All Blockbusters follow a genetic code of weaving mythological tales
Stories have an invisible plot structure
Mythosis Grid contains the plot of every story, even the untold ones
STORY RESONANCE
Mythosis plots display the number of quests utilized. Each one of us identifies with at least one quest to fulfil a basic human desire. The more quests woven into a story, the wider its appeal.
CHARACTER CONSISTENCY
Mythosis plots show the quest/s mirrored by a character. Characters pursuing more than one quest are inconsistent since they have disparate desires.
CHARACTER DEPTH
Mythosis plots indicate the number of events a character borrows from a quest. The more events a character borrows, the more layered & complex they become.
STORY COHESIVENESS
Mythosis plots identify confluence points of quests. Stories become seamless only when multiple quests are interwoven with each other.
Mythosis CODE for creating Blockbusters
Story Resonance:
All blockbusters have at least 3 mythological tales
Character Consistency:
Each mythological tale is mirrored by ONLY ONE character
Character Depth:
Every character quest borrows 35% of the tale
Story Cohesiveness:
More than half the tales are interwoven
Estimating box-office potential from script
Scripts that don’t adhere to one or more principles of the Mythosis Code
- Low Relevance: Adapting 1 or 2 universal quests limits appeal to a wider audience.
- Character Inconsistency: Characters mirroring multiple quests become inconsistent.
- Weak Characters: Characters who don’t borrow deeply from a quest aren’t layered & complex.
- Disjointed Story: Interweaving characters by relationships & not quests creates plot gaps.
Star Wars, E.T. & Jurassic Park have interwoven 5 mythological tales. Incorporating another mythological tale in any of the above movies would have diluted existing characters due to the limited runtime. The constraint of runtime hampers the exploration of character intricacies when too many tales are included—typically, blockbusters stick to around six tales.
However, a series or movies with sequels can use more than 10 mythological tales. Epics are a prime example of stories using more than 10 tales.
Blockbuster stories borrow events from various mythological tales. And each character uniquely mirrors the events of one mythological tale. Consequently, the plot unfolds as a composite of diverse character quests. However, achieving a cohesive plot structure demands that these quests are not disjointed; rather, they must be intricately interwoven. To seamlessly integrate two quests, a crucial prerequisite is a shared common event. This common event acts as a confluence point, facilitating the harmonious interweaving of the two quests into a unified and compelling plot.
We extract the plot structure to estimate the audience appeal of a script. The plot structure reveals the story relevance, character depth, character consistency & story cohesiveness. An algorithm derived by analyzing Blockbusters & Flops calculates the potency of each parameter. The combined potency of the four parameters gives us the script score. The script score to audience appeal is a simple formula. Any movie with a script score of 0.64 appeals to 20% audience of the addressable market. And a script score of 0.32 appeals to 10%.
32 mythological tales capture every human quest. And to create a Blockbuster at least 3 tales are required. By combining any five quests from 32 generates 24 million unique story plots. And if we combine six quests, that number increases to 600 million! Mythosis Code is the secret of successful storytelling and opens countless possibilities of stories.