
In their Film Studies Two class, students take on building the first act of an original screenplay. To this end, they have to learn some fundamental filmic storytelling structures and concepts. While the exercises they undertake tend to be relatively simplified, they acquire the basic tools to create as sophisticated a story as they want (and in many cases, their story concepts tend to be commercially viable). One of the first exercises is to create the characters for their movie, and they base their decisions on the character types delineated by Frank Danielle in his study of America film structure since the blockbuster era, and distilled by Michael Hauge in his Writing Screenplays That Sell. The four basic character types are: the hero, the nemesis, the reflection, and the romance. One of the most basic rules is that film characters should fall into one of these categories, and cannot switch categories. The reasoning behind this tenet is that these specific character types provide the most efficient and organic means of telling a filmic story, and constructs a structural matrix supporting emotional response from the audience. If characters switch categories, it becomes a point of confusion and / or frustration for the audience, which has invested emotional time rooting for the hero and fearing / hating the nemesis. THE UNINVITED, out this week in theatres, violates the “no switch” rule to the core, and the result is confusion to a point I haven’t witnessed since Statham and Li in WAR. In the screening I attended, several teen age girls began to shout at the screen that they didn’t understand what was going on. Literally. They then began a conversation while the rest of the audience was shaking its collective head and looking at each other, trying to work their way through the plot they had just seen. (Definitely NOT the response the filmmakers want, I'm sure...) Later, after leaving a screening for a different movie, I saw a small clique of teenagers from a different viewing of THE UNINVITED standing outside their theatre -- like an adolescent think tank -- trying to decipher what had happened in the last ten minutes of the movie. They desperately wanted to understand; they were rooting for this movie and for the hero, but felt cheated by their experience . Now, confusion is easy to create – it is not a mark of the uber creative or imaginative. The Hollywood “twist” at the end of the movie is the easiest and most commonly corrupted technique in any art, more often than not justified as some kind of superior cleverness.

Are u 4 real mr.!
ReplyDeletewas it any good then? Because i dont want to spend my money on a movie that doesnt make sense
haha ;)
OH THAT WAS ME^^^^
ReplyDeleteHuh i have a feeling that it wont be any good
ReplyDeleteit will be like quartine, unborn, grudge, or the recent remake prom night.
This is Samantha B.
in 2nd period
Hey its Jordan Perlstein from 7th period. Cool blog. Most awesome!
ReplyDeleteJonathan from 1st per.
ReplyDeleteIs it really confusing?
It sounds like this movie was either really deep or really stupid. Daniel Burleson, 7th period.
ReplyDeleteWell i dont care if the movie was horrible or not it still sounds interesting and i wanna go see it!
ReplyDeleteWhat's the "twist" in the movie?
ReplyDeleteMakes me want to go see it.
-Richard Delgado 1st period
It's Cara Dietz from 1st period. Cool blog. (:
ReplyDeleteThis is a cool blog its taylor B from 3rd period
ReplyDeletenice blog..;)
ReplyDeletecan i take film studies next year
Blog? ah this is not something i want to do hahaha.
ReplyDeletewell im Yoshui Materrn 7th period(:
haha this sounds interesting :)
ReplyDeleteWell the movie is cool and creepy and maybe better than the first one, since this is a remake of the South Korean movie called "A Tale of 2 Sisters" which was okay. Anyway its Sean B. from 3rd period! ^^
ReplyDeletei've heard it was pretty good.
ReplyDeleteIm just gonna have to find out for myself
- Joshua Garwood
2nd period
I havent seen it but i wanna watch it
ReplyDeleteVilan Hidalgo
1st period
hey its manuel(manny)from 7th period.cool blog
ReplyDeleteWow...
ReplyDeleteeven tho i may not understand it
i still wanna go see it
[karmen hall per3]
i kinda still wanna go see it event thou it might confuse me (Viviana C. from 3rd period)
ReplyDeleteThat was a really good movie but Friday the 13th will be the best
ReplyDeletethiz movie has a weird twist u wont c on previewz!
ReplyDeletebut itz kool ztill!!
oh man.. i went to see this movie.
ReplyDeleteand personally I think it was lame.
haha well it had a good plot but
the ending was.."weird",but then
again I was with my gf so....
i really, want to see this movie.
ReplyDeleteBBUUUTTT...
to much of a scary CAT.
SEEMS LIKE A NICE MOVIE MR. LACOMBE,I'LL GO WATCH IT SOMETIME..BUT I JUST HOPE IT'S NOT LAME
ReplyDeleteI wanna see it!!!! ^.^
ReplyDelete