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I went to see a pre-screening of Lone Ranger a few weeks ago. Its basically just Pirates of the Carribean in the Wild West. Depp plays Captain Jack with a different accent (bumbling, idiotic genius).

 

It was 2.5hrs but I assume it'll be chopped on our audiences recommendation!

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21 and Over. Enjoyable enough colledge kids out on the lash hi jinx. Of course it's been done a million times before and better but still worth a watch. The lead reminded me a lot of a yong Vince Vaughan and I'm still not sure whether that annoyed me or I quite liked him.

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I went to see a pre-screening of Lone Ranger a few weeks ago. Its basically just Pirates of the Carribean in the Wild West. Depp plays Captain Jack with a different accent (bumbling, idiotic genius).

 

It was 2.5hrs but I assume it'll be chopped on our audiences recommendation!

Depp's biggest box office flop??

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I'd never seen Brief Encounter before. I have now. It's quaint, but rather lovely.

 

The iconic refreshment room seen in the film has been renovated and reopened for business, 2000s-style: they serve cheesy chips.

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A Field in England

 

An ambitious attempt to combine elements of Bergman, Herzog, and Hammer with nods to Scorsese, Sunn o))) and Beavis and Butthead.

 

Whether it succeeds or fails in the attempt will need more viewings to decide. It's a confusing, meandering, pretentious, film that offers little plot and less of a conclusion. If it is a failure (and I don't know if it is) it is still one of the most interesting and original films of recent years and demands praise for trying something different.

 

I would prefer to watch it on a loop than 90% of cinema releases.

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Monsters University. I only seem to go to the cinema to see kids films these days (barring Les Mis with manc-mag)

 

As a Pixar geek, it was good but not one of their best. The detail was amazing but the storyline a bit flimsy. The bairn thought it was great so that's all that mattered today :)

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Monsters University. I only seem to go to the cinema to see kids films these days (barring Les Mis with manc-mag)

 

As a Pixar geek, it was good but not one of their best. The detail was amazing but the storyline a bit flimsy. The bairn thought it was great so that's all that mattered today :)

 

When Christmas rolls around, he'll want all manner of Monsters U shite, mind. They're not daft at Pixar.

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He's already got all of the Toy Story and Cars stuff as well as a Mikey and Sully that he got last Christmas after discovering Monsters Inc. I have a feeling it will be 'Planes' stuff this Christmas...

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He's already got all of the Toy Story and Cars stuff as well as a Mikey and Sully that he got last Christmas after discovering Monsters Inc. I have a feeling it will be 'Planes' stuff this Christmas...

 

 

Are you taking him to the airshow this weekend?

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Are you taking him to the airshow this weekend?

 

I work every weekend. His daddy lives in Seaham so they may well be going to watch the planes down at the seafront - it saves the bother of parking and crowds further up the coast.

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If you’ve gone to the movies recently, you may have felt a strangely familiar feeling: You’ve seen this movie before. Not this exact movie, but some of these exact story beats: the hero dressed down by his mentor in the first 15 minutes (Star Trek Into Darkness, Battleship); the villain who gets caught on purpose (The Dark Knight, The Avengers, Skyfall, Star Trek Into Darkness); the moment of hopelessness and disarray a half-hour before the movie ends (Olympus Has Fallen, Oblivion, 21 Jump Street, Fast & Furious 6).

 

It’s not déjà vu. Summer movies are often described as formulaic. But what few people know is that there is actually a formula—one that lays out, on a page-by-page basis, exactly what should happen when in a screenplay. It’s as if a mad scientist has discovered a secret process for making a perfect, or at least perfectly conventional, summer blockbuster.

 

The formula didn’t come from a mad scientist. Instead it came from a screenplay guidebook, Save the Cat! The Last Book on Screenwriting You’ll Ever Need. In the book, author Blake Snyder, a successful spec screenwriter who became an influential screenplay guru, preaches a variant on the basic three-act structure that has dominated blockbuster filmmaking since the late 1970s.

 

When Snyder published his book in 2005, it was as if an explosion ripped through Hollywood. The book offered something previous screenplay guru tomes didn’t. Instead of a broad overview of how a screen story fits together, his book broke down the three-act structure into a detailed “beat sheet”: 15 key story “beats”—pivotal events that have to happen—and then gave each of those beats a name and a screenplay page number. Given that each page of a screenplay is expected to equal a minute of film, this makes Snyder’s guide essentially a minute-to-minute movie formula.

 

Snyder, who died in 2009, would almost certainly dispute this characterization. In Save the Cat!, he stresses that his beat sheet is a structure, not a formula, one based in time-tested screen-story principles. It’s a way of making a product that’s likely to work—not a fill-in-the-blanks method of screenwriting.

 

Maybe that’s what Snyder intended. But that’s not how it turned out. In practice, Snyder’s beat sheet has taken over Hollywood screenwriting. Movies big and small stick closely to his beats and page counts. Intentionally or not, it’s become a formula—a formula that threatens the world of original screenwriting as we know it.

