Patterns Of Screen Writing/Planning/Viewer's Perspective

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Patterns Of Screen Writing/Planning/Viewer's Perspective[edit | edit source]

There is no terror in the bang, only in the anticipation of it.

—Alfred Hitchcock

Intent[edit | edit source]

Make and break information asymmetry between audience and the characters.

Also Known As[edit | edit source]

Mystery; Suspense; Dramatic irony; Tension release laughter; Comic distance; Emotional Rhythm

Motivation[edit | edit source]

It is necessary to be aware which crucial elements of the plot have been revealed to which characters and if the audience is also in the know.

It is possible to create a powerful dynamic within the story simply by controlling the flow of information regarding (an incident). In the most basic form it is possible to dramatizing the effect as it is revealed to a sequence of characters. In the next level of sophistication individuals will face a dilemma whether to disseminate or to withhold crucial knowledge.

Example of: Tragedy
Example
Example
In Mystic River the plot is framed by a police investigation. The main characters Jimmy Markum (Sean Penn)[P 1], Dave Boyle (Tim Robbins)[P 2] and Sean Devine (Kevin Bacon)[P 3] once close are drawn together by the murder of Jimmy's daughter. Sean became a cop, Jimmy is an (ex)con and Dave who was abducted by child molesters in the first act is now a blue-collar labourer. In the final analysis there is little action taking place in Mystic River. Yet the story builds interest and emotion as the audience are shown the trail of information reaching the three friends. In the final act climax Jimmy confronts Dave and accuses him of the murder. It is soon revealed that the Jimmy is only seeing part of the picture.
 —Eastwood, C. (Director). (2003). Mystic River. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/0327056/. [F 1]


A single incident can elicit curiosity, mystery, suspense, dread, and comic release. The emotional reactions created depends on how the action is presented to the viewers. These are discussed in detail in /pathos/mystery /pathos/suspense and /pathos/dramatic irony patterns.

Many aspects of the viewers point of view , the largest and most readily perceptible is information. It depends on different Ideally, each is present in some degree in every story. These ingredients can be created by manipulating the view’s point of view. By auditing the information made available to the viewers you can change their point of view.

Many of the dramatic effects in a story depend on how the story unfolds.

Applicability[edit | edit source]

  • Emotions
    • limited gamut of emotions
  • Exposition
    • too much or too little information
  • Scenes
    • too predictable
    • undermined by insufficient emotional variety
  • Conflict
    • jumping conflict
    • foreshadowing too brief

Structure[edit | edit source]

If X is the character, whose point of view owns the current narrative line, then:

Technique 1. Narrative Perspective[edit | edit source]

When the audience discovers information together with character X we say they are in narrative perspective. This perspective generates suspense. This by far the most common technique used to hold the compel the viewer’s interest. They have anxiety over the ending and fear for the protagonist fate.

Example of: Narrative Perspective
Example
Example


Technique 2. Inferior Perspective[edit | edit source]

When the audience knows less than characters X say they are in inferior position to X. This perspective elicits curiosity and mystery. Breaking to narrative perspective by revealing the missing information end the mystery. It is possible to create a false sense of inferior perspective, by offering the audience a false clues using an intermediatory (an unreliable narrator) or directly (confunding). It is difficult to sustain mystery overtime unless you are working on a Murder Mystery.

Example of: Inferior Perspective
Example
Example
Inferior perspective is used in North by Northwest. "The Professor" tries to convince the Protagonist, Mr Thornhill (Carry Grant)[P 4] to save the love interest from mortal danger. It seems a lost cause but as they step closer to a plane noise drowns out the dialogue placing the audience in an inferior perspective.
 —Lehman E. (Writer); Hitchcock, A. (Director). (1959). North by Northwest. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053125/. [F 2]


Technique 3. Superior Perspective[edit | edit source]

When the audience knows more than characters X say they are in superior position to X. This perspective produces suspense and dread of the discovery of what we already know. It can also sustain curiosity since the viewer’s information is limited. The question is how it will happen? the question of how Breaking to narrative creates relief, but before we break we could increase out superior perspective make his situation effectively worse a couple of times

Example of: Superior Perspective
Example
Example
He foreshadows a death using "These cymbals will decide a man’s life" Placing the audience immediately in superior perspective. Creating curiosity which together with sympathy for the protagonists turns to dread. But the incident with the cymbals is not the third act climax. The second act climax is preceded by a sequence in Albert Hall that runs 12 minutes without any dialogue, from the beginning of Storm Cloud Cantata until the climax, when the Doris Day character screams. By the end of the turning point, the audience is once again in superior perspective.


