Plot Twists

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • How do you pull off a plot twist in a script? Should you even do that? Here's some thoughts on the values and risks - plus some practical how-to tips.
    (NOTE: there's a fair argument to be made that my definition of a plot twist is too extreme. Lots of "lesser twists" do indeed count as plot twists, and many plots have them. I hope you feel my points about twists apply and are useful, either way!)
    - - - - -
    Some examples of plot twist movies I mentioned:
    From Dusk Til Dawn
    Psycho
    The Sixth Sense
    The Planet Of The Apes
    And a few I didn’t but are worth studying:
    The Prestige
    Everything Everywhere All At Once
    Barbarian
    Your Name
    Mr. Robot (a great series that never stops twisting)
    - - - - -
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Komentáře • 34

  • @wordcharm2649
    @wordcharm2649 Před rokem +2

    YES. I was just about to write a lengthy comment about how to do a twist right, when you got to the reveal portion. In the mystery/thriller genre, most novels do have major plot twists, but they aren't ones that force you to scrap the first 50% of the book and go in a new direction, which feels like a story divided in half. Rather, while investigating X, something new is revealed which changes how you view X, but from the first scene to the last scene you're still investigating X. The reveal therefore can be astronomical (especially related to the emotional plot, ie. relationships/emotions) but the external plot remains steadfast.

    • @writingforscreens
      @writingforscreens  Před rokem

      Thank you! It is definitely an area where you can experiment and no single rule applies to everything.

  • @blue_evolution_studio_official
    @blue_evolution_studio_official Před 5 měsíci +1

    I didn't realize how the twist has all that stuff, I thought it was just a surprise or a change of the story. Now I know it is more than just one word, it is something deep and could bring the story to its success or bring it to its destruction. Thank you for this important information ✨

  • @buira9482
    @buira9482 Před rokem +1

    My document with ideas for the long comic I want to write started with only one line detailing the plot twist. Then afterwards it was, "how do I fill in the rest?".
    Now that I want to write my own crime story I appreciate my favourite plot twists twice as much! They are such a complex thing to pull off in an efficient way.

  • @FlyingOverTr0ut
    @FlyingOverTr0ut Před rokem

    Excellent info, Glenn. I worked on a semester of writing long these lines where we worked on developing our skills in pretty much all the things you talk about, like hiding clues in plain sight. It might have been the most stripped down yet challenging writing I did in my classes.

    • @writingforscreens
      @writingforscreens  Před rokem

      It's definitely a thing you need to practice and get experience with to use comfortably. Thanks!

  • @filmmakeranto
    @filmmakeranto Před rokem

    Effective, Simple and Shocking... the keywords. At the end of the video my brain just randomly started saying :
    "I want the Truth?"
    "She is my sister and my daughter"
    Great video, thank you Glen.

  • @Ruylopez778
    @Ruylopez778 Před rokem +1

    Whenever I hear the term plot twist, I immediately now think of the point I've heard you make elsewhere, that it potentially cheapens the whole story. I think Sixth Sense and Psycho work for really specific reasons. For example, 'being dumb' makes sense in the Sixth Sense, because he had a traumatic and guilty death, and it's implied he neglected his wife because of his work. It would also make perfect sense if their marriage fell apart because of that event, even if he had lived. I also think that Cole being a boy, and him providing a kind of father figure role just makes us more engaged. We can how cathartic the relationship will be for Malcolm if he can help Cole. And we also know Malcolm & Anna are both in pain, so this revelation is healing for both. And in both cases, being psychological horror/thriller means we are expecting twists, scares and shocks. And with Fight Club the twist works because the narrator is recounting the story, and someone with severe insomnia is likely to hallucinate or be unreliable with details. I suppose this is also the case with The Machinist, although I don't really remember that too clearly. But again, I think a traumatic past experience is a convincing explanation for 'being dumb'. Personally, I think Psycho has a lot more style than the other I mentioned.
    Would you consider Vertigo to have a 'plot twist' or just shocking revelations and mystery/suspense? And which movies are your preferred Hitchcock movies?

