Episoder
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Editor Reactions:
Randall: The intertwining storylines are so intriguing. Great setup.
Mel: The Game of Thrones has officially started in this season with everyone wanting to be the next king, no matter who has a right to it and who does not.
Parul: The hungry for power in Season 1 (society genre) has continued and kicked off a war.
What's the Global Genre?
In a multi-plotted saga like Game of Thrones, how do you work out the genre and why should you? So why we dissect it is to help us understand why we love it, and why it’s compelling. By analyzing this masterwork, we come to understand how stories are constructed and we might be inspired for our own stories.
How do we determine the genre? One method is to look at the core event of the season. What is the big showdown that happens towards the end of the series? We have a big battle scene, which is the core event for a war story. But we also have an attempted revolution - Stannis tries and fails to overcome the Lannisters but fails. This is the Society genre. Power battles still rein within the Lannister households and amongst every house
We have a range of values that run through the season from victory to defeat.
Of course, there are other storylines going on alongside these:
Horror (core series storyline): White walkers emerge ready for battle () (life/death)
Action: The Stark children are on the run to save their lives. Jon is beyond the wall (against nature - cold, against time - missing uncle, against the state - wildlings)
Love: A twisted power/ love game between Melisandre and Stannis Baratheon. Robb Stark falls for Talisa Maegyr, culminating in their secret marriage.
See complete show notes at www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com
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This is a series with a mini-plot, multiple characters that each pursue their own storyline but come together for a larger story arc. In this first season of Game of Thrones you’ll see multiple storylines weaving together. But the value at stake is power - the clue is in the name: the Game of Thrones. This is closely linked to the action genre with its values of life and death. And you’ll see other genres laced throughout which we will share in our shownotes.
One sentence review from the editors?
Randall: This is really one of my favorite series, and the screenwriters did such a great job with the first season. It’s a great example of how to write a screenplay from a really excellently written book series. And the author (George R. R. Martin) did such a great job connecting the plotlines throughout the books/ seasons. This had to take so much planning, Harry Potter level planning.
Mel: Awesome fantasy story masterpiece with very deep, three dimensional characters, an amazing story and throughout plotline, as well as the best title music and video.
Parul: It is Society Genre combined Action at its best, everybody wants power and everybody will die.
To read all the show notes and get access to downloadable 6 core question files go to www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com
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Manglende episoder?
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Randall: I totally understand the hype on this series, I can’ believe it took this long for me to watch it. It just keeps getting better.
Parul: This show is getting darker and more complex. It’s riveting.
Randall: I think this is really what makes a good thriller, the ability to have compelling subplots/ red herrings that also have equally life/ death repercussions, but at the same time reminding the viewer/ reader who the real villain is. The cartel is involved throughout the season, as Helen is present in just about every episode, but we never forget that they are the most dangerous player at the table in Marty and Wendy’s lives - they kidnap Marty, they seem to know everything that is going on, they manipulate Wendy (with the horse farm purchase). At the same time, Frank Jr. and the mob are mad at Marty, the other cartel is a danger to Marty (he could get caught in the crossfire), Darlene is becoming more dangerous with every episode, the FBI is hot on Marty’s tail - all of these have life and death endings and they are just as engaging as the main battle between Marty and the cartel. The story would have been so water-downed if these sub-plots weren’t there and not so deadly if it had just been Marty vs. the Navarro cartel.
Compare this to Killing Eve - we keep losing sight of the threat of the 12 and there aren’t many other threats to keep the characters occupied.
Read all the show notes at www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com
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What did we think?
Randall: Great 2nd season, they kept the surprises and tension goingParul: This show is on fire!Beginning Hook:
Inciting Incident: Del is killed and Marty must get rid of Del's body before Cartel find out Turning Point Progressive Complication: Cartel tasks Marty with securing reparations for Del’s death, as he was the lieutenant. Crisis: Does Marty back down from his request for reparations from the Snells? Or does he ask for financial reparations or life for a life?Climax: He doesn’t back down but keeps his emotions in check, and talks financeResolution: Darlene insists the Snells won’t pay. Jacob kills Ash as reparationsTo read all of our show notes, go to www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com.
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Did the Story Work?
Randall: Pretty good, some nice surprises, overall the story worked.
Parul: High stakes, constantly moving. The story worked as a thriller.
What are the Editor’s Six Core Questions?
It’s a great way to analyze any story and figure out if it works. Here are the questions. We’ll touch on them in this podcast, but the full notes can be downloaded afterward.
