No. 03/ Robert McKee, a wise voice on storytelling, highlights an important point:
The Climax of the last act is your great imaginative leap. Without it, you have no story. Until you have it, your characters wait like suffering patients praying for a cure.
Once the Climax is in hand, stories are in a significant way rewritten backward, not forward. The flow of life moves from cause to effect, but the flow of creativity often flows from effect to cause. An idea for the Climax pops unsupported into the imagination. Now we must work backward to support it in the fictional reality, supplying the hows and whys. We work back from the ending to make certain that by Idea and Counter-Idea every image, beat, action, or line of dialogue somehow relates to or sets up this grand payoff. All scenes must be thematically or structurally justified in the light of the Climax. If they can be cut without disturbing the impact of the ending, they must be cut.
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Thanks for sharing this, Ehsan Rahimpour. I love writing the Climax. It's the funnest part of a script. Sometimes I'm not 100% sure about the opening scene or ending when I start the script, but I make sure I know the Climax before starting the script.
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You're welcome, Maurice Vaughan. That’s such a great approach. The climax is where all the tension and payoff meet, it’s pure storytelling magic.
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Thanks, Ehsan Rahimpour. Some things change in the Climax by time I write it though, like characters I didn't plan to be in the scene help the protagonist fight the monster.