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Screenplay gurus like Syd Field and Robert McKee touted the essential virtues of three-act structure for decades. For Field and McKee, three-act structure is more of an organizing principle—a way of understanding the shape of a story. Field’s Story Paradigm, for example, has just a handful of general elements attached to broad page ranges.

 

Field and McKee offered the screenwriter’s equivalent of cooking tips from your grandmother—general tips and tricks to guide your process. Snyder, on the other hand, offers a detailed recipe with step-by-step instructions.

 

Each of the 15 beats is attached to a specific page number or set of pages. And Snyder makes it clear that each of these moments is a must-have in a well-structured screenplay. The page counts don’t need to be followed strictly, Snyder says, but it’s important to get the proportions fairly close. You can see the complete beat sheet, with page numbers and a summary of each beat, in a sidebar here.

 

Let’s take a journey through this year’s blockbusters and blockbuster wannabes and see the big trailer-ready ways in which Snyder’s beat sheet pops up over and over again. Look at January’s Gangster Squad. After an opening image that sets up the conflict between Josh Brolin’s hard-charging cop, Sgt. John O’Mara, and the criminal forces of mob boss Mickey Cohen (Sean Penn), O’Mara is called in to see his gruff police superior. “We got rules around here, smartass,” the chief growls. “Do yourself a favor. Learn ’em.” That’s Snyder’s second beat, theme stated. And it’s right at the seven-minute mark, almost exactly when it’s supposed to happen in a 110-minute movie. The rest of the Snyder playbook is there, too: a story-starting catalyst midway through the first act, a shootout at the midpoint that ups the ante, an all-is-lost moment—including a death—between the 75- and 80-minute mark, and a concluding final act in which the baddies are dispatched in ranking order, just as Snyder instructs.

 

Or look at March’s Jack the Giant Slayer. There’s an opening image that sets up each of the young protagonists’ problems and states the theme at the five-minute mark, a catalyst at the 12-minute mark, an act break between the 25- and 30-minute mark when Jack climbs the beanstalk, and a false victory 90 minutes in, when it looks as if the evil giants have been definitively defeated.

 

Oz the Great and Powerful is a fun riff on director Sam Raimi’s quirky early horror films. But check your watch a quarter of the way through and you’ll find a tornado that whisks Oz, and the movie, into its first act. Once Oz has landed, he meets Theodora, the love interest—and the B-plot. Baz Luhrmann’s The Great Gatsby adaptation was reorganized to fit the formula, with a party-filled fun and games second quarter that leads to the decline of the third, in which tragedy looms as the bad guys close in.

 

Field and McKee were obsessed with the theoretical underpinnings of storytelling. But Snyder’s book is far more straightforward. And that’s why it’s conquered the big screen so thoroughly. Indeed, if you’re on the lookout, you can find Snyder’s beats, in the order he prescribes, executed more or less as Snyder instructs, in virtually every major release in theaters today. Even the master storytellers at Pixar stick quite close to Snyder’s playbook: Watching Monsters University this summer, I loved the way it toyed with underdog sports and college movie conventions. Yet the story hits every one of Snyder’s beats, including an opening image that’s mirrored in the final scene, an act break when Mike and Sully reluctantly join forces to compete in the Scare Games, a false victory about three-quarters of the way through when (spoiler!) they “win” the final Scare Games challenge, and an all-is-lost moment followed by an emotionally charged dark night of the soul next to a moonlit lake afterward.

 

Yet once you know the formula, the seams begin to show. Movies all start to seem the same, and many scenes start to feel forced and arbitrary, like screenplay Mad Libs. Why does Kirk get dressed down for irresponsibility by Admiral Pike early in Star Trek Into Darkness? Because someone had to deliver the theme to the main character. Why does Gina Carano’s sidekick character defect to the villain’s team for no reason whatsoever almost exactly three-quarters of the way through Fast & Furious 6? Because it’s the all-is-lost moment, so everything needs to be in shambles for the heroes. Why does Gerard Butler’s character in Olympus Has Fallen suddenly call his wife after a climactic failed White House assault three-quarters of the way through? Because the second act always ends with a quiet moment of reflection—the dark night of the soul.

 

And if the villain of the past few years of movies is the adolescent male for whom it seems all big-Hollywood product is engineered, Snyder’s guidelines have helped that bad guy close the door to other potential audiences. Save the Cat! doesn’t go so far as to require that protagonists be men. But the book does tell aspiring screenwriters to stick to stories about the young, because that’s “the crowd that shows up for movies.” Following this advice to its logical conclusion means far more stories about young men—since that’s who shows up at the multiplex the most. It’s not an accident that the chapter on creating a hero is called “It’s About A Guy Who … ” not “It’s About A Person Who … ” And with a young male protagonist, women are literally relegated to the B-plot—the love interest, or “helper,” who assists the male protagonist in overcoming his personal problems. It’s not an accident that Raimi’s megabudget Oz movie featured not Dorothy but a male protagonist.

