Screenplay Structure: Sequences
A sequence is a self-contained portion of the entire story, usually about 10 to 15 minutes (pages) in length. It has its own tension (not the main tension, but related in some way) and it has its own beginning, middle, and end. It usually also "belongs" to one particular character - not necessarily always the central protagonist - when its tension relates to that character's want/need/life more centrally than to the other characters. Many parallel aspects of an overall story are kept alive simultaneously and will appear in sequences where the overall tension is about something else entirely. The Script Lab http://thescriptlab.com Sequences http://tsl.cm/8sequences Hosted by Michael Schilf
A sequence is a self-contained portion of the entire story, usually about 10 to 15 minutes (pages) in length. It has its own tension (not the main tension, but related in some way) and it has its own beginning, middle, and end. It usually also "belongs" to one particular character - not necessarily always the central protagonist - when its tension relates to that character's want/need/life more centrally than to the other characters. Many parallel aspects of an overall story are kept alive simultaneously and will appear in sequences where the overall tension is about something else entirely. The Script Lab http://thescriptlab.com Sequences http://tsl.cm/8sequences Hosted by Michael Schilf