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Archives for March 2013

Silent Shadow of the Bat-Man Fanfilm

March 26, 2013 by RJ Andron

Not quite fanfilm, not quite mashup, the movie Silent Shadow of the Bat-Man is actually a work of art. Filmmaker Andre Perkowski brought together a series of silent films from the 1920s and 1930s to tell his own version of the Batman story. The results are spellbinding. Everything from the moody style reminscent of Murnau’s Nosferatu to the haunting music is expertly blended together into a Film showing what the Batman would have been like for a silent film audience.

Considering that the Batman was actually first published in May 1939, silent films were long since replaced by talkies and studios were already releasing big-budget color films using the three-strip technicolor in the mid-1930s, there would never have been a silent Batman film.

Have some fun looking at these clips and reminiscing about a film that could have been but never was. Just like the time in 1946 when Orson Welles was looking at producing a Batman movie.

Oh, you never heard about that? For good reason – it never happened. The Orson Welles Batman project was the creation of Mark Millar in 2003, where he penned a column that was essentially a hoax. But what a hoax it was. Here’s a page that describes the Batman Orson Welles hoax in detail.

Let’s file that under movies that should have been, but never were.

Enjoy the film.

“According to the article, Welles had talked George Raft signing up for the role of Two-Face, James Cagney as The Riddler, Basil Rathbone as The Joker and (get this) Marlene Dietrich as Catwoman!
As to the role of Batman, the column said that was a sticking point between Welles and the studio.
Welles wanted to portray Batman and Bruce Wayne, and the studio wanted Gregory Peck.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Shut up and eat your awesome…

Filed Under: Fanfilms

The ARKOFF formula

March 21, 2013 by RJ Andron

As a person who grew up reading comics, and modern pulp, I consumed adventure-based storytelling. It wasn’t until much, much later that I became aware of the Arkoff formula and what it means for storytelling. Following the formula gives a chance at an exciting and entertaining story – a chance that can be developed by having good writing, craft, and concept.

Bad writing? Well, let’s just say that there isn’t a formula in the world that can salvage bad writing

Samuel Arkoff founded American International Releasing in the 1950s, and produced over 500 films in his career. He made a practice of pre-selling films to audiences before making them so that he was profitable before even the first frame was shot.

He had a formula for success in a movie that also applies to books. Though many authors are reluctant to use the concept of formula in their work, at the end of the day, I would look at formula as a list of ingredients that you can mix and match any way that you want and use to build a story the way that you want. Rather than seeing a formula as restrictive by saying that you must have each and every element in there, I would approach it as liberating by seeing how each element can be added–if it needs to be added at all.

Now, I have only one commandment of storytelling:

First I shall entertain.

ARKOFF and What it Means

Arkoff broke his name into an acronym and explained it thusly:

ACTION: A good story keeps moving the plot forwards, preferably at a breakneck speed so that the audience can’t wait to see what happens next. Even if two characters are sitting at a table, there should still be action in the form of verbal jousting and the dance of verbal subtext between the characters.

REVOLUTION: Revolutionary ideas and concepts should be brought into the story. Show the audience something interesting, something they may never have thought of before. Make it something that resonates with them. Don’t rely on old tropes, whether you repeat them or subvert them. Instead, push for something new.

KILLING: Arkoff did B-movies by the dozen, and went through entire swimming pools of stage blood, so he tended to focus more on the teenage audience that for some reason loves to see people slaughtered. For our purposes, look at killing in terms of the stakes facing your characters–what is so important that it is worth killing for? What is so important that one of your protagonists would kill–or worse?

If you are going to kill your characters, then make sure that it’s an interesting death that does move the story forwards. Make sure that each death has something to say about the deceased, or the person who killed them. Even in the middle of a brutal combat scene, there should still be a sense that the death diminishes us, or is justly deserved because of the path the character took.

Avoid “tells” which can foreshadow the death of the character (e.g. the cop three days from retirement, or one who just bought a boat) unless those tells resonate with the theme of your story.

ORATORY: Although Arkoff used Oratory in talking about the movie he was producing at the time, I think that it’s equally important to have your character speak well. Give them memorable lines. Let them speak with layers of subtext. Make the dialogue more than interesting–make it fascinating in a way that has your readers quoting their favourite lines of dialogue back to them. Nobody is going to care that you found the right adjective to describe your character, but they will remember your character’s dialogue if you make it good enough.

FANTASY: All of us have fantasies and want to experience them vicariously through others. Find which fantasies resonate with your audience and give them the opportunity to live those fantasies through the eyes of your characters. You are not just telling a story, you’re selling dreams to people. Whether they want to be the farmboy who wants to get off planet and fight a distant rebellion, the woman who finds out that she has the opportunity to show up the snooty prom queen at her high school reunion, or a man who wants to take violent and bloody revenge on the people that murdered his wife and daughter, write in ways that let audiences experience those fantasies.

