The Checklist came to be when I took all the advice I’d offered up to that point on the blog and rephrased the posts as a series of questions you could ask about your manuscript. Each question linked back to the original post that inspired it. Then I later rewrote everything when I turned it into my book, The Secrets of Story.
Later, I kept studying examples and came up with various posts called Rulebook Casefile that backed up my points, and various posts called Straying from the Party Line that seemed to contradict them.
For the expansion, I’m redoing every entry to use the text from the book, tacking on any Casefiles or SftPLs afterwards, and including a chart of how 30 movies answered that question.
This expansion is ongoing. So far, I’ve only done the first three Parts and the rest still link back to the original posts that inspired them.
If you still want to read the original posts (and the original comments), I’ll leave that version up, too, underneath this one.
The goal is simple: Try to answer yes as often as possible. Of course, every story is unique and no story that I’ve evaluated has answered yes to all 122 questions, nor should it. Check out the Checklist Roadtests over there in the sidebar, to see how lots of great movies did. If you want to try it yourself, a downloadable version of this list as a word document is available here (link fixed!)
I’ve used this
list to evaluate my favorite stories and
my own work. The result: my favorite stories all pass and my own work always
fall short. This tells me what I’m doing wrong.
The goal is simple: Try to answer yes as often as possible. Of course, every story is unique and no story that I’ve evaluated has answered yes to all 122 questions, nor should it. Check out the Checklist Roadtests over there in the sidebar, to see how lots of great movies did. If you want to try it yourself, a downloadable version of this list as a word document is available here (link fixed!)
(This list is
primarily for stand-alone stories such as
screenplays, novels and plays, but
don’t worry, there’s a separate “pilot” checklist for the first
episode of continuing stories such as
TV series, book series, web series, and comics)
PART 1: CONCEPT
The Pitch: Does this concept excite everyone who
hears about it?
Story
Fundamentals: Will this concept generate a strong story?
Does this
challenge represent the hero’s greatest hope and/or greatest fear and/or an ironic answer to the hero’s question?
The Hook: Will this be marketable and generate word
of mouth?
Does the story satisfy the basic human urges that get people to buy and recommend this genre?
Does the story satisfy the basic human urges that get people to buy and recommend this genre?
PART 2: CHARACTER
Believe: Do we recognize the hero as a human being?
Care: Do we feel for the hero?
Invest: Can we trust the hero to tackle this
challenge?
PART 3: STRUCTURE (assuming that the story is about
the solving of a large problem)
1st Quarter: Is the challenge laid out
in the first quarter?
2nd Quarter: Does the hero try the easy
way in the second quarter?
3rd Quarter: Does the hero try the hard
way in the third quarter?
4th Quarter: Does the challenge climax
in the fourth quarter?
PART 4: SCENEWORK
The Set-Up: Does this scene begin with the
essential elements it needs?
The Conflict: Is this a compelling collision of
competing agendas?
The Outcome: Does this scene change the story going
forward?
Does the outcome
of the scene ironically reverse (and/or ironically fulfill) the original intention?
PART 5: DIALOGUE
Empathetic: Is the dialogue true to human nature?
Specific:
Is the dialogue specific to this world and each personality?
Heightened: Is the dialogue more pointed and
dynamic than real talk?
Strategic:
Are certain dialogue scenes withheld until necessary?
PART 6: TONE
Genre: Does the story tap into pre-established
expectations?
Framing: Does the story set, reset, upset and
ultimately exceed its own expectations?
Is there a dramatic question posed early on, which will establish in the audience’s mind which moment will mark the end of the story?
Is there a dramatic question posed early on, which will establish in the audience’s mind which moment will mark the end of the story?
PART 7: THEME
Difficult: Is the meaning of the story derived from
a fundamental moral dilemma?
Grounded: Do the stakes ring true to the world of
the audience?
Subtle:
Is the theme interwoven throughout so that it need not be discussed often?
Untidy: Is the dilemma ultimately irresolvable?
Whew! So how
did your story do? Go check out the Checklist Roadtests to see how some great stories line up.
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