Every sentence tells a story.
And your reader has one question the moment they start reading it: Who is this story about?
A film director faces the same question. Their answer is simple: put the character at the center of the shot.
Steven Spielberg is a genius for many reasons, especially his command of cinematic language.
— cinesthetic. (@TheCinesthetic) March 13, 2026
Munich (2005). pic.twitter.com/7EpgGjWifL
When Spielberg wants you to care about a certain character, he doesn't leave him in the corner of the frame. He centers him. Your eye goes where the director puts the subject of the shot—and that, instinctively, is who you care about.
Writers have the same tool. It just has a different name.
The Subject Position Is the Center of the Shot
In writing, the center of the shot is the subject position: it's the structural location that tells readers what the sentence is about.
Your reader's eye moves through a sentence the same way a viewer's eye moves through a film frame. It looks for the center—the thing the shot is about—and that's where it plants its attention. In a sentence, the center is the grammatical subject. Whatever you put there is who the sentence belongs to.
Consider the same moment framed four different ways:
Tom slapped Jerry on the back with a towel.
Jerry's back was slapped by the towel.
The towel slapped Jerry on the back.
Jerry got slapped by Tom with a towel.
Same information. Four different stories: Tom's story, Jerry's story, the towel's story. It all depends on what you center.
This is the writer's version of shot composition.
When you choose what goes in the subject position, you're choosing the main character of that sentence.
What Goes Wrong
Directors learn early: if you want the audience to care, keep the camera on the character.
Writers forget this.
They drift toward putting abstractions at the center of their shots. The characters get pushed to the edges. They show up in possessive phrases and prepositional clauses and adjectives, structural locations that instruct readers to ignore them and focus on whatever's in the spotlight. The characters appear like extras hovering just out of frame.
Here's a sentence with its characters hidden:
Administrative delays in proposal review have led to project cancellations.
Who is the main character? Administrators.
Where are they—center stage? No, they're hiding in an adjective (administrative) while the abstract noun delays holds the center of the shot. The reader is told to focus on an abstraction (delays) instead of a character (administrators).
Now the same sentence, shot differently:
When administrators delay proposal reviews, they cause projects to be cancelled.
Same information. Different shot. Now there's a character at center. The reader knows whose story this is from word one.
Where Characters Hide
When characters aren't in the subject position, they're usually hiding in one of three places.
- In possessives.
| ❌ | The writer's fear was that the book would be met not with disdain but indifference. |
The writer's fear centers fear, not the writer. The character is treated like an extra—the incidental possessor of fear instead of standing in the spotlight.
- In prepositions.
| ❌ | The recommendation from his publisher was to restructure the opening chapter. |
This prepositional phrase puts recommendation in the spotlight, not the publisher, who is the real flesh-and-blood character in this scene.
- In adjectives.
| ❌ | Congressional support for the bill diminished following the president's remarks. |
Congressional support puts the spotlight on an abstract action (support), not the character who carries out that action (congress). The character has dissolved into a modifier.
Once you know where to look, you start seeing this everywhere.
How to Fix It
The diagnosis is simple: