Creative Narrative
A Description Exercise
A Description Exercise
For this exercise, you will need the movie Sin City. If you don't have it, The Matrix or Equilibrium will do.
WATCH the movie undisturbed from beginning to end. NO INTERRUPTIONS. This is Important!
Watch where the Camera looks. Sin City in particular is a brilliant example of how to describe using pictures. The movie is filmed in black and white with splashes of color here and there only where the viewer's eye needs to be.
When a character is first introduced, LOOK at how the camera starts in Close Focus on the character's face and then pulls back to reveal the character's body, lovingly showing the viewer exactly what the character looks like AND their distinguishing characteristics from top to bottom. THEN the view expands wider to disclose where that character is and what they are doing at that moment.
After those first few moments of sheer View, you get a narrative from the Point of View character -- which may Not be the character the camera is showing you. You get the narrator's opinions, their feelings, their delusions. THAT is how the viewer (the reader) learns about the character.
Once the movie is over, put on some music that fits the movie. (I actually have the soundtracks, to these.) Next! Break out your remote control and Watch The Same Movie AGAIN -- but this time, with the volume OFF.
Sit on your couch and Out Loud, Narrate what you are looking at. Do NOT write anything. Just talk to the TV screen Out Loud and describe -- in detail what you are looking at as though it was a book you were reading.
Describe the Characters.
Describe the Actions.
Describe the Fight Scenes.
Describe the Kisses.
Describe the Backgrounds and Setting
-- including the rooms and weather conditions!
Use your remote control and STOP the scene where you have difficulty describing what you are seeing. Work at it until the words come to you. They don't have to be perfect -- close IS good enough for this exercise.
Do NOT write anything down.
Keep going until the movie is Over.
This should help loosen up a few things in your writing mind -- and give you some strong visuals to write from later.
Next!
-- Write a 1000 word Scene that introduces a character of YOURS. Make sure you picture the scene in your mind with the same dramatic camera angles and close-ups the movie and Describe it so that anyone Reading it can clearly see it.
Compare that scene with any introductory scene in a story you've already written and SEE the difference.
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Just so you know, this is an exercise I created to make my own writing more Visual. I hope you like it!
Note: You are NOT expected to post your work here! This is NOT a class, you will Not be graded on your efforts.