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SCENE IT! Complicate Your Characters’ Lives

Tuesday, February 26, 2013 7:03 am

Yesterday, we looked at how to raise the stakes, up the ante, for our characters in the middle of our scenes/stories.

A great example of a movie (miniseries, really) that raises the stakes and develops conflicts like nothing else I’ve ever seen is The 10th Kingdom. The simple premise is that two modern New Yorkers (played by John Larroquette and Kimberly Williams-Paisley) find themselves transported into the land of the Nine Kingdoms—fairy-tale land! They must find the magic mirror that transported them to this fantasy world to get back to New York. When the story finally ends seven hours later, you feel like you’ve run a marathon—because these poor characters have been put through the ringer.

Do you back off of conflicts in your story? Do you pull punches? Do you try to make things easier for your characters? Do you resolve arguments off stage?

STOP THAT RIGHT NOW!

Techniques for Upping the Ante for Your Characters

What are some ways in which you’ve seen writers (in books, movies or TV shows) up the ante for their characters? What are some ways you can do this in your story?

Posted by Kaye Dacus

Categories: Authors/Reading, craft of fiction writing, Fiction Writing Series, Road to Publication, Scene It, Writer-Talk Tuesday, writing business, Writing Process

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9 Responses to “SCENE IT! Complicate Your Characters’ Lives”

  1. Great list of ways to up the ante! I love doing that, and what you said in a previous lesson about payoff helped me not to feel so cruel. What you said about “sequelizing” was good about staging an interruption so it doesn’t drone on forever.

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    By Carla Gade on Tuesday, February 26, 2013 at 8:27 am

  2. Oh, and an example of upping the ante – Avatar. I just saw it last night and thought it did just that.

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    By Carla Gade on Tuesday, February 26, 2013 at 8:28 am

  3. I think this is what a lot of angry viewers don’t understand about the ending to Season 3 of Downton Abbey (aside from the fact the actor wanted to leave the show): Once you’ve put a character through pretty much everything you can think of and he’s finally attained his ultimate goal, he becomes uninteresting. In fiction, happy people who don’t want anything don’t create or drive conflict.

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    By Kaye Dacus on Tuesday, February 26, 2013 at 8:32 am

    1. Matthew was so nice that he was boring at the best of times. And I still don’t understand why a nice guy like him ended up with Lady Mary.

      Oh, yes I do. It was to create conflict. Because fiction isn’t real life.

      Like

      By Iola on Tuesday, February 26, 2013 at 1:34 pm

  4. We should quote you on that – “In fiction, happy people who don’t want anything don’t create or drive conflict.”

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    By Carla Gade on Tuesday, February 26, 2013 at 8:43 am

    1. actually, may I?

      Like

      By Carla Gade on Tuesday, February 26, 2013 at 8:44 am

      1. Go for it. 😀

        Like

        By Kaye Dacus on Tuesday, February 26, 2013 at 8:48 am

  5. […] reader in at the beginning of the scene and to keep the reader involved by creating tension and complicating your characters’ lives in the middle of scenes, it’s equally as important to make sure the reader keeps turning […]

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    By SCENE IT! Hooking Your Reader with Scene Endings | KayeDacus.com on Tuesday, March 5, 2013 at 10:52 am

  6. […] Blast Off! Crafting Out-of-this-World Scene Launches SCENE IT! Is there a bit of tension in here? SCENE IT! Complicate Your Characters’ Lives SCENE IT! Hooking Your Reader with Scene Endings SCENE IT! Consequences and Rewards (a.k.a., Scene […]

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    By Writer-Talk Wednesday: Beginnings, Middles, and Endings | #amwriting #2017WritingGoals | KayeDacus.com on Wednesday, March 8, 2017 at 2:47 pm



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