Technique 4. Foreshadowing[edit | edit source]

The Exposition/Foreshadowing/ pattern is yet another method that can be used to alter the viewer's perspective. Since foreshadowing is the promise future conflict it should be used to build up the action gradually.

Example of: Foreshadowing
Example
Example


Technique 5. Comic distance[edit | edit source]

The comic perspective means suspending empathy.

Example of: Foreshadowing
Example
Example

One of the main aspect of comedy is that no matter the misfortune inflicted on the characters we can look at at it and laugh. If empathy would not be suspended we would cry at their misfortunes.

Technique 6. Diminishing[edit | edit source]

Repeated application of the same techniques twice will have diminished results the second time. The third time it can have a reversed effect. In some genres, this has become a convention. Hitchcock NNW uses this type of pattern. Following the second set piece. It ends in an impasse that Thornhill must overcome though action.

Example of: Diminishing
Example
Example


Technique 7. Reversal into Laughter[edit | edit source]

Repeated application of the same techniques more than twice will numb the viewers and can be used to produce comic distance. When this is the intended effect it is called a reversal into Laughter. In some genres, this has become a convention. Hitchcock NNW uses this type of pattern. Following the second set piece. It ends in an impasse that Thornhill must overcome though action.

Technique 8. Unreliable Narrator [1][edit | edit source]

A lot of recent films seem unsatisfied unless they can add final scenes that redefine the reality of everything that has gone before; call it the Keyser Söze syndrome.

—Roger Ebert [2]

A narrator who misinforms his listeners is called a unreliable narrator. The misinformation places the audience in an inferior position. Such a situation can then be dramatically reversed as follows:

  • By revealing the narrator's lie without revealing the secret. (maintains inferior position).
  • By revealing the lie and revealing the truth but only to the viewers. (Switching to superior position).
  • By revealing the lie to the viewers and the point of view character. (Switching to narrative position).
  • By creating ambiguity by creating revealing alternative version of the truth without passing judgment on the narrator. (maintains inferior position).

Some classical examples illuminate these possibilities:

Example of: Three Agendas in Roshmon
Example
Example
The film Rashomon (1950), uses multiple narrators to retell the story of the death of a samurai. Each witnesses describe the same basic events but the subjective views cannot be reconciled, alternately they claim the samurai died by accident, suicide, or murder. Only one at best could be a reliable story-teller. The term Rashomon effect is used to describe how different witnesses are able to produce incompatible, yet plausible, accounts of the same event.
 —Kurosawa, A. (Director). (1950). Rashomon. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053125/. [F 3]


Example of: Narrator as Trickster
Example
Example
American neo-noir film The Usual Suspects (1995) is told mostly from the perspective of con artist Roger "Verbal" Kint (Kevin Spacey)[P 5] about his dealings with quasi-mythical criminal mastermind Keyser Söze. In the end, 'Kint' is revealed to have concocted much of the story based upon observations of the room he was in. Even on repeated viewings, it's impossible to tell how much of the story is real, and how much is invented by Kint (an aspect of the film not even its creators can agree on)
 —Bryan Singer (Director) Christopher McQuarrie (Writer). (1995). The Usual Suspects. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053125/. [F 4]


A mentally impaired narrator may describe the world as they perceive it rather than as it really is. A similar effect can be arise from the narration by a child (naive) Except that a child's point of view is much more amiable to empathy - we were all once more naive and can take some humour from this point of view while a mentally defective point of view is harder to empathise with.

