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A young sheriff returns home to where his outlaw mother was brutally killed to find the girl he grew up with now in charge and wanting the same for him.
So, the dramatic question is from her pov is: can she flip him? Can she make him regress to his earlier outlaw behavior? >>reenacts the events which killed his mom that changed both of their destiny?s Echoes of Sigmund Freud's destiny neurosis and repetition compulsion. Sixty years ago, when psychoaRead more
So, the dramatic question is from her pov is: can she flip him? Can she make him regress to his earlier outlaw behavior?
>>reenacts the events which killed his mom that changed both of their destiny?s
Echoes of Sigmund Freud’s destiny neurosis and repetition compulsion. Sixty years ago, when psychoanalysis was in vogue, that might have worked. But dramatic and acting theories have moved so far beyond Freud (and the therapeutic community these days is largely skeptical of his ideas — to put it mildly), that I am dubious that a “re-enactment” motivation will find traction.
(One post-Freudian’s opinion)
See lessA young sheriff returns home to where his outlaw mother was brutally killed to find the girl he grew up with now in charge and wanting the same for him.
So, the dramatic question is from her pov is: can she flip him? Can she make him regress to his earlier outlaw behavior? >>reenacts the events which killed his mom that changed both of their destiny?s Echoes of Sigmund Freud's destiny neurosis and repetition compulsion. Sixty years ago, when psychoaRead more
So, the dramatic question is from her pov is: can she flip him? Can she make him regress to his earlier outlaw behavior?
>>reenacts the events which killed his mom that changed both of their destiny?s
Echoes of Sigmund Freud’s destiny neurosis and repetition compulsion. Sixty years ago, when psychoanalysis was in vogue, that might have worked. But dramatic and acting theories have moved so far beyond Freud (and the therapeutic community these days is largely skeptical of his ideas — to put it mildly), that I am dubious that a “re-enactment” motivation will find traction.
(One post-Freudian’s opinion)
See lessA young sheriff returns home to where his outlaw mother was brutally killed to find the girl he grew up with now in charge and wanting the same for him.
Version 2.0 of the logline states 2 objective goals: 1] Get him to take over the town; 2] Get him killed. The 1st seems to be a means to the 2nd, the final outcome of the story. So the objective goal for the purpose of the logline would be to get him killed. But I still don't have a handle on her moRead more
Version 2.0 of the logline states 2 objective goals: 1] Get him to take over the town; 2] Get him killed. The 1st seems to be a means to the 2nd, the final outcome of the story. So the objective goal for the purpose of the logline would be to get him killed.
But I still don’t have a handle on her motivation.
See less