 

Watching poorly executed movies with Snyder’s formula in mind can become a tiresome and repetitive slog. How many times can you watch a young man struggle with his problems, gain new power, then save the world? It’s enough to make you wonder: Is overreliance on Snyder’s story formula killing movies?

 

If so, then all is lost. The major studios increasingly rely on a small number of megabudget blockbusters for their profits. But big budgets mean big risks. And the only way to mitigate those risks is to stick with what’s been known to work before. In other words, formula—and the more precise the formula, the better. America’s greatest art form is headed straight, as the Snyderized Star Trek sequel notes, Into Darkness.

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It’s not that the formula can’t produce good, fun movies: Monsters University is very enjoyable. Star Wars, Die Hard, The Matrix, and The Avengers all follow something like the story path that Snyder laid out. But it does mean that Hollywood produces way too many movies about adolescent men coming to grips with who they are (think John Carter, Battleship, The Bourne Legacy, Tron: Legacy, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, virtually every superhero movie, and the entirety of the J.J. Abrams canon).

 

It also means that there’s far less wiggle room for even minor experimentation. Think of a classic popcorn flick like Jurassic Park. It’s a pretty classic three-act story, and it includes virtually all of the elements found in Snyder’s beat sheet. But they are out of order and out of proportion. Now compare that to a modern megablockbuster like The Amazing Spider-Man, which follows the Snyder structure beat by beat. There’s a reason that even Steven Spielberg is complaining that Hollywood is too reliant on formulaic blockbusters.

 

We can appeal to screenwriters to buck the trend. But why would they? The formula is incredibly useful. Indeed, I relied on Snyder’s beat sheet to write this piece, using every beat, in the order he lists. (Try reading this piece from the beginning and see if you can spot all the beats. Or click here to see a version of the essay in which they are all labeled.)

 

I could see the advantages of the beat sheet. It helped me order my thoughts and figure out what I should say next. But I also found myself writing to fit the needs of the formula rather than the good of the essay—some sections were cut short, others deleted entirely, and other bits included mostly to hit the beat sheet’s marks. It made writing easier, in other words, but it also made me less creative.

That’s why you’ve got that strangely familiar feeling at the movies. Hollywood needs to learn a screenplay style life-lesson of its own: Sure, sometimes you can let the formula guide you. But that shouldn’t be the only thing you know how to do.

 

 

 

http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/culturebox/2013/07/hollywood_and_blake_snyder_s_screenwriting_book_save_the_cat.html?wpisrc=most_viral

 

Marvellous stuff.

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Oblivion. A shite hybrid of Independence Day and Moon (and not in the same class as either of those).

 

Trance. Rosario Dawson full frontal nudity, professor x (young version) and the bloke from La Haine with a story something to do with a stolen picture and hypnotherapy. Needless to say based on the first part of my last sentance, it's the best film ever made!

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Trance. Rosario Dawson full frontal nudity, professor x (young version) and the bloke from La Haine with a story something to do with a stolen picture and hypnotherapy. Needless to say based on the first part of my last sentance, it's the best film ever made!

I also rate it highly, but I only watched the abridged version on google images.

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That's fascinating. I wrote a short story and it follows a lot of that formula. I'd never seen it broken down like that before and I certainly couldn't have consciously had it in mind when I was writing. Perhaps I wrote the way I did because, in my head, that's how stories work?

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Man of Steel. Not at all bad. I thought Shannon was good as Zod and Cavell certainly looked the part as Superman (although I didn't think he was given much acting to do). Sets it up decently for future parts of the franchise. The only thing that I thought was a bit shit was the action scenes involving the spaceships. They seemed exactly the same as the last transformers film and the Avengers. We've seen that now, come up with something original please!

 

Premium Rush. Decent action thriller with Joseph Gordon Levitt as an adrenilin junkie bike messenger who gets chased around New York by Michael Shannon's dirty cop. Nothing particularly original or unexpected but a decent watch all the same.

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I watched Olympus Has Fallen recently (reminded me of Die Hard) and while I enjoyed it it was as realistic as Bob the Builder becoming Mayor of London........Boris!


They wouldn't let us near the Whitehouse with bottle of water not sure how you would be able to get to the gates with 30 machine guns, 2 refuse trucks and several bombs, but hey that's Hollywood.

 

Watched Marley and Me last week and cried buckets even though I knew the dog died in the end. :crying:

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Watched Marley and Me last week and cried buckets even though I knew the dog died in the end. :crying:

 

I've never cried at a film ever in my life but fuck me that film had me on the brink! As a dog owner and a lab dog owner at that I can really relate to that film.

 

On another note I watched 'The Watch' last night with Vince Vaughan, Ben Stiller, Jonah Hill and Moz from IT Crowd in it. Very run of the mill comedy that was fairly entertaining but without many major laughs (Jonah Hill provides one or two though).

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