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When & How to Write a Montage

How to Write a Montage

Since montage is primarily a film technique, it makes sense to watch a few film montages for inspiration. Notice, in particular, the pacing of film montages. Each shot is just long enough to establish what’s going on, and maybe show something exciting happening; but the shot doesn’t linger too long, and quickly moves on to the next part in the sequence. Similarly, your montage should have:

Other than that, you’re completely free to build your montage out of whatever bits and pieces you think will advance the plot and keep your reader’s/viewer’s attention.

 

When to Use Montage

Montage is a creative technique appropriate to creative writing and filmmaking. It is especially useful when you’re creating the script for a movie, and need to show a lot of events happening in a short space of time. For example, if a character is taking a long train journey from Paris to Calcutta, you could use a montage of the character sitting on the train and stopping in various cities along the way; this would be more efficient than showing the whole journey, and more interesting than simply skipping over it.

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