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To Work a Subplot(s) |
- by Chuck Dixon
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- We've had a couple of posts
on this subject so I guess it rates an article.
There's a whole host of choices and opinions and approaches on
how to advance a subplot.
The oldest and sturdiest is the ABC method. This is used on soap
operas and has many supporters in the comics field. And with
good reason.
You have your "A" plot or main plot. Dr Armageddon
has returned to destroy the Legion of Do-Gooders. That takes
up most of the action in your issue. Then there's your "B"
plot. This is a subplot. It takes the level of Cellophane Lass,
leader of the Legion of Do-Gooders has a secret. Then there's
the "C" plot. This is a sub-subplot that takes
only a few pages. A mysterious stranger is lurking outside of
the Do-Gooder Building.
You then resolve plot "A" over the next few issues
and, at the same time, move plot "B" forward in importance
until it becomes plot "A". Cellophane Lass' secret
is that she's an alien and an armada from her homeworld is heading
Earthward with conquest in their hearts. Which side will Cellophane
Lass choose? Our "C" plot advances to the "B"
level as we discover that the mysterious stranger lurking around
the DGB is none other than the Golden Age Captain Ohio. But why
is he here? Then you intro a brand new "C" plot.
A sinister figure is crossing the arctic tundra vowing vengeance
against the LDG.
All right, Cellophane Lass sides with her pals and helps trounce
the nasty invaders from her homeworld. This resolves your main
plot. The Golden Age Captain Ohio tries to kill the current Captain
Ohio then turns out to be an android controlled by H.E.R.M.I.T.,
sworn enemies of the LDG. The sinister figure crossing the arctic
will turn out to be Sardonicus the Mad whose looking for the
frozen remains of The Inhibitor; a villain sent to Earth long
ago by the Legion of Evil Doers from Earth 27-G. And all along,
as you push one plot up and resolve it, you intro a new plot
to replace it.
And there, in bare skeletal form, you have a year's continuity
for a monthly comic. And with that formula you always have a
story ending, a second story beginning and a third story in its
middle.
This is a dynamite formula and can be played up or played down
as you see fit.
I use a more organic version of this with a few flourishes. I
favor at least one long sub-plot in each book mixed with a variety
of sub-subplots that resolve quickly. The story of Tad in NIGHTWING
is a good example of a long subplot. Tad was intro'ed in the
first year of Nightwing as a minor subplot. His story has become
a saga that won't see its fruition until close to issue #50.
It's had its ups and downs but it was always GOING SOMEWHERE.
I knew the general direction Tad Ryerstad and "Nite-Wing"
were taking the first time he appeared.
In same time I've introduced Dudley Soames and seen him come
to greater evil. We've seen Dick agonizing over joining the police
force and finally joining. We've seen Blockbuster's health problems
come to light but not yet be resolved. And while this was going
on we had Dick and Clancy, Dick and Babs, Dick and Huntress etc.
Also the troubles with the building Dick Grayson lives in. His
choice of a crimefighting vehicle. Amygdala's mysterious arrival
in Bludhaven and the continuing mystery of his employment. We've
seen gangsters come and gangsters go. Subplots boiling beneath
subplots.
That's what helps keep a book vital. There's always something
unresolved. Always something to bring the reader back. It also
serves to make your stories denser and the world you're creating
seem more three-dimensional. And as long as these continuing
threads always lead to something satisfying or cathartic then
you'll keep readers entertained.
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