3 Mistakes Screenwriters Make In Act 1 That Ruin A Screenplay by Michael Hauge

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Damn....

2:30 - Biggest problem is it doesnt lead into a clear finish line that anyone can envision.

2:45 - not showing the everyday life of the character before moving the story forward. It must show this is who it was for sometime and it must create empathy....

It didnt take 5 minutes. It took 15 seconds.

👍︎︎ 20 👤︎︎ u/Livid_Match_6109 📅︎︎ Jul 23 2020 đź—«︎ replies

What a great resource, thanks for posting. It’s awesome to get these perspectives from people who know about the craft.

👍︎︎ 6 👤︎︎ u/quod-vox 📅︎︎ Jul 23 2020 đź—«︎ replies

Neil is such a hack writer.

👍︎︎ 5 👤︎︎ u/_furlong_ 📅︎︎ Jul 23 2020 đź—«︎ replies

Holy shit, what we've felt all along, but couldn't put it into words like this, because we don't know the craft secrets. But yes, exactly, TLOU2 gets nothing right about what he is saying, and it definitely shows. It also explains why no one can exactly pinpoint what they like about the story - it's simply done wrong, so there is no way to articulate what you like about it.

[edit] so I posted this on the other sub, and it's been removed after one minute for "spamming".

[edit2] I got a message saying it's in the process of approval, apparently they manually approve each post.

👍︎︎ 6 👤︎︎ u/Zoolok 📅︎︎ Jul 23 2020 đź—«︎ replies

god dammit neil

👍︎︎ 6 👤︎︎ u/chinmang 📅︎︎ Jul 23 2020 đź—«︎ replies

One thing that bothered me is, this story had no point. The characters never accomplished what they set out for, so I was left with the feeling of, why? Why even tell this story?

With the character arc Abby goes through, it makes it seem like this game was about Abby and last minute they were like fuck it and threw in Joel and Ellie.

👍︎︎ 2 👤︎︎ u/ScreamnMonkey8 📅︎︎ Jul 24 2020 đź—«︎ replies
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Film Courage: What are some common mistakes that writers make in the first two stages of writing a screenplay which compromises the first act and then subsequent acts? What are the first parts that end up compromising the entire work? Michael Hauge: I would actually go a little further with your question. I would say, if you have problems in the first two stages, it’s impossible for your script to work. I have this sort of motto and that is “If you’re having story problems, all roads lead to the hero’s outer motivation.” Because one of the biggest issues, one of the most difficult things for writers to really embrace is the idea that at the foundation of any story is a visible goal that the hero wants to cross at the end of the story. They’ll get so caught up in the inner journey, in the depth of dimension of the character or in the themes they want to deliver or they’ll just think the premise is good, so they’ll get lost in a thicket of events and plotting until finally they are just coming up with new ideas and adding idea after idea until it becomes so complicated and confusing that there is no story there. If you think about most Hollywood movies in particular are based on very simple story ideas. Even if you take a story idea that is fairly complex like INCEPTION. That seems pretty complicated. I have a little trouble grasping some of that but at it’s very core, it’s very simple. A group of people want to penetrate a person’s dreams down to a layer where they can change behavior without him knowing it. That’s it! I was able to say that in what, five seconds and one sentence?Everything is built on that goal. And if you have that kind of clear through line and if when you say what that goal is, everybody gets the goals of what achieving that goal is, then you’ve laid a foundation for what most scripts don’t honestly have. It’s odd because it sounds simple but it’s not easy. I think for those of us who write or are storytellers, we so want to get into character. We so want to get into deeper levels of meaning. We so want it to be original and different and complex and special that we lose sight of first I have to have this very simple throughline. So, that is the number one thing. One of the biggest problems in one and two is that it doesn’t lead to a clear, visible finish line that anyone can envision, whether they are reading the script or watching the movie, they know what they’re looking for. Second thing is not showing the everyday life of the character before they get into the story moving forward. We have to have a set-up. It can be very brief or the character can be on-the-move, so to speak, action wise. They can’t have just arrived into town and we see them going to a meeting or going to meet with a hit man or whatever it might be. Nonetheless, it has to convey that this is who this character has been for some time and it has to create empathy. Film Courage: Like Rambo. He arrives….Brian Dennehy’s character sees him…. Michael Hauge: Yes, exactly. So we’ll find out what happened prior to that but the first big event that is going to happen to him doesn’t happen on page one. We first have to get acquainted and identify or empathize with this character. And that empathy must occur immediately. We have to empathize before we see what the flaws to the character are, before we start recognizing what this inner conflict is or what this identity is or what dark places they might go. First we have to just connect with them emotionally. The third thing I would say is jumping from the set-up to the outer motivation. I think because screenwriters are inundated with the idea that you’ve got to grab the reader right away and you’ve got to get things going and Hollywood moves fast and so on….all of that is true bit it doesn’t mean you rush the story. What it means is you start building in conflict as soon as you can. But you don’t rush the story. It’s going to take all of act one to get your hero to the point where they really begin pursuing that visible finish line. And if you start at page ten with them pursuing the goal, your script is going to die around page 7, because you can’t sustain a single goal that long. So you’ve got to take the whole stage one and stage two just to build up, to create the opportunity in the new situation, to get them oriented, where they have the goal and then they take that first step and that is what has to happen at 25%.
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Channel: Film Courage
Views: 611,255
Rating: 4.9538217 out of 5
Keywords: 6 stage plot structure, screenwriting structure, michael hauge, story mastery, screenwriting, selling your story in 60 seconds, screenwriter, 5 key turning points, writing, i am writing, writing screenplays that sell, writing a screenplay, screenplay, selling a screenplay, screenwriting contest, filmcourage, film courage, interview
Id: RGYHGc0pTeI
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 5min 10sec (310 seconds)
Published: Thu Dec 29 2016
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