    • @writingforscreens
      @writingforscreens  Před rokem +1

      I think VERTIGO might indeed count as a "twist." Among my favorite Hitchcock: STRANGERS ON A TRAIN, NORTH BY NORTHWEST, REAR WINDOW, SHADOW OF A DOUBT, FRENZY, TORN CURTAIN and PSYCHO, but I also love SABOTEUR and admire VERTIGO without loving it personally...

  • @agoogleuser4410
    @agoogleuser4410 Před rokem +2

    Twilight Zone featured many twists. Some worked better than others. Three I remember best: The Howling Man, The Invaders, To Serve Man.

    • @writingforscreens
      @writingforscreens  Před rokem +1

      Yes, Serling was so great because he cared about ideas, he cared about structure and he cared about characters.

  • @LesandaMooreAuthor
    @LesandaMooreAuthor Před rokem

    Awesome video Glen. Sixth Sense was the perfect example. It popped into my head as you were explaining the types of plot twists.

  • @JoelAdamson
    @JoelAdamson Před rokem +1

    There's a scifi jargon term for your snow globe reveal, the "Jar of Tang Story." You get to the end of a short story or TV episode and the villain says "For you see, we are all living in a jar of Tang! Ahahahahahahaha!" These were fairly common in the fifties but were over-used by Roald Dahl and The Twilight Zone, so people started to see through them.
    "It's a cookbook!" was pretty close.

  • @BastianBooks
    @BastianBooks Před rokem +1

    I was just thinking of The Hole, with Thora Birch. The twist happens in the middle of the movie and from that point we see two different realities. At the same time, we start to witness characters who believe one or the other reality, in the movie itself, .. with a last twist at the end. Super effective for thriller or crime investigation stories like this one. It doesn't get spoiled even if you watch the movie again and again... the story remains exciting because there are still characters who don't know the truth, while you do, and knowing it already makes you feel like an investigator!

    • @writingforscreens
      @writingforscreens  Před rokem

      Interesting - I don't know that movie, will have to check it out. Thanks!

  • @-_Dawg_-
    @-_Dawg_- Před rokem

    I found this at an incredibly convenient time. I was just writing a sci-fi western pilot that has a plot twist, and after watching this I now know how to carefully craft it to have more purpose! Thank you!

  • @BlancheChiang
    @BlancheChiang Před rokem

    Unexpected yet inevitable, seriously, that's like jumbo shrimp 😂😂

  • @jonfrey6893
    @jonfrey6893 Před rokem

    Great video Glenn. It reminds me of a quote: "The which, for which, there is no whicher." - Alan Watts

    • @writingforscreens
      @writingforscreens  Před rokem

      Watts is really great, isn't he?! He's an inspiration-generating machine.

  • @Donna07
    @Donna07 Před rokem

    Awesome! Thanks Glenn, I love a great plot twist well done, and as a writer I know how hard they are to pull off! Brilliant advice which I'm going to play with this week - thank you!

  • @LoiselsPhotography
    @LoiselsPhotography Před 5 měsíci

    What's the difference between a plot twist and a revelation?

    • @writingforscreens
      @writingforscreens  Před 5 měsíci +2

      I happen to have an answer for that one! Revelation: A Screenwriting Tool - czcams.com/video/WckYwbeMNSU/video.html

    • @LoiselsPhotography
      @LoiselsPhotography Před 5 měsíci

      @writingforscreens Thank you
      So much! You have helped me out tremendously with my writing and I really appreciate all the knowledge you have given. - Andrew from North Carolina.

    • @writingforscreens
      @writingforscreens  Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@LoiselsPhotography Thank YOU, Andrew! It's wonderful for me to hear that the work I'm doing here is actually helping!!

  • @pendafen7405
    @pendafen7405 Před rokem

    Following pro-wrestling since childhood has taught me to be very wary of swerves. They don't always come off well, and even when they do it's often accidental or messy.