Trubysway
Trubysway
Trubysway
Truby's way
Janice Day attended John Truby's genre seminar in London organised by
(I didn't attend the 22-step story structure weekend - just the genre seminar.)
form, and usually a combination of two or three.
If you want to succeed, you must master one or
two of the most popular genres, then write a
script that bends the rules.
Writers resting
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May 2005
with genre
Raindance, which followed on from a weekend masterclass in Truby's own 22-Step Story Structure.
So is his approach to genre really different?
compares them. He tells us that we can apply his
simple method of analysis to all of them, which
makes the whole area of genre easier to
understand.
I was curious to know how he had gained this
mastery - or to put it less politely - from whence
he had pinched his ideas. So I asked him.
'I'm sure there are many influences on my
thinking. Most importantly was the technique I
learned from Aristotle. When I was learning how
to write, there were no courses. So I used the
Aristotelian approach, which was to see as many
films as possible and take notes on what worked
and what didn't. I didn't want to start with a
theory and impose it on storytelling. I felt there
were already too many abstract terms tossed
around in the writing world that didn't mean
anything in practice.
'Using that approach I identified the 7 Steps,
then the 22 Steps, and finally the various story
beats of the major genres and sub-genres. I think
the major advantage of this approach is that the
story elements I found are organic to the stories,
not mechanically imposed from outside.'
During his course Truby said that genres are
modern myths: each has its own unique hero and
desire line. Each is set on its own social stage; has
a specialised opponent; needs a key question to
focus the theme; has a unique story-telling
strategy and highlights certain structure steps in
the seven basic structure steps of classical
structure. Most importantly, perhaps, each has
ten or twelve story beats (meaning actual events
rather than structure steps) that need to be
present in that genre.
I was disappointed that we didn't have time to
look at the individual story beats. The course
was packed with information and cleverly
constructed, but it felt like a taster of what he
really does have to offer. It's almost like an
interactive advertisement for his software and, it
has to be said, it works. When challenged on this
point, he explained that he doesn't run single
genre classes over here. In the States he will
spend the entire day on one form and look at the
sub-genres. Comedy, for instance, has eight
major sub-genres.
His goal for his one day genre course is to give
the participants enough information to know
which genre they are working in and how it can
be transcended. He explained that we would look
at how to take classical structure and twist it for
a certain genre. They had been studying structure
in the previous two days but he recapped his
ideas for the benefit of newcomers and the weary
brains of everyone else.
When we went through the genres we
thought about which of these structure steps
were particularly highlighted in each. (Not having
a clue, I kept shouting 'Battle!' until it was the
right answer and I could feel good about myself.)
For example, in the Horror genre, the two
significant structure steps are 'The Ghost' and
'The Opponent'.
He also summarised each genre in one simple
line, e.g. 'The detective film is about the person
who searches for the truth.' He then talked about
how to deal with that genre in order to write the
best screenplay.
Truby says that there are three major ways to
use genre and I paraphrase his advice below:
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G E N R E
Daddy got
commissioned!
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May 2005