There is a comfort zone of knowing where things are going and having characters in place, but the action gets more and more dramatic and is very challenging to describe.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
When the reader and one narrator know something the other narrator does not, the opportunities for suspense and plot development and the shifting of reader sympathies get really interesting.
The important thing is the storytelling and having a script that makes you feel you're living and breathing through the characters.
The most challenging and exciting aspect is the outline and formation of the plot points. This is the stage where the notion of the story begins to take shape, and I can see glimpses of what is to come.
When we don't have all the details about our characters, we have to make it up to fill in all the details. So, for me, writing and acting go hand in hand.
I prefer playing characters that are going through turmoil. Most movie characters are just in service to the story.
It's always appealing to play a character that has to overcome himself as well as an obstacle. It makes the drama so much deeper.
The movies and TV shows I like to watch tend to put their characters in situations where they have to dig deeper.
The audience has to understand that if the film is going to have any meaning for them. If they are going to empathize with the characters, they have to visualize the process of concentration involved in making every move.
I'm constantly being surprised and finding unplanned things - because the writing is a process of experiencing things on the ground with the characters.
In real life, people are constantly saying one thing and doing another, but if you write your characters that way, the story becomes too hard to follow.
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