Featured Post

Latest Posts

2

One Thing the Movies Can Teach You About Setting

By K.M. Weiland | @KMWeiland


Often times setting is so integral to a story that it becomes a character in itself. Fantasy, science fiction, and historical stories all demand detailed and precise settings. Most mysteries will demand at least one scene set in a police station or morgue. Many thrillers and suspense stories have found great success by confining their boundaries to an airplane, island, or small town.

Setting is an inherent and vital part of all stories. Without a setting that immediately grounds him in the characters’ world, a reader is going to find himself floundering... and the author is, more than likely, going to find himself out of a job. Finding the right descriptive words to bring to life the Wyoming plains, a river in Syria, or the bombed-out streets of war-torn London, requires an excellent grip on the English language, a clear vision of color and space, and a vivid imagination.

In provoking the immediacy of setting, movies have a decided advantage over the lowly novelist. After all, a movie director hardly requires pages of evocative description when he has the ability to simply inundate his viewer with a minute’s worth of color and light and spectacle. In that regard, novelists are at a certain disadvantage when compared to their brethren of the silver screen.

But there is one way in which all authors of fiction can share in the cinematographic grounding of setting. And that is in what I term “throwaway settings.” All stories, be they on the written page or the movie screen, possess two kinds of setting: the concrete and the “throwaway.”

Concrete scenes are those that demand a particular kind of setting. Allow me to use three movies as an example. In the 2005 movie Pride & Prejudice, the scene in which Elizabeth Bennett and Fitzwilliam Darcy are reunited after Lizzie’s refusal of his first proposal, could have taken place in no other setting than the sumptuous grounds of Darcy’s Pemberley estate. The Patriot (2000), which took place during the American Revolution, featured innumerable battle scenes that, to be true to historicity, could have taken place nowhere but South Carolina. Likewise, the majority of The Last of the Mohicans, which takes place during the French siege of the English Ft. William Henry, could not conceivably have been set elsewhere.

In these same movies, however, we find many throwaway scenes—scenes that do not demand a particular setting. For instance, the scene in Pride & Prejudice in which Elizabeth refuses Darcy’s proposal could have taken place almost anywhere. In Jane Austen’s book, upon which the movie is based, the scene is acted out in a drawing room. At first glance, nothing can be said against this choice of setting: it’s sensible and realistic. But how much better was the setting chosen by the director of the movie—the opulent monument, in a lush landscape, to which Elizabeth runs to escape the rain? Jane Austen’s original drawing room setting may have gotten across the scene’s point, but the movie’s version explored so many deeper levels of tension and beauty, simply by changing the setting.

In The Patriot, the hero, a militia captain, must select a hidden base camp, from which he can harass the enemy and then melt back into hiding. The writer and director of the movie could easily have gotten away with parking the camp in the middle of a forest. Instead, they chose to set it in a graveyard-cum-swamp, with the headstones lurking half-submerged in the water. In conveying tone, the swamp was far more effective than a simple forest setting could ever have been.

Finally, the splendid sense of setting we found throughout The Last of Mohicans is nowhere more evident than during the prolonged escape scene, in which the heroes launch their empty canoes over a waterfall, then seek a hiding place behind the fall itself. Not only does the idea work marvelously in the plot itself, it also manages to submerge the viewer in a mysterious world of mist, water, and shadow, thereby bringing an entirely new and exceptional tone to the scene.

The simple use of setting in all three of these movies proves how easy it is to transform a scene with a few keystrokes. In fact, as authors we are able to make these changes with far greater ease than that of movie producers and directors, who must hunt out strange and interesting locales.

The next time you sit down to write a scene with a throwaway setting—a scene in which the setting is not inherent—stop and think. Could you bring a new level to your scene by adding an interesting or unexpected setting? Very possibly changing the setting will add depth to your scene, heighten the tension, and even lead to story angles you never suspected were present.

Consider your settings carefully, even those that initially seem unimportant. You never know when you may find an unexpected gem!

Bookmark and Share

Story by K.M. Weiland

Tags: Setting , SYN

2 comments

  1. eCla!r June 2, 2011 at 12:40 AM

    Wow, once again, excellent post KM!

    Every time I sit down to watch a movie with the family, no matter how young or old an audience it is aimed at, I always find myself asking the same question: How would you put that into words? Sometimes it can get a little annoying, for example, in the middle of the high action climax scene, when all of a sudden this little voice pipes up - How would YOU put that into words, huh?

    lol, despite the slight annoyance though, it has helped me come up with many a good idea ;)

    once again, excellent post. I'm very glad I stumbled upon your blog, all those months ago ;)

    eCla!r

  2. K.M. Weiland June 2, 2011 at 2:23 PM

    Hah, I do that too. Some things we find in the movies just plain *aren't* translatable into words (just as some things we find in books can't be translated on the big screen), but the act of scrutinizing what we're watching from an author's perspective is always a useful exercise.

Leave a reply











  • Free E-Book

      Free e-book: Enter your name and email address to receive email updates and claim your free copy of the 50-page e-book Crafting Unforgettable Characters: A Hands-On Guide to Bringing Your Characters to Life.





  • My Books

  • Receive Blog Updates via Email

      Enter your email address:

  • Like Wordplay’s Posts?



Labels

backstory (14) beginnings (32) Characters (123) conflict (33) Creativity (43) Description (29) dialogue (34) Editing (34) endings (23) foreshadowing (17) genres (9) Grammar (19) Inspiration (66) names (8) narrative (28) Originality (11) outlining (23) pacing (12) Plot (23) pov (23) premise (5) research (20) rewriting (5) Setting (26) style (26) Theme (18)
  • Wordplay Badge

      Copy this code to add the Wordplay badge to your site!