Example of: Unreliable due to Senile Dementia
Example
Example
In the film Amadeus which is narrated by an elderly Antonio Salieri (F. Murray Abraham)[P 6] from an insane asylum, where he claims to have murdered his rival, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. It is left unclear whether the story actually happened, or whether it is the product of Salieri's delusions; this is especially ambiguous and could be missed by an audience unfamiliar with the Salieri's or Mozart's biography.
 —Peter Shaffer (Writer) Milos Forman (Director). (1999). Amadeus. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086879/. [F 5]


Example of: Unreliable due to a split personality
Example
Example
In the film Fight Club, the narrator's best friend, Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt)[P 7], is—unbeknownst to the narrator—an aspect of his own split personality, meaning that everything Tyler does is actually being carried out (or imagined by) the narrator.
 —Jim Uhls (Adaptation) David Fincher (Director). (1999). Fight Club. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0137523/. [F 6]


The most elusive and probably the hardest to or perhaps the most elusive - is a reluctant narrator - one who is unreliable because he or she chooses to ignore the truth.

Example of: Reluctant Narrator
Example
Example
In the film The Remains of the day, James Stevens (Anthony Hopkins)[P 8] is the protagonist whose role is as an English Butler. Throughout the story he repeatedly ignores other people's plight, showing little kindness to his colleagues or even his father. He also disregards and his own inner drive with a major personal cost. All this is done under a pretext of blindly following his master's (presumed) wishes. Eventually in his capacity he faces a moral dilemma - perpetuate his master's prejudices by dismissing two members of the household who would be deported to nazi Germany and face certain death or to turn a blind eye and protect the innocents as requested by the romance character. Miss Kenton (Emma Thompson)[P 9]
 —Kazuo Ishiguro (Novel), Ruth Prawer Jhabvala (Screenplay), James Ivory(Director). (1993). The Remains of the Day. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0107943/. [F 7]


Participants[edit | edit source]

Exposition; Pathos/Mystery; Pathos/Suspense; Structure/Rhythm; Structure//Intensity;

Collaborations[edit | edit source]

Character/Dimension; Character/Center Of Being; Pathos/Empathy And Sympathy

Consequences[edit | edit source]

By tracking the viewer's perspective in relation to each character you will:

  • Detect and eliminate illogical story holes due to information.
  • Root your narratives dynamic in exposition as opposed to action. This is required to produce the most powerful turning points.
  • Create interest by eliciting basic emotions.

Uses & Abuses[edit | edit source]

Once the auteur is in full control of his medium, he will utilize these basic techniques as well as other aspects like music, cinematography and so on to layers of emotions. This way the emotional message can be pure color, uses many hues of the same color or create secondary or tertiary effect by mixing different or even conflicting effects. While today this type of layering is still outside the realm of the screenwriter, a solid foundation in weaving the emotional overlay will allow the script to suggest more advanced emotional layering.

Related Patterns[edit | edit source]

Planning/Story Rhythm/

References

Books

Films

  1. Eastwood, C. (Director). (2003). Mystic River. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/0327056/. 
  2. Lehman E. (Writer); Hitchcock, A. (Director). (1959). North by Northwest. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053125/. 
  3. Kurosawa, A. (Director). (1950). Rashomon. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053125/. 
  4. Bryan Singer (Director) Christopher McQuarrie (Writer). (1995). The Usual Suspects. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053125/. 
  5. Peter Shaffer (Writer) Milos Forman (Director). (1999). Amadeus. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086879/. 
  6. Jim Uhls (Adaptation) David Fincher (Director). (1999). Fight Club. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0137523/. 
  7. Kazuo Ishiguro (Novel), Ruth Prawer Jhabvala (Screenplay), James Ivory(Director). (1993). The Remains of the Day. [Motion picture]. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0107943/. 

People

  1. Sean Penn
  2. Tim Robbins
  3. Kevin Bacon
  4. Carry Grant
  5. Kevin Spacey
  6. F. Murray Abraham
  7. Brad Pitt
  8. Anthony Hopkins
  9. Emma Thompson

Others

  1. wikipedia article
  2. Fight Club, review by Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times, October 15, 1999, accessed February 15, 2008