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  1. NotQuiteAlien. •. Don't make your movie about something else. Superhero movies used to have a problem with the movie being about some guy with powers who really wants to be a dancer or writer or something. Anything but a hero. Been there, seen that. Everybody wants powers. Everybody wants to be a hero.

  2. The Birth of a Superhero. Setting the Stage. Crafting the Perfect Villain. The Art of Storytelling. The Ghostwriting Connection. Mixing Genres: A New Perspective. Mapping the Hero’s Journey: 9 Essential Steps. Conclusion. Welcome, aspiring writers, to the exhilarating domain of superhero fiction.

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    • Iron Man: Grab Readers With a Multi-Faceted Characteristic Moment. Learn how the characteristic moment in Iron Man made sure we’d pay attention to Tony Stark for eight years and counting—and how you can do the same in your own book.
    • The Incredible Hulk: How (Not) to Write Satisfying Action Scenes. Turns out the secret to great action scenes isn’t the action. Learn why The Incredible Hulk‘s action failed—and how to make readers adore your conflict.
    • Iron Man 2: Use Minor Characters to Flesh Out Your Protagonist. Did you know the most important function of minor characters has nothing to do with them and everything to do with your protagonist?
    • Thor: How to Transform Your Story With a Moment of Truth. The most important job of your story’s Midpoint—and arguably the most important scene in the entire story—is the Moment of Truth.
  4. Jul 24, 2018 · Watching Like a Writer is a movie review series that looks at films from the perspective of a fiction writer, complete with one writing takeaway, and an exercise that will help better your fiction ...

    • Brian Rowe
  5. Writing Superhero Movies. by Erik Bork. Whether you’re a diehard fan of the Marvel Cinematic Universe or agree with Coppola and Scorsese that comic book superhero movies are the scourge of our culture, I think we can all agree that they have taken over a big chunk of the American film industry — at least for now — and are making certain ...

  6. May 27, 2013 · 7. Make the Superhero the Solution to His Own Problem. Back in the bad old days of the 1970s and 1980s, television writers would sometimes write themselves into a corner and so they would have to come up with solutions in a real hurry. If they were writing superhero stories, the solution was to give the superhero a brand-new power.

  7. May 14, 2015 · Step One: Introduce a powerful item. Start by introducing a really powerful item. This is your MacGuffin, and is essentially the device the whole plot will hang on. The bad guy is going to want to ...

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