SHREK
Shrek
has the best script I've seen this year. It's the
result of two elements of writing, structure and texture,
that are rarely found together in Hollywood mainstream
movies.
Structurally,
the writers combine the fairy tale form, the myth
form and the buddy picture in a seamless whole. The
community begins in trouble, which forces the hero
to go on his journey. His goal is the opponent's goal,
to bring back the Princess. This allows the writers
to save the big conflict with the main opposition
for last.
On
this strong line, the writers hang a series of anti-fairy
tale elements for the hero and the audience to encounter.
The story plays out the fairy tale structure, but
also makes fun of it along the way.
By
also adding the buddy picture element, the writers
give the hero an ongoing opponent he can banter with
along the route. That goes a long way to removing
the episodic quality many myth-based stories have.
These
great structural elements are also what make the fabulous
texture of this film possible. By texture I mean details,
sometimes comic, sometimes reverses of cartoon and
fairy tale expectations. Texture is usually horizontal.
That is, you are not moving the story forward, you
are layering the moment. You are taking a pause in
the forward line so you can please the audience with
a little magic.
This
film has the densest texture I've seen in a long time,
and it's why adults like this film possibly even more
than children. Shrek is a film worth careful study.
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