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18 Plot Devices You Can Use to Elevate Your Story

What are the best plot devices that screenwriters can use to make their cinematic story more intriguing?
by Ken Miyamoto - updated on August 3, 2022

While plot devices may initially be thought of as clichés or tropes, they are actually quite effective as a screenwriting tool. Even the best screenplays and films utilize them. The secret, though, is to craft and utilize them well.

If you have the time, you should definitely dig into our exhaustive guide on plot devices, but if you're looking for something a little more bite-size, here are 18 of the best plot devices that can elevate your story, from "Big Dumb Objects" to "Plot Twists."

But first...

What is a Plot Device?

A plot device is best defined as any technique in a narrative used to move the plot forward.

A well-conceived plot device — one that emerges from the concept, genre, story, or characters — can drive your plot forward and enhance your story and characterization.

17 Plot Devices You Can Use to Elevate Your Story

[Warning: Spoilers ahead!]

Alibi

Most prevalent in mysteries and the subgenre of whodunits, the alibi is an explanation for how a character could not have committed the crime in question. This allows you to point the guilt towards a specific character, only to reveal that they have an alibi that will shift the plot into a different direction.

You can also play with this alibi with fakes and misleads.

It can be used in courtroom dramas, mysteries, thrillers, and even comedies.

Big Dumb Object

Originally a term that was used as a joke within the book The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction — and also attributed to reviewer Roz Kaveney — the Big Dumb Object refers to a plot device that entails any mysterious object with immense power — usually of unknown or extraterrestrial origin. There is usually an intense wonder about its origin and power.

The monolith in 2001: A Space Odyssey is a perfect example.

The compelling factor of using this plot device is that it drives the intrigue throughout the whole story.

The Cliffhanger

Best defined as an ending to an act, chapter, serial, or novel that leaves the audience in suspense with an unresolved and often shocking plot point, the cliffhanger is best reserved for serials and television episodes.

Writers can use them creatively within feature film screenplays with perfect placement and complimentary story editing.

You can have a character fall from a building, only to leave them dangling from the edge as their grip slips.

You can then cut away from that scene to another that features a different character. This leaves us wondering what's about to happen to the character that was left dangling from the building.

Deathtraps

A protagonist or another sympathetic character is captured by a villain who attempts to use an elaborate and often sadistic method of murder. This increases tension as we watch the character try to escape. It also offers a moment for exposition as the villain reveals key plot details.

Disguise

Mission: Impossible movies are notorious for using disguises as a plot device for plot twists within the story. Disguises can hide the true identity of a killer, protect the protagonist from harm, or offer a reveal within the climax of the story.

But beware of using a disguise as a cheat without any plant, foreshadowing, or explanation.

False Death

A character that apparently dies, only to later be revealed alive at a pivotal moment within the screenplay. While often a trope within mystery and horror movies, if utilized well it can be quite a surprise for the reader or audience — as long as the explanation makes sense and isn't too far-fetched.

False Ending

False endings offer the writer the ability to tease the reader or audience into thinking that the story has come to a close, only to shatter that notion with an additional ending that is even better.

This plot device can be used for scares, thrills, or enhanced mystery reveals.

Speed gave us somewhat of a false ending.

Only to continue the story on.

Die Hard did the same thing, albeit with a briefer second ending.

Flashback

Flashbacks can be used to recount events that happened prior to the story’s current events and can also be utilized to fill in crucial backstory. While this type of plot device is often frowned upon, it can be very effective when crafted well.

Flashing Arrow

An audiovisual cue within a screenplay that is used to bring some object or situation to the attention of viewers. Later on within the script, the object or situation will be referred to once again, somehow advancing the plot forward as most plot devices should.

The MacGuffin

This plot device has been utilized in cinematic storytelling for decades. It's what Alfred Hitchcock referred to as the MacGuffin — a goal, desired object, or any other motivator that the protagonist (and often the antagonist as well) is either tasked with pursuing, or drawn to pursuing for whatever reasons.

