From Fairy Tale to Film Screenplay: Working with Plot GenotypesIn Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting (1979), Syd Field first popularized the Three-Act Paradigm of Setup, Confrontation and Resolution for conceptualizing and creating the Hollywood screenplay. For Field, the budding screenwriter needs a clear screenplay structure, one which includes two well-crafted plot points, the first at the end of Act I, the second at the end of Act II. By focusing on the importance of the four essentials of beginning and end, and the two pivotal plot points, Field did the Hollywood film industry an enormous service. Nonetheless, although he handles the issue of overall structure expertly, Field falls down when offering the screenwriter advice on how to successfully build each of the three individual Acts. This is because Field did not recognize the importance of another layer of analysis that underpins the existence of plot points. This is the level of the plot genotype.This book will offer you a richer theory of plot structure than the one Field outlines. It will do this not by contradicting anything Field has to say about the Hollywood paradigm, but by complementing it with a deeper level of analysis. Plot genotypes are the compositional schemas of particular stories. They are sets of instructions, written in the language of the plot function, for executing particular plots. This book outlines the plot genotypes for The Frog Prince, The Robber Bridegroom, Puss-in-Boots, and Little Red Riding Hood and then shows how these genotypes provide the underpinnings for the film screenplays of Pretty Woman, Wrong Turn, The Mask, and Psycho. By means of a detailed study of these four Hollywood screenplays, you will be able to offer a much richer description of what is going on at any particular point in a screenplay. In this way, you will become much sharper at understanding how screenplays work. And you will become much better at learning how to write coherent screenplays yourself. |
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Table des matières
Vladimir Propps Functional Analysis of the Fairy Tale | 9 |
Figures | 14 |
A Functional Analysis of Charles Perraults Cinderella | 16 |
Formulating the Concept of the Plot Genotype | 27 |
The Robber Bridegroom Genotype in Wrong Turn 2003 | 46 |
The Frog Prince Genotype | 56 |
The Frog Prince Genotype in Pretty Woman 1990 | 66 |
The PussinBoots Genotype | 102 |
The PussinBoots Genotype in The Mask 1994 | 111 |
The Little Red Riding Hood Genotype | 144 |
The Little Red Riding Hood Genotype in Psycho 1960 | 151 |
Conclusion | 172 |
The plot genotype of Jack and the Beanstalk | 179 |
Notes | 182 |
Bibliography | 188 |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
From Fairy Tale to Film Screenplay: Working with Plot Genotypes Terence Patrick Murphy Aucun aperçu disponible - 2015 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
Angelic Double Anonymous Arrival asks Bargain-Agreement Bates Motel Branding Cabin cast of characters Charlie Chris Cinderella Coco Bongo Club Complication Counteraction Delivery Detective Arbogast Difficult Task Donation Dorian Tyrell Dorian’s Gang Edge City Edge City Bank Edward and Vivian Edward Lewis Entrapment executed fairy tale Fifth Functions Figure film Foundations of Screenwriting Frog Prince Heroine Heroine’s Hollywood Jack Jessie Journey of Stanley Lieutenant Kellaway Lila Crane Little Red Riding Loomis Marion Crane Mask Milo Morse Mother Mountain Men Murderous False Hero Niko Norman Bates Philip Stuckey Pivotal Eighth Function Pivotal Nineteenth Function plot function plot genotype plot point police Preparation Characters Pretty Woman Puss-in-Boots Reciprocal-Retrospective Reconnaissance Red Riding Hood Regent Beverly Wilshire Reluctant Bride Reluctant Hero Reluctant Princess Requesting Robber Bridegroom Sam Loomis screenplay sequence Setting Spatial Transference Stanley Ipkiss Stanley’s Stepsisters tells Tina Carlyle Trickery Uncovering the Crime Unfounded Claims Villain Vivian Ward Vladimir Propp Wolf