Friday, June 13, 2025

STORY FORCES

 

It's time to revisit the most basic concepts behind successful stories—the forces that make stories work. There are more sophisticated ways of diagraming the above, just search Google images for "story through-lines."  If you follow this blog you've see the following more complex renditions of "The 13/20 Roller Coaster Beats," or posts on how to intertwine subplots so they support the same plot.  The BASICS never change as I've tried to diagram above:

  • NOBLE (or villainous) VALUES always drive the
  • Protagonist's or Hero's decisions and action, that are always obstructed by an
  • Antagonistic or Villainous force, in an effort by the Protagonist or Hero to always achieve a
  • NOBLE (or villainous) GOAL
NOT diagramed above are subtleties critical to a cathartic story structure:
  • Noble Values always reflect NEEDS required for human survival.
  • Ignoble Values always reflect WANTS that lead to human destruction.
  • At first the protagonist is often motivated by a WANT but... 
  • Close to the story's midpoint (The Moral Premise's "Moment of Grace") the protagonist comes to realize the difference between their WANT and their NEED.  
  • The protagonist may be a heroic or a tragic character (but always opposite the antagonist).
  • The antagonist may be a heroic or a tragic character (but always opposite the protagonist).
The above diagram relates the never changing forces of a successful story. The above diagram is the most simple illustration of the through-line, the plot, the backbone, the theme, or the moral premise. But there can be sub through-lines related to various subplots, and all tied together with supportive themes, and Nicomachean Moral Premises. (I've blog extensively about all this before.) A story becomes interesting when the through-lines, plots, and theme are imbued with irony, motifs, red-herrings, and secrets.

For example, there can be, in one story the:
  • physical through-line of the main plot
  • emotional through-line of the central protagonist
  • symbolic through-line of various 3-beat motifs
  • thematic (moral premise) through-line of the protagonist
  • secret through-line of information held back from the audience
But in the end there ALWAYS must be:
VALUES that motivate the PROTAGONIST to battle the ANTAGONIST in order to achieve an GOAL.
In a redemptive story the value and goal are noble and focus on a NEED.
In a tragic story the value and goal are scandalous and focus on a WANT. 


The are almost 400 posts in this free blog that discuss these issues. My book, The Moral Premise sets forth the foundation for all successful stories. My free Storycraft Training series dives deep into these topics. And I'm sometimes available for story/screenplay consulting on specific projects