Re: 電影劇本創作指導Robert McKee評論奧斯卡入圍名單
看板Scenarist作者DramaLogue (Stranger Than Fiction)時間13年前 (2011/03/12 23:52)推噓0(0推 0噓 0→)留言0則, 0人參與討論串2/6 (看更多)
補充一下 剛剛在該部落格上看到的 原文出處
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/blogs/race/
screenwriting-guru-robert-mckee-rates-96935
縮短版:http://ppt.cc/5s58
在此再次感謝部落格作者tenkawa精美的中文翻譯版 ^^
也在這邊順便貼一下英文的原文版好了 給有興趣閱讀或對照原文版的朋友參考~
Screenwriting Guru Robert McKee Rates the Oscar Nominees
The longtime screenwriting teacher weighs in on the debate about
accuracy in biographical films such as "The Fighter," "The King's
Speech" and "The Social Network."
1:06 PM 2/5/2011 by Gregg Kilday
All right everybody, settle down. Class is in session. And Robert McKee, the
creative writing instructor who travels the world lecturing about how to
write a successful screenplay and whose book Story: Substance, Style and the
Principles of Screenwriting is one of the go-to texts in the field, is about
to grade this Oscar season.
His judgment? Surveying the 10 screenplays competing for the two writing
trophies at the 83rd Annual Academy Awards, he says: "This is quite a nice
year. None of them are embarrassing." (OK, class, everyone can relax a bit --
especially those of you like Toy Story 3's Andrew Stanton who have sat in on
McKee's seminars.)
McKee credits the writing in such TV series as In Treatment and The Wire for
raising the level of screenwriting by educating audiences to appreciate
subtext and not just spectacle.
"Great writing is in the subtext," he explains. "Often producers and
marketing people, they want it all in dialogue or voice-over because they
have no respect for the audience. But the Academy has always favored what I
would call 'indoor movies' -- intimate, psychologically complex stories. The
Fighter, King's Speech, The Social Network, even Winter's Bone are all really
indoor stories, the kind of thing cable TV does, but they are outnumbering
the big productions here."
"But I'll tell you what most impresses me," he says, pointing to Winter's
Bone and The Kids Are All Right, from director/co-writers Debra Granik and
Lisa Cholodenko, respectively, as well as True Grit, with its spunky heroine,
Mattie Ross. "It's the number of women writer-directors and the number of
women protagonists." Pointing to a recent study of Wikipedia that found that
less than 15% of its contributors are women, he notes, "Some professor who
studied this says that 85-15 is normal balance of male to female in any
enterprise. Women are just not assertive enough. But I look at this list, and
it's higher than that, and it's about time. If there's anything this world
needs in terms of storytelling, it's, for god's sake, let's hear what women
have to say as writers and directors. I never had a sister or a daughter, so
mother-daughter relationships fascinate me, and The Kids Are All Right had a
lot of that."
The other thing that strikes McKee about this year's movies is how
adaptations dominate. (And having been portrayed onscreen by Brian Cox in
2002's Adaptation, McKee knows a thing or two about that subject.)
Setting aside the Academy's distinction between what's adapted (Toy Story 3,
for example, because it's based on existing characters) and what's considered
an original (The King's Speech, for instance, though it draws from the
historical record), McKee counts seven of the 10 nominated screenplays as
adaptations of novels, existing characters or real-life events. And it's
those true-life stories in particular that presented real challenges.
"The first problem any writer faces with a biographical subject is the
enormous amount of material," he says. "Every life has hundreds of thousands
of hours and many characters, and you have to boil it down to two hours. The
problem is interpretation -- realizing that whatever interpretation you might
come up with, someone else might take the material and turn it on its head."
In the case of 127 Hours and King's Speech, he says, the writers did have the
advantage of a set end-point -- Aron Ralston's arm-severing escape, King
George VI's climactic speech -- toward which they could work.
The Fighter had that too. But, in McKee's view: "One of the most interesting
things about The Fighter is trying to discern what kind of drama it is. Is it
a sports movie? A coming-of-age drama? No, what it really is is a domestic
drama. The family as a group is really the protagonist with all this
self-destructive stuff going on, promoting the kid while they are tearing him
down. It's an impressive piece of writing in terms of figuring out where its
heart really is."
But his highest marks go to Aaron Sorkin's Social Network because the life in
question, that of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, "doesn't give you a great
ending the way The Fighter did, so you have to make some ending about some
other thing that changed and make audiences care about it. Sorkin had a great
challenge because he had a protagonist who is not particularly empathetic
because he's awkward and closed-off socially. But he did a brilliant job of
making the hows and whys of what he did quirky enough so that the process
really intrigues us. He knew exactly where to create tension in the
audience's mind. You don't have a big climax, but you have a big resolution."
Journalists are busy debating the veracity of such movies as King's Speech
and Social Network, but McKee has no patience for that. "I will never
understand that debate," he says. "All story is fiction. Autobiography is
fantasy. Biography is fiction in the sense that you have to make choices. And
out of the enormity of the material, the sliver of choices that you make is
an interpretation of what could be dozens of contradictory interpretations.
And they are all more or less true.
"All we ask of biographers," he adds, "is that they make a fair, heartfelt
and honest interpretation of their characters, knowing that 99% of the facts
will be cut out, certain things will be merged and the chronological order of
certain things will be changed."
He adds: "Journalists get trapped because they don't understand the
difference between fact and truth. They think fact is truth, but fact is not
truth. Truth is how and why what happened; it's always an interpretation. If
you don't like it, go write another movie."
--
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