[Quick Summary: A man waking up with amnesia realizes that he's an assassin.]
What is the difference between:
a) the Suspense genre and
b) regular suspense that is found in all stories?
According to one Hitchcock quote, the Suspense genre is marked by danger, and I always find interesting in HOW various writers include it.
For instance, writer Tony Gilroy brought fresh life to the tired suspense genre in the Bourne adaptations by making the audience feel the danger to the protagonist.
The scene below is from a first draft:
- The "Professor" is chasing Bourne and Marie.
- Notice how your eye keeps moving because the stakes are high and there's a real possibility of failure.
- Also notice that the tension lies in the maybes: Maybe Bourne will get caught and we'll never get answers. Or Marie will die and he'll lose connection to the world.
THE METRO PLATFORM
The PROFESSOR lands on the other side -- both racing down the platform -- PROFESSOR tearing up the wall behind them and -- HERE COMES A TRAIN -- on BOURNE and MARIE's side -- traveling the opposite way -- temporary refuge. Not for long -- there's no way out on this end of the platform. They skid to a halt -- just as --
THE TRAIN DOORS OPEN -- STARTLED STRAPHANGERS stare at BOURNE and MARIE as they stop onto the platform -- take off running.
THE PROFESSOR has to turn his bike around. He's quick -- but it gives BOURNE and MARIE a two second head start.
BOURNE and MARIE almost at the other end of the platform -- gunfire ripping up the windows behind them. Gonna go for the steps -- be here come --
THE ANGRY COPS -- remember them? -- the ones who took the ride down the steps -- they're firing now and --
BOURNE and MARIE turn back -- the PROFESSOR is firing and there is only one option --
WHAT I'VE LEARNED: What undergirds danger is the possibility of failure, which requires the push-pull of tension.
I also think this story's frame work lends itself to suspense because it's the ultimate life or death situation, survival of the fittest.
The Bourne Identity (2002)(9/20/00 Paris draft)
by Tony Gilroy and William Blake Herron
Based on the novel by Robert Ludlum