David by Michelangelo

David by Michelangelo
David by Michelangelo is not Augustin

5 April 2014

SUPER 8 movie review

      Syd Field, in his book, Screenplay and The Screen Writer's Workbook, has outlined a paradigm that most screenplays follow. A paradigm is a conceptual scheme and is the structure that holds screenplays together. Screenplays follow a three-act structure, meaning the standard screenplay can be divided into three parts: Setup, Confrontation, and Resolution, according to Field.


     Act 1 (Setup) comprises the first quarter of the screenplay. (Act I would last approximately 30 minutes for a two hour movie). Here is where the story is set up; the main character is told; what their goal is and introduces the main conflict that becomes their obstacle. The tone and style of the movie will also be set here. Act I must also present a strong hook: an exciting scene early in the script that grabs the audience’s interest. Part of that hook is the inciting incident that takes place somewhere in the beginning of Act I. This inciting incident often provokes a change in the protagonist’s routine – something new they experience that could either challenge or encourage them.

The story starts with the change in Joe’s family life, the incident happened in the factory causes Joe and Jackson lost their loved one. In the first two minutes, most of the characters are introduced (in sequence: Joe Lamb, Mr. and Mrs. Kaznyk, Joe’s best friends; Preston, Cary, Charles, and Martin; Jackson Lamb and Louis Dainard. In Joe’s house where the funeral is held, the setting is sad and moody. The children are curious about how Joe’s mother died, but they are naive, and they blur the discussion with zombie and food. This shows that there will contrast between adult’s world and children’s world in the movie; adults are serious and kids worry about other things which creates sense of humour in the film. Other than that, the cause of the death of Joe’s mother, Charles’s film, the relationship between Jackson and Louis are the hook of the movie. The main conflict in the movie is the relationship between Joe and his father. From the conversation between Mr. and Mrs. Kaznyk (00:01:55 Mrs. Kaznyk: “But he has never had to be a father before…I don’t think he understands Joe.”, the couple remains silence), we know that Jackson is not having good relationship with his father and they do not have much contact (Jackson is looking for the son in the house while the son is outside). Joe rather be alone and memoirs his mother (holding the necklace in his hands) than join his friends and family in the house.  

     According to Field, the three acts are separated by two plot points. The "Plot Point" or “Turning Point”, often called as reversal, is an event that thrusts the plot in a new direction, leading into a new act of the screenplay. Later screenplay gurus have built on Field's theory by stating that Plot Point 1, which leads into Act II, is the moment when the hero takes on the problem.


The turning point 1 will be the adding of new character Alice who will be the wife for the detector in Charles’s film. Together they go to the train station and shoot the film. Joe finds out that a car goes onto the train track and hit the train, there is a big explosion. Joe find cubes and keep one of them in the pocket. The kids discovered Dr. Woodward and he warn the kids to keep secret about it. This creates a big question in audience’s head.    


      Act 2 (Confrontation) comprises the next two quarters of the film. (Act II would last approximately 60 minutes for a two hour movie). The writer faces the challenge of keeping the story moving forward and not boring the audience. The elaboration of subplot is the device to solve this. The subplot is a minor story layered under the main narrative. It often adds a three-dimensionality aspect to the characters by allowing them to engage in a behavior that is not related to the main plot, but still relevant in the overall narrative and often connected to a central theme. Here, the main character begins confronting the series of obstacles standing in his/her way at this part.  They also reveal more about themselves (backstory & secrets) and what motivates them.  They suffer setbacks that test their desire for their goal, often culminating in a “darkest hour” when all seems lost right before Turning Point 2.

Act 2 is about the events caused by the train accident, the Air Force has plans, but the residents of the town are not acknowledged about that. Charles decides to go back to the scene to shoot but Alice refrains from shooting. Then Joe goes to her house and tries to persuade her, but he is chased away by her father, at the end, Alice accepts Joe’s request. When they go back to the train to shoot, Joe finds out that the train is an Air Force train. On the other hand, the Air force collects the cube and refuses to explain which makes the accident more complicated. Then strange things start to happen, Sheriff is attacked, unstable electricity, people vanishing, dogs run out of the city, engines, generators and microwave are stolen. Entering of Air Force into the town add mystery to the involvement of them in the accident.

