By John Truby from Screenwriting Tips
You don’t need to go to film school to recognise the key elements of great
movies.
These same elements are present time and time again in the great movies, like
King Kong, The Outlaw Josey Wales, She Wore A Yellow Ribbon, McCabe and Mrs.
Miller, Meet Me in St. Louis, It’s A Wonderful Life, Sunset Boulevard and Touch
of Evil and they are worth highlighting:
1. These movies tend to have strong single line – with one overriding problem
or goal for the hero – to give the story drive, momentum, and a sense of
priorities, or in the extreme, a sense of the first cause.
2. These films occasionally digress from that strong line to allow the film
to “breathe.” That is, they play with the structure to comment on what is
happening, to cause the viewers to rethink their expectations, and to present
actions or words that make an abstract, or thematic, point.
3. These films usually have heroes with a moral problem. The hero commits or
fails to commit actions that hurt other people. These are characters with moral
flaws, and the stories drive toward the moment when the hero uncovers his or her
moral blindness.
4. Perhaps the most crucial element of great films is that the audience
believes, what each is fighting about. Even more important, these movies attach
entire clusters of values and beliefs to the two antagonists. The great movies
set up, around a single central opposition, an array of other oppositions that
grow until they have national or even international implications, and present
the essential predicaments of human life.
Read more at http://www.raindance.org/9-elements-of-great-films/
No comments:
Post a Comment