The Aristotelian Myth, the Screen Idea and the Making of the Chilean Film No
Keywords: 
Screenwriting
Aristotle's Poetics
Screen Idea
Writing process
Narrative
Chilean cinema
Pablo Larraín
Issue Date: 
2017
Publisher: 
Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Navarra
ISSN: 
2386-7876
Citation: 
Brenes, C.S. (Carmen Sofía). "The Aristotelian Myth, the Screen Idea and the Making of the Chilean Film No". Communication & Society. 30 (4), 2017, 1 - 12
Abstract
This article takes a close look at an element that permeates the screenwriting process from initial idea to finished film, and suggests that at the beginning of the creative process there is a core or budding idea that takes gradual shape as the screenplay develops into the screen version. This element is neither detectable nor does it give the work unity at the beginning of the writing process, but results from such process. As the story develops, the authors (screenwriter, director, producer) negotiate about that intangible “something” they do not wish to lose. After a theoretical overview of Aristotle’s notion of the poetic myth understood as the soul of the story and mimesis of action (Poetics, 1450a 9, 16-18, 22, 32-35, et. al.), and Ian W. Macdonald’s notion of screen idea (2013) seen as the goal at which a screen project aims, this essay presents a case study of the Latin-American film No (Chile, 2012), written by Pedro Peirano, produced by Juan de Dios Larraín and directed by Pablo Larraín. The methodology combines narratological and thematic tools. As a result, the study shows how the screen idea can be tracked down by observing the transformation arc of some of the characters in the plot, and explains why the plot undergoes modifications throughout the different stages in the development of the film.

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