У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно How the 3 Act Structure Works (With Examples) или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
What Is the 3 Act Structure? The 3 Act Structure is the most commonly used storytelling framework in film, TV, and theatre. It divides a story into three major parts: Act 1 – Setup Act 2 – Confrontation Act 3 – Resolution Each act serves a specific purpose in the narrative and pushes the story—and the character—forward. ACT 1: SETUP (Approx. 1–25%) Goal: Introduce the world, the characters, and the central conflict. Key Elements: Opening Image – The first thing we see, sets tone/theme. Establish the World – Show the normal life of the protagonist. Introduce the Protagonist – Who are they? What do they want? Inciting Incident – The event that changes everything and sets the story in motion. Plot Point 1 (End of Act 1) – The decision or action that propels the protagonist into the “new world” or conflict. Example from The Matrix (1999): Opening: Thomas Anderson (Neo) lives a boring life as a hacker. Inciting Incident: He’s contacted by Morpheus and told “The Matrix has you.” Plot Point 1: Neo takes the red pill—commits to finding out the truth. ACT 2: CONFRONTATION (Approx. 25–75%) Goal: Escalate conflict, build tension, raise stakes. Key Elements: Fun & Games – The “promise of the premise”; what the trailer would show. B Story – Often a relationship subplot (friendship, love, etc). Rising Tension – Challenges increase; protagonist learns and adapts. Midpoint – A big twist or revelation halfway through. Stakes shift. Dark Night of the Soul – Protagonist hits their lowest point. Plot Point 2 (End of Act 2) – They find a new resolve or plan. Example from The Matrix: Fun & Games: Neo trains with Morpheus, learns about the Matrix. Midpoint: Oracle tells Neo he’s not the One. Dark Night: Morpheus is captured. Plot Point 2: Neo decides to rescue him—his turning point. ACT 3: RESOLUTION (Approx. 75–100%) Goal: Resolve the story. The protagonist faces their greatest test. Key Elements: Finale/Climax – The protagonist takes on the final challenge. Transformation – They apply everything they’ve learned. Resolution – Tie up loose ends. Show how the world has changed. Example from The Matrix: Climax: Neo rescues Morpheus and fights Agent Smith. Transformation: Neo realises he is the One. Resolution: Neo flies away—transformed and empowered. Visual Breakdown with Timings (Feature Film Length) For a 90-minute film: Act % of Script Pages What Happens Act 1: Setup 1–25% 1–25 World, characters, stakes, inciting incident Act 2: Conflict 25–75% 26–75 Midpoint, rising action, dark night of the soul Act 3: Resolution 75–100% 76–90 Climax, transformation, wrap-up Why It Works Predictability ≠ Boring – It’s satisfying. The audience subconsciously expects these shifts. Structure = Freedom – Once you understand the structure, you can innovate within it. Quick Summary Act 1 = What’s the world + what’s about to change? Act 2 = How hard is this challenge and how will they grow? Act 3 = Do they succeed, and how are they different now? Learn more with our blog on the 3 act structure - https://www.filmindustrygateway.net/p... Sign up to our mailing list: https://filmindustrygateway.net/newsl...