What’s the genre?What are the conventions and obligatory scenes for that genre?What’s the Point of View?What are the objects of desire?What’s the controlling idea/theme?What is the Beginning Hook, the Middle Build, and Ending Payoff?BEGINNING HOOK
We start with what appears to be a normal family: Marty is an accountant who appears to watch porn all the time. The kids are pretty normal, Charlotte is a normal teenager with attitude and Jonah seems to be pretty normal too. Then we find out that Marty knows his wife is cheating on him. All of this sets the stage for the viewers, we see the family at home, work and play and we have a good idea what they are all about.
To see the rest of our show notes go to www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com
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Randall Expectations: I’m excited to watch this series, it’s got a lot of good hype. I also really enjoyed Breaking Bad, with which I see some similarities.
Parul Expectations: In terms of Genre? Action or Thriller with morality. Status? Maybe? It’s unclear why he’s making the choice, but we know he’s chosen to be a drug dealer and now will pay the price. As a viewer - this looks like it’s an edge-of-my-seat type of show. I’m excited but not looking forward to seeing the body count - I’m squeamish.
Mel Expectations: An exciting story about a family man struggling to do what’s right for his family and what’s morally right, while their life gets threatened more and more, and his marriage is tested.
Read all of your show notes at www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com
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Villanelle demonstrates a cold brutality even though she looks stunning and absolutely beautiful which deceives everyone around her. Her beauty and innocent appearance is like the trap that lures her victims into her reach so that she can kill them.
Villanelle doesn’t follow a moral code and only does what excites her. If she has to do something, she doesn’t want to, she falls back into lashing out like a child. Not being able to see the consequences of her actions. She’s impulsive, while her ego requires her to feel invincible. And still, there’s something about curly haired women in their early 40’s, that throws her completely out of balance. And she can’t deal with her emotions..
As we have gotten to know and love her, she is a twisted personality. She can show every personality trait that we can sympathise with. From funny, to warm, vulnerable, but also strong and frightening. And whenever you look at her, you can’T tell what’s on her mind. Is she gonna kiss you or kill you? That makes the show very exciting.
As said in the last episode of season 3, she can make people change to their worst. She is the reason why Eve unlocked her inner monster and changed from that self-doubt person who carried so much guilt and said sorry for everything to becoming a person who slowly loses her moral path.
The beauty of the show is, as it seems, that maybe one day Eve and Villanelle will be at the same level. Eve seems to become darker and lose her sense of justice and morality, while Villanelle walks on the path of redemption - which was only possible through Eve. And maybe, one day, Villanelle will have changed so much for the better, that she can lead Eve back on the path of redemption. That would be a great twist and sign of character development.
For complete notes, go to www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com
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Initial Observations:
Mel - Seems like the biggest crisis and the most at stake was neither for Villanelle nor Eve, but for Konstantin in this final episode, while Eve and Villanelle were only bystanders. If I wouldn’t love the character of Konstantin that much, the episode would have been lots more disappointing.
Parul - 50% thriller, 30% love, 20% morality
Randy - Finally. Finally Eve and Villanelle meet again, and as always, they are the best scenes and the best dialog of the show.
To so the complete notes go to www.storygrid.com or wwwsgshowrunners.com
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Initial Observations:
Mel - I’m lost. I’m not engaged in the show anymore.
Parul - We’ve veered off the global genre
Randy - World’s worst assassins
Read our show notes at www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com
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Initial Observations:
Mel - Very unexpected, and not believable beginning, and then the characters became unreal for me, too.
Parul - I like many scenes, glad the investigation is back on track, but I’m worried about the global story
Randy - No way!
Recap:
Villanelle goes home, sees her family, wins the dung throwing contest at the local fair, kills her mom, and blows up her family’s house
5 Commandments for Eve:
Inciting Incident: Niko is alive in london hospital (What?) Turning Point: Eve discovers a hiccup in the theory that Villanelle attacked NikoCrisis: Does Eve Find and confront Dasha or not? Stakes - endanger herself and Niko more, get to the truth; don’t find Niko’s attacker, live in fearClimax: Confronts Dasha (turns out Eve can bowl)Resolution: Eve suspects that Villanelle didn’t attack Niko. Niko continues to ignore her.For more Episode Notes go to www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com.
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Initial Observations:
Mel - A documentary about life in remote Russia that has a tragic, but expected ending.
