With details of the upcoming Robert McKee courses:
"Nothing moves forward in a story except through
conflict."
- ROBERT MCKEE
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Master the Levels of Conflict
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Do you want to
learn how to harness the power of meaningful conflict in your story?
Robert covers the forces of antagonism and the levels of conflict in
the following webinar from 2020 (now
available On Demand for a limited time):
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The Principle of Antagonism
Part 5 of the 2020 Spring Webinar
Series
Learn how to push your characters to the limit of
human experience.
Available
until March 31, 2021
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"Stories hold conflict and contrast, highs and lows,
life and death, and the human struggle and all kinds of things."
- DAVID LYNCH
Academy Award-Winning Writer & Filmmaker
BLUE VELVET / TWIN
PEAKS
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The World According to Writers
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Conflict is
more than an aesthetic principle; it
is the soul of story.
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Story is
metaphor for life, and to be alive is to be in perpetual conflict. As
Jean-Paul Sartre expressed it, the essence of reality is scarcity.
There isn’t enough of anything to go around. Not enough food, love,
justice, peace and never, ever enough time.
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Writers who cannot grasp the truth of our transitory
existence, who have been misled by the comforts of the modern world,
who believe that life is easy once you know how to play the game, give
conflict a false inflection. Their stories are either a glut of
meaningless and absurdly violent struggles, or absent of any meaningful
conflict.
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Works of art
are born from the conflict of life.
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An artist
intent on creating works of lasting quality comes to realize that life
isn’t about subtle adjustments, or hyper-conflicts. Life is about the
ultimate questions of finding love and self-worth, of bringing serenity
to inner chaos, of the titanic social inequities everywhere around us,
of time running out.
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Life is conflict. Your job as a
writer is to decide where and how to orchestrate this struggle.
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Conquer the
Conflict of Story with Robert McKee Online.
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"Robert
is a force! In person or streaming. The series was very useful to me -
worth every penny and definitely valuable and motivating!"
- Kim
Murdock
(Love Story
Webinar Attendee)
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Recordings of McKee’s 2020 webinars are now available to
view on demand! Sign up now and gain instant access to the webinars and
follow-up Q&A sessions until March 31st, 2021.
Webinar
attendees wishing to regain access to recordings, or
looking to register for a new series, are eligible for a discount.
Contact Luke (luke@storylogue.com) for more
details.
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Complication vs.
Complexity
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Robert McKee
teaches the different ways a writer can use conflict to either
complicate the life of their protagonist, or create a truly complex
story.
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A Message from Our Friends at Scriptapalooza
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23rd Annual Scriptapalooza Screenplay Competition
Contacts.
Meetings. Introductions. Producers. Agents.
Over $50K in prizes. Everything you expect and get with
Scriptapalooza.
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The Facts:
- All the reading is done
by producers/managers/agents
- We promote and pitch
the TOP 100 writers for a full year
- $10K Grand Prize
- 54 writers have sold or
optioned their script
- 165 writers have been
hired to write on film or TV
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McKee
Seminars | Two Arts, Inc.
PO Box 681
Sherman, Connecticut 06784
United States
(928) 204-2323
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"Thou shalt research."
- ROBERT MCKEE
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Robert McKee's 2020 In Review
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All of McKee's 2020 Spring, Summer, and Fall webinar
series are now available to stream On Demand for a limited
time.
Returning webinar attendees looking to register for a new
series, or wishing to regain access
and review a series they already attended, are eligible for a discount.
Contact Luke (luke@storylogue.com) for more
details.
You can now
gain instant access to recordings of the following webinar series until
March 31st, 2021:
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Spring
Program
Webinar Series
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Story Craft
Webinar Series
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Love Story
Webinar Series
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"I think young writers should get other degrees
first, social sciences, arts degrees or even business degrees. What you
learn is research skills, a necessity because a lot of writing is about
trying to find information."
- IRVINE WELSH
Novelist & Playwright
TRAINSPOTTING
/ FILTH
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Why You Never Start with "Fade In"
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The key to writing a truly unique story is research,
taking the time and effort to acquire knowledge. Generally, a story
excels based on research of three types...
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First, ask
yourself "What do I know from personal experience that resonates
with my characters' lives?" Explore your past, relive it, then
write it down. In your head it’s only memory, but written down
it becomes working knowledge.
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Secondly, ask "What
would it be like to live my character's life day by day?" While
memory gives us chunks of life, imagination takes fragments of
experience that seem unrelated, then finds hidden connections and
merges them into a whole. A working imagination is research.
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Finally, suppose for a moment you're writing in the
genre of Domestic Drama. No matter how many families you live in, how
many you observe, or how vivid your imagination, your knowledge on the
nature of family is limited to the finite circle of your experience.
But if you read respected factual works (anthropological,
social, psychological studies, etc.) on the subject of family life, you
will expand that circle globally.
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Too often we
close novels or exit theaters bored by an ending that was obvious, or
disgruntled because we’ve seen those characters and scenes 1000 times
before.
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Before rushing
to type "Fade In," ask yourself if your story is ready.
Originality is about thoroughness, not shortcuts. Writers need research
to feed the beasts of imagination and invention.
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Learn to
create works of original beauty with McKee Online.
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"I joined
the spring webinar series and it was groundbreaking for me in every
way. What a privilege - I literally felt like I was sitting by the desk
of a master, just taking it all in!"
- Jane
Olander
(Spring &
Fall Webinar Program Attendee)
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How Much
Research is Enough?
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Robert McKee
discusses how to balance your time between writing and research, and
why you should be wary of using research as procrastination.
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McKee
Seminars | Two Arts, Inc.
PO Box 681
Sherman, Connecticut 06784
United States
(928) 204-2323
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