It’s a motivating element that exists only to drive the plot and is usually the cause and effect of each character’s conflict that they are dealing with throughout the story.

Take a look at our deep dive into MacGuffins to learn more.

Magnetic Plot Device

An object, person, or piece of information is something that the antagonist wants, needs, or is attracted by.

Dana's apartment complex in Ghostbusters.

John Connor in (most of) the Terminator films.

The Allspark in the Transformers movies.

This type of plot device can create seemingly insurmountable conflict for the protagonist. And in storytelling, conflict is everything.

Plants and Payoffs

Perhaps the best plot devices that screenwriters can use. Plants and payoffs are cinematic examples of foreshadowing. You plant images, objects, or information throughout your story and later create payoffs that explain why those elements were present in the first place.

Plot Twist

Whether it occurs between acts or at the end as a twist ending, plot twists are some of the most fun and entertaining plot devices you can use. Why? Because they add depth and mystery to your narrative, catching your viewer/reader (hopefully) by surprise, which will keep them engaged in your story longer.

Check out our list of 101 plot twist ideas if you need some inspiration for your own scripts.

Plot Voucher

Originally defined by Nick Lowe, a plot voucher is an object given to a character before they encounter an obstacle that requires the use of that object.

A perfect example would be a character that is given a metal flask, only to later have that flask stop a bullet that was shot at that character.

This device originated from the dramatic principle called Chekhov's Gun, which stipulated that every element within a story must be necessary to the story. And all irrelevant elements should be removed.

Anton Chekhov once wrote:

"Remove everything that has no relevance to the story. If you say in the first chapter that there is a rifle hanging on the wall, in the second or third chapter it absolutely must go off. If it's not going to be fired, it shouldn't be hanging there."

Quibble

A quibble is a plot device that is used to fulfill the exact verbal conditions of an agreement in order to avoid the intended meaning. Quibbles are used in legal bargains and especially in fantasy stories that contain a magically enforced one.

A Deal with the Devil can contain clauses that allow the devil to quibble over what he grants. And sometimes the protagonist finds a quibble to escape the bargain.

One of the best examples is present within The Twilight Zone episode The Man in the Bottle. A genie is freed from a bottle and grants a couple four wishes with the warning that every wish will have consequences. The man wishes to be in a position of great power, the leader of a modern and powerful country who cannot be voted out of office. The genie turns him into Adolf Hitler during his final days in World War II.

The Red Herring

The red herring is used to divert the audience's attention away from something significant within the plot.

You'll see this type of plot device in mysteries, thrillers, horror stories, and crime stories.

The subgenre of the mystery — the whodunit —  utilizes multiple red herrings so that the audience is tricked into thinking that a given character is the murderer when it is actually another character.

It's best to use multiple red herrings throughout any story, instead of a single one. A single red herring risks the chance of the audience feeling cheated. But multiple red herrings showcase many twists and turns.

Ticking Time Bomb

A literal or figurative ticking time bomb can drive the narrative and create urgency and tension within the story.

Twins

Twins or doppelgangers have been used as an effective plot device in movies and television. A protagonist has a twin or doppelganger that is revealed as an ally or enemy.

While it can seem like a cheat within many stories, if you use this plot device creatively you can redefine its use.

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These are just a few plot devices that you can use to make your stories even better. They can be big or small, but they must be used wisely.

What other plot devices did we miss?


Ken Miyamoto has worked in the film industry for nearly two decades, most notably as a studio liaison for Sony Studios and then as a script reader and story analyst for Sony Pictures.

He has many studio meetings under his belt as a produced screenwriter, meeting with the likes of Sony, Dreamworks, Universal, Disney, Warner Brothers, as well as many production and management companies. He has had a previous development deal with Lionsgate, as well as multiple writing assignments, including the produced miniseries Blackout, starring Anne Heche, Sean Patrick Flanery, Billy Zane, James Brolin, Haylie Duff, Brian Bloom, Eric La Salle, and Bruce Boxleitner. Follow Ken on Twitter @KenMovies

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