The World of Obstacles

The World of Obstacles

Published: December 21, 2011 @ 1:10 pm
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By Mark W. Travis

 

Obstacles. We don’t like them, they frustrate us, we don’t want them. But we need them. Obstacles are an essential element of existence – everyone’s existence – heck, even plants and animals face obstacles over the course of their lives. Obstacles are what make life rich and invigorating, challenging and colorful. They define us. And they are one of our most powerful storytelling tools.

Obstacles are present every moment of our lives, whether it’s other people, other attitudes or beliefs or even our own doubts and insecurities. We complain about them but, quite honestly, a life without obstacles would be unreal, absurd, bizarre, and surreal.

Many of us face the same obstacles (i.e. the weather, the economy, a difficult boss or spouse, low self-esteem, etc.), but how we handle these common obstacles reveals more about us as individuals than our pursuits and accomplishments.

I once ran a marathon (now there’s a challenge with many obstacles) in under three hours. My pride was put into proper perspective when, an hour later, I witnessed a man finish the same race with an artificial leg.

As we create and construct our stories and characters, we immediately face two primary questions:” What do our characters want (objectives)?” and “What is in the way (obstacles)?” Our characters have needs, wants, desires and dreams. But over the course of the story, they also face enormous obstacles, challenges that are extreme and petty, external and internal. And regardless of what a character wants or needs, it is the construction of the "world of obstacles" and how each character handles them that reveals the true nature of the character.

As you look at the characters in your story (regardless of whether you are a writer, director, actor or producer) take a moment to look at each character and consider the obstacles they face. Observe how they respond to their obstacles, how they either overcome them or are defeated by them. And, remember, obstacles come in three distinct categories:

First, Other Characters. These are usually pretty obvious. In every story each character is pushing against the needs and desires and actions of one or more other characters. We recognize these obstructions quickly; they are often very public and obvious to the viewer if not to the other characters in the story.

Second, the Environment. No matter where our characters go or what they do the physical environment pushes against them, sometimes in helpful ways, most often not. Whether it’s the weather, the distance they need to cover, the confusing geography, the traffic, the hills, the size of the building, the tightness of the room, the poor lighting, the number of doors … or just that there are too many "safe places" where they could have put their keys … they live in a physical world that presents obstacles at every turn.

But there is another part of the Environment that presents even more challenging and perhaps even illusive obstacles - and that’s the social environment.

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Mark W. Travis is regarded by many Hollywood and international professionals as one of the world’s leading authorities in the art and craft of film directing. He has served as a creative consultant on several studio and independent feature films including: "A Bronx Tale," "Notorius," "Men of Honor," "Barbershop" and "The Stoning of Soraya M." He is the author of the number-one bestseller (L.A. Times), "The Director's Journey: The Creative Collaboration between Directors, Writers and Actors." His second book, "Directing Feature Films" is currently used as required text in film schools worldwide.  His latest book, "The Film Director's Bag of Tricks"  was published in September 2011.

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