Tuesday 1 July 2008

FCB in The Guardian

There was a good article in yesterday's Guardian by Frank Cottrell Boyce, which can be found here. As a little teaser, here's what he has to say about the three act structure...

All the manuals insist on a three-act structure. I think this is a useless model. It's static. All it really means is that your screenplay should have a beginning, middle and end. When you're shaping things, it's more useful to think about suspense. Suspense is the hidden energy that holds a story together.

Oooh, controversial!

I've been thinking about structure and pacing quite a lot recently, and this little article is helping me frame some of my thoughts in a wider context. I may well post some of this meandering old nonsense at a later date, but in the meantime, hop over to the article and have a gander.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I've done a lot of thinking and reading about scriptwriting lately and I concur with Mr. Cottrell Boyce. Every script should have a beginning, a middle and an end.

Now if I could only work out which order they should go in, I'll be laughing.

Wyndham

Chip Smith said...

Howdy Wyndham - I've got a bit of a problem at the moment as the treatment I'm writing begins with the middle, goes back to the start and ends with the end (as you'd expect really). I think it's up to you as to which order they go in (I mean, look at Pulp Fiction). In all honesty, there's a lot of guff written about structure - I think it has more to do with pacing than anything else, but FCB is certainly onto something here...