Sunday, November 8, 2009

Steppin Up

Yesterday, my collaborator and I made our version of a step-sheet.

We started out with a long walk in which we argued about pacing (Me: FAST! BIG! Her: SLOW! UNDERSTATED!), and character (Me: specific motivation! Her: theme!)

Talked about the few scenes we'd discussed previously and wrote one-sentence summaries for each, which we put on note-cards and taped to a foam-core board.

Looked at them and tried to put them into a three-act structure. Found out we were writing a detective story.

I said: don't detective stories follow five-act structure? And, as a tv writer wanna-be, five act is actually sort of my thing.

We brainstormed for a while, and made a lot of random cards and finally (FINALLY!) found a solid, interesting, specific motivation for our main character. He came to life!

I went back to an old plotline we'd liked, and a five-act version of it sprung out of my mind. It worked!

We re-configered the cards on the board so they were in five acts.

Act by act, we talked about what happened to the main character. At the end of each act, he had to make a decision.

In my head, and a book on mystery writing (I *think* it's based on the act structure in You Can Write a Mystery by Gillian Roberts, but if not--someone please correct me?) the five-act structure for mysteries is:

1. Problem/Decision
2. Easy solution--FAILS!
3. Discover *real* problem
4. Figure out how to solve it
5. Solve it! (or not)

We went through all five acts, and got extremely happy with our main character's journey/the A-story. YAY!

We went back through each act and planted clues that would later be important, or added scenes with characters that had slipped out of sight for a time (for instance, the love interest is kept from the hero for the length of an act, and we'd almost lost sight of her. Likewise, one character is important at the end, so we had to show him for a bit at the beginning).

I wrote it all down in a word document, and we had a forty-scene, five-act stepsheet.

Wow, a whole movie officially plotted, and it only took five hours.

The plan now is: we each have three scenes from the first act (the entirety of the first act, put together) that we're writing today. Tonight we'll put them together and see how they look. Talk about how we felt the first act went, and if we have any changes we want to make to the second and third acts before we assign and write them. At the end of the third act, I have the feeling we'll have a major plotting session again to hammer out every little detail of the fourth and fifth acts, which are bound to change in the drafting process. Then we'll write the rest, and celebrate that we'll have a FULL DRAFT OF A FABULOUS SCREENPLAY!

So, it was a hard, exhausting, but definitely productive day. My favorite kind.

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