Problem and Solution Elements
Posted: Jul 08, 2014 9:03 am
Hi,
In plotting sequences for a script, I found an interesting way of doing it. This seems borne out in movie sequences. I'd come up with a beginning, middle, and climax scene for each. Then fill in two journey scenes, one between each of those three. If you're doing an action driven story, the idea of decisions being in those journey scenes makes sense, actually. There was a comment online about having a cliffhanger which leads into the next sequence. Of course.
Here's my question. The story form problem you have could fit into the sequence beginning. Does the solution often come up in the climax of a sequence. I had thought of this, but wondered if it seems premature. Then again, Chris mentioned in one of the podcasts that either a signpost (I'm using this as a sequence) or an Act -- I can't remember -- is a re-expression of the story form points. You're just putting them in a context of the new signpost. Okay, does the solution tend to pop up at the end of a sequence?
In plotting sequences for a script, I found an interesting way of doing it. This seems borne out in movie sequences. I'd come up with a beginning, middle, and climax scene for each. Then fill in two journey scenes, one between each of those three. If you're doing an action driven story, the idea of decisions being in those journey scenes makes sense, actually. There was a comment online about having a cliffhanger which leads into the next sequence. Of course.
Here's my question. The story form problem you have could fit into the sequence beginning. Does the solution often come up in the climax of a sequence. I had thought of this, but wondered if it seems premature. Then again, Chris mentioned in one of the podcasts that either a signpost (I'm using this as a sequence) or an Act -- I can't remember -- is a re-expression of the story form points. You're just putting them in a context of the new signpost. Okay, does the solution tend to pop up at the end of a sequence?