FORNICATION: Yes, fornication. Sex appeal is an important part of the fantasy element. But we’re not necessarily talking about full, raunchy sex scenes that would make a porn star blush. What we’re talking about is sultry, sexy, sensual–the heat that comes from desire rather than the sweat that comes from the sex itself. Focus on the seduction, not on the sex. Let the audience fill in the details with their imagination–they will thank you for it.

Before we abandon fornication as a topic, there are two things to consider. First, does the sex move the story forwards, or is it just tacked in there in order to spice up a dull plot? A scene written where a woman has sex with a man she despises to keep the man from hearing the conversation of her co-conspirators in the next room pushes the plot forwards and also reveals something about the character. A scene written where a man and woman stop in the middle of a madcap race to stop an atomic bomb from detonating to have passionate sex is bad plotting.

Incidentally, the proper response to being propositioned for sex because “We might not live through the night…” is “GODDAMMIT! Quit Whining! Defuse the bomb and then we’ll celebrate.” Just saying…

The second thing to consider about sex is whether it ties into the fantasies of the reader. Harlequin has managed to build a very successful multimillion dollar business by having a very rigid blueprint designed to appeal to their female marketplace. Many of their series feature sex as fantasy fulfillment using the “heat of the moment” to allow the heroine to be swept away by her passions. And you can almost predict right to the page where the first sex scene occurs. The point is to know your readers and their fantasies and to allow the fornication to appeal to those fantasies.

Exploring Heroic Worlds

Exploring Heroic Worlds

 

So, What Do We Do with the ARKOFF Formula?

Well, we have the formula, so we can mix and match elements as needed in order to get an entertaining story, but I don’t think that’s enough. Anyone can pick up a hammer and start nailing 2×4’s together but that’s a long way from framing a house. Understanding the theory behind structure, and load, and even how the wood beams curve is all necessary.

The formula is simple enough that anyone can follow it. To master it, we have to understand what’s behind it. Take a look at all of the elements there, and see what the commonality is.

It’s vicariousness. It is allowing the reader or the viewer to live out exciting experiences through the eyes of the story’s characters. Vicariousness allows the audience to feel the thrill of being hunted, or of seduction. It allows them to imagine what it’s like to say memorable words, and to imagine the unimaginable. It takes them outside of their lives, and lets them experience excitement. It lets them watch bad things happening to someone else, far away, and see how that person triumphs against the bad things.

It goes back to the one commandment: “First, I shall entertain.”

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Filed Under: Creating Tagged With: Arkoff Formula, creativity, First I Shall Entertain

Shut up and eat your awesome…

March 20, 2013 by RJ Andron

It’s no secret that there has been an explosion in creativity with Youtube, and that the internet is awash with films that would never have seen the light of day in even fifteen years ago, no matter how good the film was. And what makes it even better is that the films look as good as, if not even better than, the multi-million dollar feature films that sell out the movie megaplexes. Case in point is this film:

Talk about high-concept! And it speaks right to the heart of nostalgia where every kid had sat watching Saturday morning cartoons wolfing down a bowl of cereal. Hell, there were Saturdays I practically lived on Count Chocula cereal. And the filmmakers here have taken the concept in directions that would make action-movie filmmakers choke up with pride that their art has been brought to the screen this way.

I know it’s just a trailer, but I would really love to be able to see a full movie like this.

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Silent Shadow of the Bat-Man Fanfilm

Filed Under: Fanfilms Tagged With: Comedy, Fanfilm, Film

Wouldn’t it be Cool if…

March 9, 2013 by RJ Andron

…life was really like this?

This video put out by TNT is a fun piece of marketing which really runs with the idea that people need drama in their lives. Everything that happens there is all about “blockbuster film.” I just wonder what the civilians were thinking as they saw this spectacle unfolding before their eyes. The look on the faces of the people who pushed the button says it all – they are awe-struck, nervous, and downright thrilled by the eruption of drama that they have – all by pushing that one little button.

I get this feeling every time I read a great book. I love the thriller genre, and I am having a lot of fun exploring the pulp genre of the 1930s and 1940s. It’s that feeling of being taken away and dropped into dramatic situations that you get to experience through the protagonist’s eyes, and trying to find out what happens next. How does the protagonist get out of the very deep hole the author has dropped him into? That’s all part of the fun – and something that I want to make sure happens in any story I create.

I want you to be able to pick up my story and thrill to the challenges faced by the characters, and follow them as they try to get what they want despite everyone else in the story trying to stop them. I want you to lose yourself in the worlds that my characters inhabit, whether they’re in the shadows of our own world, or in places that no one could imagine. I want you to shudder as the villains try to find ways to bring their own form of drama to the story, and fight to keep from skipping ahead to make sure the protagonist is all right.

In short, I want to add drama.

Sure, videos like this are over the top, and books and movies that show events like this occurring almost never happen to people in real life. That’s why we want the thrills – even if they’re from the nice safe distance of the pages in our hands, or the screen before our eyes. That’s why we look for stories that add drama.

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Filed Under: Creating Tagged With: Drama, First I Shall Entertain, Ideas

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