Product Details
The Writer's Journey

The Writer's Journey
By Christopher Vogler

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Product Description

Presenting a study of film as storytelling, this book examines how the great works of cinema history have used the principles of myth to create stories which are dramatic, entertaining, and psychologically true. The author looks not only at how outstanding figures from Hitchcock to Lucas, Spielberg and Tarantino have used mythic structure to create powerful stories, but also offers step-by-step guidelines designed to help readers to incorporate effective plot structure and characterization in their own writing. This edition has been updated to include analysis of "Titanic", "The Lion King", "Pulp Fiction" and "The Full Monty".


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #236021 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-03-12
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 368 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Beginning life as a seven-page memo to Hollywood studios, The Writer's Journey was first published in 1992 as a guide for screenwriters concerned with classically organic structure and development within their work, based on the ideas of the mythologist Joseph Campbell. Unsurprisingly it was voraciously devoured, so much so that this is a second revised and expanded edition which also considers recent blockbusters such as Titanic, Pulp Fiction, The Lion King and The Full Monty in relation to its theories. The book is essentially a distillation of Joseph Campbell's The Hero with a Thousand Faces, in which the author considers myth and storytelling as a definable framework that renders a narrative instructive and psychologically true. Vogler, applying this idea, and with frequent recourse to Carl Jung, has developed a 12-stage cycle which he believes is inherent in all good drama if manipulated to fit the writer's intent. And, for the most part, he is correct.

Using auteurs such as Hitchcock and Spielberg and classic films, notably The Wizard of Oz and the Star Wars trilogy, Vogler demonstrates how much mainstream Hollywood has absorbed the tenets of mythic structure into its thinking. As with most "this will change your life" proclamations, when his ideas are themselves distilled they come down to a fundamental few, which are nuggets of wisdom. The main body of the book is written as a step-by-step guide to the "hero's journey" in accessibly short paragraphs, each chapter concluding with a series of questions for the reader to consider about their own work. If your ambition lies beyond becoming the next George Lucas then this book may have its limits, but in making conscious the intuitive structure of storytelling Vogler has come up with a valuable text for those moments of structural panic and characterisational chaos that cause all writers' fingers to ttttremble. --David Vincent


Customer Reviews

The Heroes Quest is all about yourself5
So you thought the guys that fought dragons lived in books, times they are a changing - we are and do it all the time yet we don't know it. You have to do a Vison Quest to find out what it's all about. Otherwise get to grips with the shadow and you will understand what you should be really doing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

For a vision quester try googleing "Leonie Fitzgerald"

bobby

CLASS!5
This is a great book. If you don't like it you are probably lame. Like the people who gave it a poor review above and below. Chris has done his work and is sharing a deep understanding of story writing and story telling and most importantly the function of character. The conceptual stuff will help you to recognise archetypal characters in any setting. The Movie comparisions make this accessable to lazy writers like me. If you get a footing in these concepts you have already climbed a mountain. It is written in a clear concise, precise style, that makes it gripping and informative. There is a personal element which makes it all the more accessible. I simply stumbled on this book in a shop and it was like a finding a piece of gold.

A good place to start4
Having read this book, gone to the 2 day seminar with the author and read the other reviews here I thought I'd write my review. I found Joseph Campbell's the hero with a thousand faces very heavy going, this book will give you the same essence in a much more approachable way. As a starting point for understanding story structure it is great. I can also recommend the seminar as Vogler is a very good tutor, speaking without notes in an entertaining and inspirational way.