For example, in Signs, there’s two reasons why this alien invasion thriller only contains a single alien: the first is so Shyamalan can withhold the alien to build suspense and for us to create the horror in our minds the second is to keep the budget down. He always writes for a medium budget (in major Hollywood studio terms of budget), even when the subject matter would suggest a bigger film. His narratives are structured in three 30-minute acts, followed by a 10 minute “Act Four” which acts primarily as a falling action. Shyamalan applies a number of general principles to each film.Īll his films span approximately 100 minutes in length, from story start to story end (minus titles and credits). We all work in the shadow of his dream gig, thus we can learn a little something from… HIS METHOD Still, for successfully making a string of auteur genre films in the Hollywood studio system, for only writing on spec and directing only his own screenplays, we bow down to Manoj Night Shyamalan.
In other words, not every beat works, especially at a crucial point in The Village. We need him in that lab.īut with great chances taken, so comes the risk of great falls from grace. And considering his four straight commercial successes (The Sixth Sense, Unbreakable, Signs, The Village), it’s safe to say we keep coming back for more. He loves it, gets off on playing us like a marionette. Like Hitchcock before him, Shyamalan is the Great Manipulator. Don’t kid yourself - he may be fascinated with the retooling of narrative structure, but ultimately, he’s experimenting on us, the audience. Shyamalan has always enjoyed playing the puppetmaster of our emotions. With The Village he shocks his most bold experiment into life. From his sub-basement sanctum sanctorum, amidst the smoking beakers and jarred brains and that lightning-rod thingee, adjacent to the plasma screen playing non-stop Hitchcock films, he straps standard three-act structure down onto a slab of unforgiving granite and goes to work. This is a screenwriter who has mastered traditional narrative and gotten bored with it, so he’s decided to consistently take chances with the form. With each new film, he’s gone back into his lab and concocted some new experiment in suspense storytelling. Night Shyamalan is the modern master of the high-concept thriller. Originally published in Script Magazine Online in 2005 in a slightly shorter form here.