1. Figuring It Out Beforehand:
One of the best ways to craft a good ending is to figure it out beforehand. Knowing where your final destination gives you the freedom to plant setups and payoffs, plot twists, and most importantly, give your audience the unexpected. Let’s take a look at the basic formula for a romantic comedy. The formula is our protagonist meets the love interest, gets the love interest, loses the love interest, then gets them back in the end. Knowing this beforehand, you can create an alternate ending that the reader may not expect, potentially giving you a one-up on other rom-com writers looking for representation just like you.
2. Happy or Sad:
The true answer…depends on the genre.
Taking a look at films in the genre you’re writing is a great way to see how much you can play with your ending. For example, action-adventure and comedies usually have happy endings. Imagine if TAKEN ended with the father dying and his daughter never being rescued or if THE 40-YEAR-OLD VIRGIN ended with Andy losing his girl and keeping his virginity. All the patrons in attendance would’ve left the theaters with pitchforks and torches on a one-way march to Hollywood.
But if your story has a bitter-sweet or sad ending, genres like drama and horror give you room to craft that perfect heartbreak. A great example of this comes from the romance/drama PORTRAIT OF A LADY ON FIRE. Our protagonist Marrianne sets off to an island to paint a portrait for a woman who is to be married soon. When Marrianne meets Héloïse, the love interest, they spend the time that they have together deeply in love until it’s time for Héloïse to leave for a marriage that she doesn’t want.
3. Teach Don’t Preach:
We’re not sitting in our grandma’s church. Being preached to can turn off even the most open-minded viewer/reader. Avoid monologuing (unless you’ve mastered it) and show us why the bad guy didn’t win or why our protagonist didn’t end up with the love interest or how we should accept defeat based on our protagonist’s actions like in CREED.
Now that we’re done with features, let’s take a look at how to end a TV Pilot:
The goal of a pilot is to leave the reader/audience wanting more to set up the series. A rule of thumb for a pilot is for your character to win a small battle within a big war. Let’s take a look at BREAKING BAD.
When crafting an ending, look at examples in your genre and have an idea for your destination before you put words on the page. It’ll save you tons of time and help you craft a stronger ending that’ll leave your audience wishing they could watch your story for the first time again.Need help with structure after coming up with the perfect ending for your story? Click here to take the leap.-Written by Collin Shaw