The Basic Outline

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Cause and Effect

As you can see, the structure of "Thelma & Louise" contains an economy of form, and an inexorable movement forward that drives the story to its conclusion. There is no coda, because the story ends as finally as is possible; nothing more need be said.

This structure shows that you have many options in terms of how and where you will need to begin your own outline. Often when you conceive a story, you will have a specific scene or scenes in mind. Sometimes these will relate to the beginning, the outcome, the main character's conflict, or any number of other elements. One way to do the outline, then, is to fill in the parts you know, and then fill in the spaces between by creating a story progression that justifies the existence of the scenes you have already imagined. This can create difficulties, because if you create the middle before you create the beginning, you can often enter into logical quandaries that demand answers. Sometimes it is easier when constructing certain kinds of stories to begin at the beginning, and create a chain of cause and effect that leads you to the end.

It is important to allow yourself the flexibility to let your story grow and change as you begin to come up with new explanations for character motivations, scenes, and dramatic situations. The trick in outlining your structure is to work at the whole story as if it were a puzzle, and to piece it together according to both its internal needs and your external desires. You might, for example, decide that you want your main character to be a bus driver, but at a critical moment be able to push the right buttons on a sophisticated supercomputer to save the world. Unless you're writing a comedy, the question of this character's computer literacy arises because the groundwork for such a possibility has not been properly set. You would then need change the story or the character to reflect the following kinds of possibilities:

As you can see, what you must always keep in mind is a very strong sense of cause and effect. In screenwriter's terminology, this directly relates to the important concepts of setup and payoff. Very simply, a setup is piece of information given earlier in a story that lays the groundwork for ("sets up") a related piece of information later in the structure. This excellent device allows you to break up important revelations into smaller pieces and pepper them throughout the story. It also permits drama to build gradually, often creates instant foreshadowing, and fills your narrative with textural detail.

A great example of setup and payoff can be found in "Raiders of the Lost Ark" (and in fact the film is filled with textbook examples). Todt, the evil Nazi agent, burns his hand on the hot Egyptian amulet in Marian Ravenwood's bar (setup). Later we learn that the Nazis have begun to dig for the Ark, and Indy reasons that they must somehow have a copy of the amulet (further setup). Immediately following, we see that Todt bears a nasty burn scar upon his hand in the exact image of one side of the amulet (payoff). This is a classic example of how to work important information into the body of your story.

In "Thelma & Louise," the setups and payoffs are smaller, but no less important, and often relate more to character detail than to plot. When J.D. tells Thelma of his gentleman-bandit method of robbing stores and gas stations, it functions as a setup that pays off during Thelma's later robbery of a store, during which she quotes J.D.'s lines. Many of these tiny details will not appear in your outline, but will only become apparent when you begin to write the script.

When you write setups and payoffs, you will see they require a lot of back and forth between parts of the outline, sometimes seeding the payoff before you even know what the setup will be. Especially in the thriller, mystery, and noir genres, setups and payoffs often drive the entire story. Watch "The Sting" and see if it doesn't make your head spin as you contemplate the sheer amount of story planning involved to get all of its setups and payoffs to function smoothly.

Screenplays, in contrast to many other kinds of writings, often require meticulous planning to pull off. Their built-in time limit coupled with their need to constantly generate forward motion require that you carefully consider how each detail fits together with every other. Thorough plotting and proper fermentation of your idea in the outline stage is its own reward, as not only will your work be tighter, leaner, and stronger, but when you sit down to write the first draft, it will practically type itself.

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