     After that, the story will comes to the Mid-Point, which is the scene or event halfway through the second act, and therefore halfway through the script, which gives a change in direction to the story. The mid-point functions as a setback, reversal or turning point which sends the character in a new direction, pushes the plot into a higher gear or raises the character’s commitment to another level. It can also be a “lynchpin” that helps to connect Turning Point 1 to Turning Point 2.

Joe knows that the Air Force is looking for Alice’s father’s car and Dr. Woodward’s research. There is an old man which helps the deputy to listen to military chatter through the radio. The Air Force is planning an operation named “Walking Distance”. Louis told Jackson that Jack’s son is approaching Alice in the police station. Jackson is so angry and sends his son back home when he is with his friends.

     An important element of this escalation inherent to Act 2 is Plot Point 2, which shoot off the story into the third and final act. Much like Plot Point 1, Plot Point 2 also affects the main character by turning the narrative drive of the story into a new direction. The difference is that the stakes are much higher. This is often a moment of crisis, in which all hope seems lost. Sometimes it is the “light at the end of the tunnel” which is something that gives them new information or inspiration to move beyond the “darkest hour” and push toward the climax.


After Joe argued with his father, he goes to the graveyard and memoirs his mother. He hears noises from a house in the cemetery and something is digging the ground. When Joe is feeling emotional, Alice visits him and has conversation. Alice sees the home video of Joe’s family and tells Joe that her father is one of the causes of the death Joe’s mother and she hopes that the victim is her father. The Air Force killed Dr. Woodward who can tell the truth. After that, Alice too, has argument with her father and his father crashes his car when he is chasing his daughter. Alice, unprotected, caught by the alien. On the other hand, Jackson goes into the trap set by the Colonel and locked in a room. After that, the Air Force starts a fire and urges the residents of the town to evacuate. Joe is united with friends and found out that Alice is in danger.

     Act 3 (Resolution) comprises the final quarter of the film. (Act III would be the final 30 minutes for a two hour movie). At this stage, things pick up speed now as the protagonist moves faster and closer to achieving their goal, putting the final pieces of the plot’s “puzzle” together and racing toward the climax and dénouement. Climax is when the character faces the biggest obstacle of all in a climactic showdown and, in doing so, finally achieves the opportunity to realize his/her outer goal. Denouement is the “wrap-up” after the climax.  It quickly ties up the script’s loose ends, i.e., “They lived happily ever after.” The third act also offers a resolution to the subplots. The resolution can also give extra information for a more elaborate character arc.

Joe and his friends go into the town and break into the school by the help of Donnie and Charles’s sister. They discover the big secret from the documentary left by Dr. Wood. Jackson escapes from the Air Force and with Louis, they try to look for their children. In the car, their misunderstanding is resolved. The alien finds the bus and kills all the Air Force people including the Colonel, while the kids, lucky enough, able to escape and saved by Donnie.

The climax will be the kids run into the town and separate, left with Joe and Cary, who are able to make it to the cemetery. They find a big hole which leads to underground where the alien lives; they also find the vanished people, including Alice there. Cary distracts the alien with firecrackers and Joe goes to save Alice, Sheriff and accidentally a lady. They meet Cary when they try to escape but things turn out when the alien discovers them, at the end, the kids are trapped at a dead end. Joe is brave enough to face the alien and talk to it. Then, the alien is distracted by sound of machine which the spaceship is ready to operate.


For the denouement, the fathers and their children reunite on the road. After that, there is a force pulling metals, guns, cars and cubes to the water tank. Joe lets go his mother’s necklace which makes the final piece of the spaceship. When the spaceship is completed, the alien goes back home and the characters are happy about that.




Reference:
http://www.elementsofcinema.com/screenwriting/3-act-structure.html

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