Tuesday, 9 October 2012

Telling Stories in the New Millennium

At the turn of the new millennium stories began going digital. Anyone with a camera and some free time wanted to have their shot at fifteen minutes of fame. To this end everyone was running around making indie movies and trying to hit it big with very few success stories and lots of movies that would never see a large enough audience to give investors the confidence they needed to support up and coming artists.



 This is how Youtube began. With Youtube's birth, many up and coming directors, producers, actors and singers could have their shot at making it big and being discovered but it also opened the door for more hobbits movie makers, re-inventing the way we see digital stories.

The usual format for a digital story is beginning, middle and end, this introduces the audience to the topic, builds suspense and resolves any problems formed during the timeline. With youtube videos there is no need for an introduction as the audience can see the creator and interact with him/her by leaving comments or even posting response videos.

 The story doesn't even have to end and can continue for as long as the user posts videos.

Monday, 1 October 2012

How I learned to write.



When I was a young girl, around the age of nine. I began writing stories. Like most stories written by children, they were focused more on the self than actual plot progression and character development. I mean, how would you develop your self? Isn't that the same as seeing the future? I really had no concept of a good story outside of 'add more drama!'

 It wasn't until I picked up my first manga that I began to refine my craft. Micing the lines of plots I saw there to create my own stories. I still have the fanfic I wrote for that series but I shall never let anyone see it every again. 

 When I learned to write it was a trial and error kinda thing. where I would wonder: Does this make sense for this character or is this story easy to follow? Questioning my writing worked in the beginning, allowing me to correct my mistakes and move forward with a more defined purpose but until I started learning the techniques behind the craft I was still slowly progressing.

 I honestly suggest picking up books on the writer's craft. They help immensely when trying to edit your work or even just get better at writing in general. More often than not, they help you see where the major mistakes in your writing are, if you can swallow their medicine.

Tuesday, 18 September 2012

The Evolution of the Story Map

Before Gustav Freytag's pyramid was introduced to the world another thinker, Aristotle, had noticed the differences between a good story and a bad story. He had discovered that it had a beginning, middle and end the same way Fretag had. It was this realization that was fed down the line through writers who wanted to make compelling stories until it took the form of an M.



This M shaped story line is called a story map and is used to help guide writers through the pitfalls of their writing.Story Maps can show a writer where the holes in their story and help make it more engaging to the audience.

As noted on the picture the story map is an expanded version of the Freytag Pyramid. With the added categories, the story map is easier to use as a guideline but one feature of the story map is it's ability to map out internal conflict as well. The story map can show the transformation between the character's sense of self in the beginning of the story versus her sense of self near the end.

Wednesday, 5 September 2012

The Three Points of Good Stories






Many of the greatest media pieces produced in the western world follow the simple structure of Freytag's Triangle. They have an exposition, climax and denouement. The beginning of a story introduces your characters and the world they inhabit. This part of any story begins to build suspense until you reach the climax. The climax is the height of the story where the emotional energy of the story is dispersed and settles into the Denouncement. At this point, any character that is affected by the climax should have changed in some way.

When these steps are followed, the writer completes the contract they had with the consumer and the consumer is left feeling satisfied. However, should the writer fail to complete these steps xe is breach of contract and ends up hurting xir story. A good example of this is Batman Begins.

 During the movie, Christian Bale's character Bruce Wayne begins as a young man who had lost his way and managed to get arrested halfway across the world. He is rescued by Ra's Al Ghul and trained to become his heir. He is then put to the test and asked to kill someone, which he refused to do. Up until this point, the movie follows most of the rules in Freytag's Triangle. It has introduced the characters and the world they live in while also generating suspense but continues to keep that suspense bottled up.

 So instead of a Freytag Triangle, we get something like this:



 By the theory of the triangle, the movie is doomed to fail but is saved by it's comic background and action sequences.