Parul - If I’m looking for a silver lining - here is a good way to look at how one might introduce a villain’s backstory
Randy - WTH?
To see all of our show notes visit us at www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com
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Killing Eve S3 Ep4
Initial Observations
Mel - Confusing, because I wondered why they’ve changed the way they tell an episode, especially in midseason? Probably only to keep the tension between Eve seeing Niko and in between until we found out why we thought something was off.
Parul - I’m not sure about the new format. But I am happy about the addition of the red-haired woman. Good episode but slower and doesn’t match the allure of Season 1.
Randy - The ending was just bad writing, but it could have been great.
See the rest of our comments in our show notes at www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com
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Mel - Finally, Killing Eve is indeed back. Everything we loved about the show, they had saved for this episode. Loved it.
Parul - Mostly good. A little disappointing.
Randy - Nothing new, not too many surprises
“I want to smell like a Roman Centurion coming across an old foe who once hurt her greatly, but the centurion comes back and is now an Emperor”
To see the rest of our analysis and notes, visit us at www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com
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First Impressions
Mel - This episode did not work for me and I’ll add the why later on.
Parul - Strangely, I really enjoyed this episode, and I was really disappointed when the series ended.
Randy - I get it, they had to have an episode where the two protagonists both know that each other is alive, but it was kind of slow and even the Clown assassin kill scene didn’t catch my attention much (Villanelle is above that). But they have all the players in position to make something exciting happen next episode. Remember, wasn’t it episode 3 that Bill got killed last time?
See more notes on www.storygrid.com and wwwsgshowrunners.com.
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Initial Observations:
Mel - Without Eve in her life, Villanelle returns to her old self.
Parul - I no longer look at Constantine
Randy - Villanelle is back killing in her unique way, and the trailer shows some other scenes which look interesting to say the least. I’m in.
Inciting Incident:
Randy - Eve is alive. I mean, we knew that, but we had to see it. And she’s working as a cook in a Korean restaurant.
Parul - What is an inciting incident? It’s the ball of chaos that shifts the state of normal, the equilibrium. When does this happen in the episode? When Villanelle sees her former handler and starts attacking her? I’d say so. It’s comical, but it’s a shadow of how Villanelle operates.
Check out the rest of out analysis on www.storygrid.com or www.sgshowrunners.com
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Initial Observations
Mel - The villain is the hero of his own story. And it was great to get into the mind of a psychopath, especially through the first-person narrative, seeing how he leaves red herrings for whoever is trying to get him and start seeing the good guys as his antagonists while wanting him to succeed.
Parul - Another great story where we have great innovations of the Love Genre mixed with the thriller genre to give us an engaging narrative drive. Reminds me of Killing Eve.
Randy - Awesome. Compelling story, well told.
Read more in our notes at www.SGShowrunners.com and www.storygrid.com
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Randall and Melanie analyze the trailer on YouTube and the Wikipedia description to establish the viewer expectations based on the assumed Genre.
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With three protagonists and three timelines, the story can get a bit confusing for those with no prior knowledge of the Witcher Universe. There were some good scenes, but the editors break down the problems and offer some solutions.
Initial Observations - One word or one sentence.Randy: Interesting, but no game of thrones. One word: confusing
Mel: Wonderful portrayal of The Witcher by Henry Cavill, but my one word for this TV series: disappointing.
Parul. A good example of how a great idea is lost without structure and world-building.
Go to www.sgshowrunners.com or www.storygrid.com for the rest of the notes.
Thanks!
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What other epic fantasy television or movie series have you guys watched?
Melanie: Hercules, Narnia, Dungeons and Dragons, Warcraft
Randall: Magicians; Shannara Chronicles
Parul: Lord of the Rings, Game of Thrones, Xena: Warrior Princess, Wonderwoman
You'll find our show notes on:
sgshowrunners.com/the-witcher/the-witcher-intro/or on storygrid.com -
We've analysed The Umbrella Academy TV Series of Season 1. In this episode we talk about the global story and if it satisfied our expectations or not. And if not, let's find out why.
We talk about genre, moments we expect, the point of view, wants and needs of the characters as well as wrap up the Season by using the 5 commandments for Beginning Hook, Middle Build and Ending Payoff.
In our shownotes on storygrid.com and sgshowrunners.com, you'll find bonus material: PDF for the foolscap, the Story Grid's 6 Core Questions as well as two interpretations of the Heroic Journey's Stages.
Tune in next time when we talk about our expectations for the Witcher TV series.
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