Listen when you need tension without external stakes--subtext, stillness, and thematic weight do the work.
In this episode, Stu and Chas delve into the cultural phenomenon of ADOLESCENCE. We try to find the craft tools that have made the show so compelling and such a catalyst for conversation.
In particular, we breakdown how the show’s emphasis on questions creates tension: not just tension through plot, but tension through character, and ultimately tension through theme.
We analsyse the show episode-by-episode, and discuss how the overall structure skilfully shifts from a plot-heavy police procedural towards a thematic-heavy melodrama and the impact that has on our experience.
We discuss how the decision to shoot the show in a series of “oners” affects the writing and what tools we can take from that to apply to our own writing (even if we’re not writing it to be a one-shot): POV characters, handovers, French scenes, emotional events, and more.
As always: SPOILERS ABOUND and all copyright material used under fair use for educational purposes.
As always: SPOILERS ABOUND and all copyright material used under fair use for educational purposes.
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Thanks to our Patrons, especially Lily, Paulo, Alexandre, Malay, Jennifer, Thomas, Randy, Jesse, Sandra, Theis and Khrob.
→ Read the transcript for this episode.
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"The absence of plot does not mean the absence of tension." — Chas Fisher @ 00:00:00
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CHAPTERS
- 00:00:00 – Cold Open
- 00:00:13 – Why ADOLESCENCE? Craft tools behind a cultural phenomenon
- 00:03:35 – › Melodrama, stillness, and the emotional contract with audiences
- 00:07:28 – › Unity of time as a narrative constraint and creative tool
- 00:09:38 – EPISODE ONE: Did Jamie do it, the audience question vs character objectives
- 00:13:10 – › Every procedure scene tracks impact, not investigation
- 00:19:29 – › POV strategy withholds Jamie to centre Eddie's emotional event
- 00:27:35 – › Who is the protagonist when plot belongs to the detectives
- 00:32:18 – EPISODE TWO: School as world, motivation as a character question
- 00:36:03 – › Luke's emotional event with his son unlocks the plot
- 00:39:24 – › Melodrama broadens the world through shallow but purposeful characters
- 00:44:35 – › A dialogue scene resolves character questions and opens thematic ones
- 00:46:47 – EPISODE THREE: Briony and the forensic interview as character excavation
- 00:51:12 – › Win conditions are hidden when the goal is understanding, not confession
- 00:55:07 – › Jamie's rage, restricted access, and what we project onto him
- 00:57:49 – EPISODE FOUR: Social realism melodrama and a light plot engine
- 01:00:19 – › The van incident as a vehicle for Eddie's sense of agency
- 01:04:13 – › Responsibility, inherited anger, and the thematic endgame
- 01:09:05 – › Incomplete questions invite the audience to finish the argument
- 01:19:05 – Melodrama: Ordinary People, Big Emotion, and Genre as Emotional Contract
- 01:23:32 – Scene-Level Tools: POV, French Scenes, Handovers, and Tension Through Questions
- 01:30:51 – › Introducing characters before they appear controls audience questions
- 01:36:59 – › Handovers and French scenes solve pacing inside a continuous take
- 01:44:22 – › The point of view character of a scene is whoever is most impacted
- 01:51:12 – › Using a character question to resolve a plot problem
- 01:52:56 – Key Learnings & Wrap Up
- 01:58:27 – Patreon Thanks
SHOWS
- ADOLESCENCE 1x1 — Philip Barantini (d), Jack Thorne, Stephen Graham (w)
- ADOLESCENCE 1x2 — Philip Barantini (d), Jack Thorne, Stephen Graham (w)
- ADOLESCENCE 1x3 — Philip Barantini (d), Jack Thorne, Stephen Graham (w)
- ADOLESCENCE 1x4 — Philip Barantini (d), Jack Thorne, Stephen Graham (w)
LINKS
- Watch: Crafting Adolescence's Tense One-Take Episodes with Stephen Graham via BAFTA
- Watch: The Making Of Adolescence: The One-Shot Explained
- Read: 'Adolescence' Episode 3 Script By Stephen Graham & Jack Thorne
RELATED EPISODES
- DZ-67: Writing Passive Protagonists & Melodrama
- DZ-108: The Emotional Event with Judith Weston
- DZ-101: Oners - Creating Immediacy & Anchoring Action on the Page
- DZ-70: Joker & Melodrama
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More Draft Zero is brought to you by our awesome Patreons.
If you enjoy the show, please leave a review on Apple Podcasts, a rating on Spotify, or a review on Podchaser.
We are @stuwillis, @mehlsbells and @chasffisher on Twitter. You can find @draft_zero and @_shotzero on Instagram and Twitter.
Full show notes at: https://draft-zero.com/2025/dz-118/
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