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Script Apart: 'Strange Darling' Screenwriter on the Power of the Midpoint Twist

by Al Horner on October 18, 2024

Strange Darling writer-director J.T. Mollner loves an early twist. Why wait till the end of the movie to pull the rug out from underneath your audience, the writer-director reasons, when you could stun them before or around the midpoint when viewers least expect it?

It’s no spoiler to say that Strange Darling—his astonishing new thriller—spends a chunk of its runtime signposting one type of story before zagging into shocking new territory. But as important as the twist is, it is more important when it occurs in the film, the filmmaker told me on my podcast Script Apart recently—a lesson that emerging screenwriters might want to take note of.

How Strange Darling Times Its Twist Perfectly

“There's a version of [Strange Darling] where it could have been the ending of the movie when you find out who's who,” Mollner explained. “But I never wanted it to be. I love [Twilight Zone creator] Rod Serling and I love M. Night Shyamalan movies. There are so many great Alfred Hitchcock movies where they end and you can’t believe what you just watched,” he says, discussing classic movies that reveal their twist in the film’s dying moments.

“But I wasn't setting out to compete with any of those filmmakers or any of those movies because that's been done. It's so hard to do, especially nowadays, with spoilers and how intelligent audiences are.”

His point is a great one.

In 2024, viewers raised on the internet in a post-The Sixth Sense, post-Lost world have come to expect narrative curveballs and are adept now at sniffing them out in a way they weren’t generations ago.

Showing your hand early in your script gives audiences less time to figure out the surprise you have in store for them. It also makes it more satisfying. Even if viewers guess what the twist is, if that shock comes around the midpoint, then the twist is not the destination of your movie—it’s a journey point. The rest of the film can be about what the twist means for the characters instead of solely what it means for us in the audience.

Listen to the full interview above and give Mollner’s advice a try in your own work today.

Read More: Ups and Downs: Five Ways To Approach the Midpoint Culmination


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Al HornerAl Horner is a London-based journalist, screenwriter, and presenter. His work has appeared in The Guardian, Empire Magazine, GQ, BBC, Little White Lies, TIME Magazine, and more.

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