Dramatica Users
Group Movie Analysis:
"A
Face in the Crowd"
by Chris Huntley
We started
by identifying the four throughlines in general. The
Overall Story throughline was pretty easy. The OS involves the
meteoric rise (and fall) of folksy “Lonesome” Rhodes’s
celebrity.
We identified
Marcia Jeffries and Larry “Lonesome” Rhodes
as the Main and Impact characters, though we had a prolonged discussion
about which was which. We settled on Marcia Jeffries as the Main
Character because we seemed to share her ambivalent feelings and surprise
at some of Larry’s antics (e.g. he comes back from Mexico a married
man). Larry Rhodes was then selected as the Impact character.
The relationship
throughline was a bit tough to define because so much of their interactions
were on both the personal and professional levels—the personal belonging to the Main v. Impact throughline
and the professional belonging to the OS throughline. It seems
to be a doomed relationship based on physical proximity. They’re
together much of their time and the physical closeness, distance, and
infidelities defined the throughline.
From
there we went to the dynamic questions.
Marcia
is clearly a Change Main Character. She starts off bright-eyed
and in control and willing to rationalize Larry’s duplicitous
behavior. By the end, Marcia is world weary and fed up with rescuing
Larry from himself. She decides to save herself and leaves.
We skipped
the Main Character Growth, though we came back to it later and determined
Marcia was her own worst enemy. Our other choices
resulted in a MC Growth setting of Stop which was consistent with our
understanding of Marcia.
The question
of Main Character Approach (Do-er or Be-er) proved to be quite involved. Some saw Marcia as a Do-er—she went
into the prison to find “a face in the crowd,” she ran
the daily workings of Lonesome’s support system. However,
we eventually decided that she was a Be-er because of her lack of action
and internalization regarding her personal issues. For example,
Marcia uses cool, professional manner to keep Lonesome at a distance
then turns on the sex appeal to keep him from leaving. Also,
much of the stuff she “does” is related to the Overall
Story throughline.
To help
clarify the MC Approach, we jumped to the Story Driver. We
quickly agreed that the story was driven by Actions. The inciting
event is when Marcia finds Larry Rhodes in the local jail. Leaving
the small town for Memphis identifies the OS act break. The same
with the move to New York. Ultimately, it’s Marcia’s
turning up the volume while Lonesome denigrates his audience that brings
about his fall from grace. Therefore, the Overall Story’s
requirement of actions to drive it forward explained much of Marcia’s
activities in her professional capacity as Lonesome Rhodes’s
backroom organizer
The Story
Limit was quickly decided to be an Optionlock. Rather
than a specific number of options running out, we used the more recent
clarification (addition) of Optionlock: Distance. Lonesome
starts at the bottom and is shooting for total world domination (or
at least unlimited power). Reaching his zenith brings about the
climax and story resolution.
Speaking
of resolution, we unanimously choose Failure for the Story Outcome. Lonesome Rhode’s effort to gain and wield the
significant power of the common folk falls apart. We also chose
Bad for the Story Judgment because Marcia’s personal angst is
far from resolved at the end of the movie. Like Dr. Frankenstein
with his monster, she regrets ever having brought her “monster” to
life.
We then
went on to identify the placement of the four throughlines on the
structural chart. The Overall Story choice seemed pretty
obvious: Manipulation. Conflict is created at every turn
by most every character as they try to manipulate others to get their
way. Marcia manipulates the inmates of the jail cell to get her “Face
in the Crowd” radio show. “Lonesome” Rhodes
manipulates the sheriff to get out early. In fact, everyone from
the mail “boy” to “Miss Arkansas” to General
Haynesworth to Senator Worthington Fuller try to manipulate the common
folk or those around them (to few people’s net benefit).
Selecting Manipulation as the OS Domain was enough to set the other
three throughlines based on the dynamic choices we had made.
The Main
v. Impact Character Domain was identified as Activities, which worked
well to clarify our vague definition of their relationship. Larry’s
activities profoundly stress their relationship for the first half
of the story and Marcia stays locked in the relationship by what she
doesn’t do. This is a relationship that crashes and
burns as “The End” comes up. Larry bellows “Marcia” over
the cityscape from his penthouse as Marcia drives off in a cab.
The Impact
Character throughline fell in the Situation Domain. This
worked well because his common man background defined Larry “Lonesome” Rhodes.
The Main
Character throughline fell in the Fixed Attitude Domain, which was
consistent with Marcia’s personal concerns about integrity
and professionalism.
The next
thing we did was identify the story Concerns. It was
proposed that the OS Concern should be “Playing a Role” since
there seemed to be a lot of role playing going on, yet we settled on “Conceiving
an Idea” as the OS Concern. The whole story seemed to be
about the dangers of manipulating ideas or coming up with different
ideas to manipulate others. For example, Marcia comes up with
the idea of “Lonesome Rhodes” when Larry refuses to tell
her his first name. This creation of hers becomes the seed of
the monster to come. Lonesome’s uses his spontaneous ideas
to harass the Sheriff and then his sponsor. As Lonesome’s
popularity grows he continues to find new ideas with which to manipulate
his audience, his sponsors, his staff, his women, everyone. The
senator wants to come up with an idea for increasing his popularity. It’s
problematic because it’s not honest. When the audience
gets the idea that they’ve been duped his rise to stardom collapses.
At this
point we looked back at the Main Character Problem Solving Style
(Mental Sex) and discussed two important points. The first
concerned our choice of Intuitive (Holistic /Female Mental Sex) as
her problem solving style and how it didn’t serve Marcia very
well in the context of this story. The second point was one of
audience identification. As a gross generalization, men do not
empathize with a Main Character who has an Intuitive (holistic/female
mental sex) problem solving style. Instead, male audiences tend
to “sympathize” with the Main Character—they stand
by them and see things from where the Main Character stands but the
male audiences do not stand in the Main Character’s shoes and
experience the MC’s struggles first hand. This accounted
for our difficulty identifying the Main Character at the beginning
of the evening. The users group was filled with male mental sex,
linear thinkers!
Once we’d narrowed down the OS Concern we jumped directly down
to the OS Problem. We were running short on time (and the projection
system pooped out after five minutes of using Dramatica to identify
the problem element) so Chris proposed an OS Problem of Potentiality. Conflict
was created in the Overall Story when people considered the potential
for some opportunity to manipulate others for their own ends. While
Certainty would “cure” that problem (e.g. imagine the common
folk knowing for certain what Lonesome, the General, the Senator, and
others were up to), it never takes hold and were left with a world
in which Lonesome will retain some status and influence even if it
is diminished. The OS Symptom and OS Response are Nonacceptance
and Acceptance respectively. People think conflict arises from
unacceptable ideas or behavior and conflict seems to resolve once it
is accepted. Lonesome’s technique of bucking the system
and then being accepted by it (from jail house to white house) gets
him far.
We now
had a single storyform and printed out the results. We
went on to discuss many of the other story points but those described
here were the salient ones.
One last
story point should be mentioned: Larry’s Impact Character Problem
of Reaction. Since Larry is a Steadfast Impact Character, his “problem” is
better seen as the source of his drive. We see this drive come
to life as early as the first scene in which the reactions of Marcia,
the Sheriff, and the other inmates motivate “Lonesome” Rhodes
to come to life. Until the very end, Lonesome Rhodes continues
to play off his audiences’ reactions (and, ultimately, their
non-reactions).
"A Face
in the Crowd" Storyform
|