature, without consciously understanding what it is that we recognize. Practically all that we can see of this body of concern is socially conditioned and culturally inherited. Below the cultural inheritance there must be a common psychological inheritance, otherwise forms of culture and imagination outside our own traditions would not be intelligible to us. But I doubt if we can reach this common inheritance directly, by-passing the distinctive qualities in our specific culture. One of the practical functions of criticism, by which I mean the conscious organizing of a cultural tradition, is, I think, to make us more aware of our mythological conditioning.
Northrop Frye, The Great Code.
Northrop Frye, The Great Code.
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