Storyteller Skill
Overview
This skill transforms metaphorical/theatrical narrative content into concrete, filmable visual stories. It serves as the critical translation layer between poetic writing and production-ready screenplay format.
The Problem It Solves:
INPUT: "Aku menjadi laut yang membeku, menunggu pelaut yang tidak kembali"
PROBLEM: What does this LOOK LIKE on screen?
OUTPUT: Woman stands at frozen beach at dawn, staring at horizon where ship
disappeared. She places his jacket on the ice. Days pass (montage).
She returns. Always returns.
Core Principle: Preserve emotional truth while making content filmable.
Core Transformation Workflow
Step 1: Extract Emotional Core
What does the metaphor FEEL like?
Read the metaphorical content and identify:
- •Primary Emotion: The dominant feeling (longing, grief, obsession, hope)
- •Emotional Intensity: Scale 1-10, how extreme is this feeling?
- •Relationship Dynamic: Who feels what toward whom?
- •Temporal Context: Is this present pain, past memory, future fear?
Example:
Metaphor: "Aku menjadikanmu altar pribadi" Primary Emotion: Worship/devotion bordering on obsession Intensity: 9/10 (extreme, unhealthy level) Dynamic: Speaker → Beloved (one-directional adoration) Temporal: Present state, ongoing condition
Step 2: Find Visual Equivalent
What ACTIONS show this emotion?
Translate abstract emotion into visible behavior using this framework:
| Emotion Type | Visual Translation Strategy |
|---|---|
| Longing/Waiting | Character returns to same location repeatedly; keeps object belonging to absent person; checks phone/window/door obsessively |
| Worship/Devotion | Ritualistic behaviors (daily routines, shrine-like arrangements); serving without being asked; positioning self lower than object of worship |
| Loss/Grief | Empty spaces where person used to be; untouched belongings; inability to change/move on from environment |
| Obsession | Collection of items; repetitive actions; deteriorating self-care while maintaining focus on other |
| Fear of Abandonment | Checking behaviors; keeping lights on; sleeping in wrong positions; startling at sounds |
Visual Vocabulary Reference: references/visual-vocabulary.md
Step 3: Generate Scene Breakdown
Build filmable scenes around visual actions
For each emotional beat in the source material:
- •Identify Location: Where would this emotion naturally occur?
- •Define Action: What does the character DO to show this emotion?
- •Select Props/Objects: What physical items carry symbolic weight?
- •Establish Time: When does this happen? (time progression matters)
- •Document Story Logic: Why does this visual choice work?
Scene Template:
SCENE [NUMBER]: [Brief Description] Location: [Specific place] Time: [Time of day/progression] Action: [What character physically does] Key Visuals: [Important visual elements] Emotional Beat: [What audience should feel] Story Logic: [Why this visual choice represents the metaphor]
Step 4: Create Story Logic Map
Document the metaphor→visual transformation
For transparency and creative consistency, document:
STORY LOGIC MAP =============== Original Metaphor: "..." Emotional Core: [extracted emotion] Visual Translation: [chosen visual representation] Why It Works: [explanation of connection] Alternative Considered: [what else could work]
Output Format
Scene Breakdown Structure
# Visual Story Breakdown: [Title] ## Source Material Summary - **Original Concept:** [From diverse-content-gen] - **Emotional Core:** [Primary emotion identified] - **Tone:** [Preserved from source] - **Target Duration:** [5-10 minutes] ## Character(s) - **[Name]:** [Brief visual description, emotional state] ## Scene-by-Scene Breakdown ### Scene 1: [Title] **Location:** [Specific, filmable location] **Time:** [Time of day] **Duration:** [30-60 seconds estimate] **Visual Action:** [Detailed description of what character does - FILMABLE actions only] **Key Visuals:** - [Visual element 1] - [Visual element 2] - [Visual element 3] **Emotional Beat:** [What audience feels] **Story Logic:** [How this scene translates the original metaphor] --- ### Scene 2: [Title] [Continue same format...] --- ## Story Logic Map | Original Metaphor | Emotional Core | Visual Translation | Why It Works | |-------------------|----------------|-------------------|--------------| | "..." | ... | ... | ... | ## Technical Notes for Screenwriter - [Any specific notes about pacing, transitions, or visual consistency]
Transformation Guidelines
What Makes a Scene "Filmable"
✅ FILMABLE:
- •Physical actions (walking, touching, looking, moving objects)
- •Observable emotions (tears, shaking, stillness, posture)
- •Environmental details (weather, lighting, objects in space)
- •Time progression (morning→night, seasons changing)
❌ NOT FILMABLE:
- •Internal thoughts ("She thinks about him")
- •Abstract concepts ("Love fills the room")
- •Unvisualizable metaphors ("Her heart is a frozen sea")
- •Telling instead of showing ("She is sad")
Converting Common Metaphorical Patterns
| Metaphor Type | Visual Approach |
|---|---|
| "I am [element]" (sea, fire, ice) | Show character interacting with that element; use element as setting backdrop; character's behavior mirrors element properties |
| "You are my [sacred thing]" (altar, god, sun) | Show ritualistic worship-like behaviors; lighting/composition that elevates the beloved; character positioning that shows devotion |
| "I am waiting for..." | Show passage of time; same location revisited; objects accumulated or deteriorating; physical signs of waiting |
| "When you left..." | Empty spaces; untouched belongings; paused activities; contrast with "before" flashbacks |
Detailed Methodology
For step-by-step transformation process with worked examples:
Integration with Pipeline
Input: diverse-content-gen Output
Expect structured narrative ideas with:
- •POV, Setting, Tone, Structure already defined
- •"Why This Wins" analysis (emotional hooks identified)
- •Metaphorical/theatrical language
- •NOT scene-by-scene yet
Output: Ready for Screenwriter
Provide scene breakdowns with:
- •Concrete locations and times
- •Physical, filmable actions
- •Key visuals for each scene
- •Emotional progression documented
- •Story logic preserved
Screenwriter will then:
- •Add proper screenplay formatting (sluglines, etc.)
- •Wrap in XML tags for pipeline
- •Add technical metadata (duration, characters list)
Quality Checklist
Before outputting scene breakdown, verify:
- • Every scene describes VISIBLE action (not internal thought)
- • Emotional core from source material is preserved
- • Story logic map explains all metaphor→visual translations
- • Scenes follow logical time/space progression
- • Total scene count appropriate for target duration (8-15 for 5-10 min)
- • Key visuals are specific enough for image generation
- • No unexplained jumps in emotion or location
- • Tone consistency maintained throughout
Additional Resources
Detailed Transformation Process
references/transformation-methodology.md