On the
Jarvis MethodMaking the Torches Burn Bright
O, she doth
teach the torches to burn bright...
Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
February is the
month of love. Indeed, we even celebrate the guy with the
little bow and arrow on the 14th.
But that little
guy, although powerful, is also evasive. The love story
is one of the hardest stories to write. Make that: write
and SUCCEED. For almost all writers try their hand at
this Story Type from time-to-time with very mixed
results. Indeed, I can remember a number of love stories
that really moved me at the time, but have been lost in
the ash bin of history.
I. The
Lure of the Love Story
Love stories are
very commercial. By "commercial" I mean
universal to all. They "feature" a host of
universal passions: anger, fear, hate, revenge,
greed...and love, the greatest of all the passions. Love,
though, is not necessarily the greatest because it is
more universal than the rest; rather, it is the greatest
because it is more noble than the rest. Indeed, we
can all think of even enormously powerful persons -
dictators, politicians, moguls - who were driven by greed
and revenge but in the end toppled by the forces of love.
And just about every religion teaches us to turn the
other cheek. (Which, of course, is why religious people
have suffered so much over the years. But that is another
subject.) And so we dream of love and make poems to our
mistress's eyebrows; and so we, as writers, celebrate it.
II.
Ingredients for a Powerful Love (Story) Potion
Yet those
celebrations fail most of the time. Why? One major reason
is that we place our story's lover in a narrow historical
context that is lost on future generations. Shakespeare
knew better when he created his Romeo and his Juliet: he
placed them in a setting where their parents and families
were the villains and by doing so created dramatic
tension. Note that I did not use the word
"antagonist" for the parents and families;
love-story antagonists must always be molding forces -
forces that constantly cause change - and not brick walls
(antagonists can be brick walls, but not in love
stories). In short, in StoryCraft lingo, one lover,
usually the female, acts as a Shape Changer for the male.
And villains, another necessity in all good love stories,
act (again using the language of StoryCraft) as Gate
Guardians.
To create a proper
love story, then, requires five ingredients: 1) a
universal context for the lovers, 2) one lover who is the
hero, 3) the other lover, who is an antagonist (acting as
Shape Changer only!), and 4) a villain (or villains), who
acts as Gate Guardian.
But I said that
there were five ingredients. The fifth is the Story
Type-Category relationship. I do not have the space to
cover this rather complex subject, but let me cover a few
love stories that satisfy all, or most, of the five
criteria.
The best love
stories to study are ROMEO AND JULIET and WUTHERING
HEIGHTS. Those who know the Method used in StoryCraft
know that ROMEO AND JULIET's Story Type is Love and that
WUTHERING HEIGHTS's Story Type is Extreme Love. Both are
in the Theme Category (the only proper Category to
satisfy requirement number one above).
A recent very
successful love story is THE ENGLISH PATIENT. Love stores
that concern adultery always, of course, have a strong
Gate Guardian in the spouse. And because of the adultery,
they belong to the Extreme-Love Story Type. (However, it
is important to understand that a story is not
automatically a "love story" just because it
may have love and a Gate Guardian. Much depends on the
ultimate fate of the main character. ANNA KARENINA, for
example, is not a love story, even though it seems so at
first. FOR A LOVE STORY MUST END WITH THE LOVERS
TOGETHER IN LIFE OR IN DEATH. Thus Tolstoy's
novel belongs instead to the Excess-and-Downfall Story
Type.
II.
Flash: "PATIENT has Perfect Potion!"
But to return to
THE ENGLISH PATIENT. This is perhaps the best love story
written in a long time, and I would recommend that all
writers see it. It has a well-developed main character,
whose character arc and backstory are shown in
flashbacks. Although this device is normally not
recommended, it works wonders here and makes the film not
just a good old prose love story, but a cinematic one as
well. It also has a Gate Guardian and an antagonist lover
who should be the model of every writer.
One of the
pleasures of this film is that we have a subplot showing
carnal as well as Agape love. Hence, we get a little
philosophy for our money as well! However, unlike the
moralizing Tolstoy, this writer does not make the
carnal-love character dominate the story; in short, the
film remains a love story, and does not become the
Excess- and-Downfall Type.
Those of you who
have read my discussions on subplots know that I am
generally against subplots. The reason for this
recommendation is that subplots are seldom handled well.
Which just goes to prove that, once again, THE ENGLISH
PATIENT is an exception - all in all, a great love
(story) potion!
-- John Jarvis
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