Blake Snyder’s Beat Sheet
Blake Snyder’s
Beat Sheet
The
Blake Snyder Beat Sheet is the best plot structure template I’ve come across.
It
breaks down the three-act structure into bite-size, manageable sections, each
with a specific goal for your overall story.
See
my review of
the Save the Cat books by Blake Snyder (where the Blake Snyder
Beat Sheet originated), and buy the book.
It’s a great resource!
Below
is an explanation of each beat. Please see how it works with graphic novels by
visiting Graphic Novel Story Structure.
Thanks!
THE
BLAKE SNYDER BEAT SHEET (aka BS2)
Opening
Image –
A visual that represents the struggle & tone of the story. A snapshot of
the main character’s problem, before the adventure begins.
Set-up – Expand on the
“before” snapshot. Present the main character’s world as it is, and what is
missing in their life.
Theme
Stated (happens
during the Set-up) – What your story is about; the message, the truth. Usually,
it is spoken to the main character or in their presence, but they don’t
understand the truth…not until they have some personal experience and context
to support it.
Catalyst – The moment where
life as it is changes. It is the telegram, the act of catching your loved-one
cheating, allowing a monster onboard the ship, meeting the true love of your
life, etc. The “before” world is no more, change is underway.
Debate – But change is scary
and for a moment, or a brief number of moments, the main character doubts the
journey they must take. Can I face this challenge? Do I have what it takes?
Should I go at all? It is the last chance for the hero to chicken out.
Break
Into Two (Choosing Act Two) – The main character makes a choice and the journey
begins. We leave the “Thesis” world and enter the upside-down, opposite world
of Act Two.
B
Story –
This is when there’s a discussion about the Theme – the nugget of truth.
Usually, this discussion is between the main character and the love interest.
So, the B Story is usually called the “love story”.
The
Promise of the Premise – This is when Craig Thompson’s relationship
with Raina blooms, when Indiana Jones tries to beat the Nazis to the Lost Ark,
when the detective finds the most clues and dodges the most bullets. This is
when the main character explores the new world and the audience is entertained
by the premise they have been promised.
Midpoint – Dependent
upon the story, this moment is when everything is “great” or everything is
“awful”. The main character either gets everything they think they want
(“great”) or doesn’t get what they think they want at all (“awful”). But not
everything we think we want is what we actually need in the end.
Bad
Guys Close In –
Doubt, jealousy, fear, foes both physical and emotional regroup to defeat the
main character’s goal, and the main character’s “great”/“awful” situation
disintegrates.
All
is Lost –
The opposite moment from the Midpoint: “awful”/“great”. The moment that the
main character realizes they’ve lost everything they gained, or everything they
now have has no meaning. The initial goal now looks even more impossible than
before. And here, something or someone dies. It can be physical or emotional,
but the death of something old makes way for something new to be born.
Dark
Night of the Soul –
The main character hits bottom, and wallows in hopelessness. The Why
hast thou forsaken me, Lord? moment. Mourning the loss of what has
“died” – the dream, the goal, the mentor character, the love of your life, etc.
But, you must fall completely before you can pick yourself back up and try
again.
Break
Into Three (Choosing Act Three) – Thanks to a fresh idea, new
inspiration, or last-minute Thematic advice from the B Story (usually the love
interest), the main character chooses to try again.
Finale – This time
around, the main character incorporates the Theme – the nugget of truth that
now makes sense to them – into their fight for the goal because they have
experience from the A Story and context from the B Story. Act Three is about
Synthesis!
Final
Image –
opposite of Opening Image, proving, visually, that a change has occurred within
the character.
THE
END
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