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Screenwriting gets praised too casually when people only mean good dialogue or clever plot. A trilogy has a harder job. It has to make the first movie feel complete, give the second movie a real reason to exist, and make the third movie feel inevitable without seeming pre-planned to death.
These six trilogies are scary-good on the page. They know how to repeat an idea without making it stale, how to let a character change without betraying who they were, and how to make small choices echo across multiple films. The best part is that none of them teach the same lesson. Scroll down slowly if you want to find out how.
6
‘Back to the Future Trilogy’ (1985–1990)
Screenwriters should be forced to study the first Back to the Future before they are allowed to touch time travel. It is that clean. Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) goes to 1955, accidentally disrupts his parents’ romance, and has to repair the event that makes his own life possible. That sounds complicated when summarized, yet the movie plays with almost ridiculous clarity because every problem has a visible consequence. The family photo fades. George McFly (Crispin Glover) must find courage. Lorraine (Lea Thompson) must redirect her attention. Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd) needs enough information to send Marty home. The clock tower gives the whole story one deadline every viewer can understand.
The trilogy keeps using that same discipline without becoming a lazy copy of itself. Part II turns familiar events into a puzzle of timing, mistaken identities, alternate futures, and old choices creating new disasters. Part III goes to the Old West and finally gives Doc the temptation Marty has faced repeatedly: changing history for something personal. The scripts keep returning to bullies, names, accidents, family shame, vehicles, clocks, and public humiliation, but each return has a new purpose. That is the lesson. Repetition becomes satisfying when the meaning changes.
5
‘The Vengeance Trilogy’ (2002–2005)
Park Chan-wook’s three revenge films are a brutal screenwriting lesson in consequence. The stories are separate, yet each one attacks the same fantasy from a different direction: someone has been wronged, punishment feels necessary, and then the punishment starts destroying every simple feeling the audience brought into the movie.
Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance is almost cruel in how plainly it lays out cause and effect. Ryu (Shin Ha-kyun), bad luck, poverty, disability, illness, desperation, kidnapping, grief, and retaliation keep moving forward until nobody can claim control. Oldboy is written with more theatrical force, but the emotional trap is even tighter. Oh Dae-su (Choi Min-sik) thinks the question is who imprisoned him. The real question is why the answer was saved for him so carefully. That difference turns the mystery into a punishment designed around knowledge. Lady Vengeance changes the shape again. Geum-ja (Lee Young-ae) wants justice, image control, motherhood, public repentance, private fury, and maybe peace, and the script refuses to make those needs line up neatly. Across the trilogy, revenge never behaves the same way twice. It becomes accident, obsession, ritual, performance, and moral exhaustion.
4
‘The Dark Knight Trilogy’ (2005–2012)
The best writing choice in Batman Begins is that Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) does not simply become Batman after trauma. The script makes him construct Batman through fear, discipline, theatricality, technology, class privilege, anger, and a need to give Gotham something larger than one damaged man. This is why Nolan’s Batman has the most substance in cinema behind him. Every mentor and ally tests a different part of that idea. Ra’s al Ghul (Liam Neeson) wants justice without mercy. Alfred (Michael Caine) wants Bruce alive. Rachel (Katie Holmes / Maggie Gyllenhaal) wants him to recognize the difference between symbol and excuse. Gordon (Gary Oldman) gives him a version of public service that still believes in decency.
The Dark Knight then puts that symbol under pressure from every side. Joker (Heath Ledger) understands stories better than most villains understand weapons. He attacks the city’s belief in order, Batman’s belief in rules, and Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart)’s belief in public goodness. That script is masterful because Gotham’s soul is argued through choices, not speeches alone: boats, hostages, lies, surveillance, burned money, corrupted hope. The Dark Knight Rises has blunt turns, yet its core idea completes the writing arc. Bruce has to stop treating death as proof of devotion. The trilogy’s screenwriting power comes from turning Batman into a question, then refusing an easy answer.
3
‘The Lord of the Rings Trilogy’ (2001–2003)
Adapting The Lord of the Rings for cinema could have become an endless pile of names, maps, histories, objects, kingdoms, and prophecies. The scripts survive because they keep asking one practical question: whose choice matters right now? That is why the trilogy stays emotionally legible even when the world keeps expanding. Frodo (Elijah Wood) carries the Ring, but Sam (Sean Astin) carries the emotional promise behind the quest. Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen) has royal blood, but the writing makes his hesitation personal before it becomes political. Boromir (Sean Bean)’s failure hurts because the script gives his fear and love for Gondor real dignity before the Ring exploits him.
The trilogy is full of smart compression. Tom Bombadil is gone, Arwen gets stronger dramatic placement, Faramir (David Wenham) is made more conflicted, and the separate storylines are arranged so each film has its own moral pressure. The Fellowship of the Ring is about accepting the burden. The Two Towers is about holding together while every group is tested. The Return of the King is about finishing the task after strength, innocence, and certainty have nearly run out. The screenwriting never lets scale replace character logic. Even the smallest mercy toward Gollum (Andy Serkis) becomes essential later, which is exactly how payoff should feel: surprising in the moment, obvious in hindsight.
2
‘The Before Trilogy’ (1995–2013)
The dangerous thing about The Before Trilogy is that the scripts have nowhere to hide. If Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Céline (Julie Delpy) speak falsely for even a few minutes, the entire project collapses. Before Sunrise understands youth with painful accuracy: the flirtation disguised as philosophy, the performance of intelligence, the sudden honesty that appears after a joke, the way two strangers can feel brave because morning will end the risk. The first film is romantic because the conversation feels temporary, and temporary things make people reveal themselves faster.
Before Sunset is sharper, sadder, and more adult. Jesse and Céline have less time, more history, and more to lose by admitting what Vienna did to them. Every topic they touch — marriage, work, politics, sex, memory, disappointment — is really another way of asking whether they missed the life they were supposed to have together. Before Midnight is where the trilogy becomes almost frighteningly honest. The same verbal chemistry now includes resentment, tired parenting, sexual insecurity, old grudges, and the ugly satisfaction of knowing exactly which sentence will hurt. The screenwriting is great because the words age. The conversations still sound like Jesse and Céline, only with more damage inside them.
1
‘The Three Colours Trilogy’ (1993–1994)
Three Colours is the screenwriting miracle here because it begins with concepts that could have turned painfully stiff: liberty, equality, fraternity. But the creators never ask characters to represent an idea neatly. They force the idea into private life and let it become messy. In Blue, for instance, Julie (Juliette Binoche) thinks freedom means cutting herself away from grief, music, memory, and other people. The script understands how tempting that is. It also understands how impossible it is when love has already shaped too much of a person’s life.
White is the strangest middle chapter in the best way. Equality becomes divorce, humiliation, money, revenge, sexual pride, immigration, and a man trying to recover power after being reduced to nothing. Karol (Zbigniew Zamachowski)’s plan is morally ugly, funny, sad, and completely human. Red then opens the trilogy into connection without forcing romance where it does not belong. Valentine (Irène Jacob) and the retired judge (Jean-Louis Trintignant) become one of cinema’s great written relationships because their bond grows through attention, listening, judgment, shame, and curiosity. The crossings between the films feel delicate, never gimmicky. The final convergence is bold, yet the emotions have already earned it. This is the top masterclass because every film stands alone, and the trilogy becomes richer once you understand how precisely the three parts speak to each other.
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https://collider.com/movie-trilogies-masterclass-in-screenwriting/
Safwan Azeem
Almontather Rassoul




