Karma as Story Structure: Cause and Consequence in Cinema
Karma is not cosmic punishment or a moral scoreboard. It is the oldest story engine we have: every action plants a seed, and the third act is the harvest.
Most people think karma means "you did a bad thing, so a bad thing happens to you." A cosmic scoreboard keeping tally, a slap from the universe when you deserve it. That is not what the word means, and more to the point, that is not why karma is the single most useful idea a screenwriter can steal. Underneath the folk version sits something colder and far more powerful: every action plants a seed, and every seed, eventually, bears fruit. Cause and consequence, running without exception. That is not a moral. That is a plot engine, and it is the oldest one we have.
I am nobody in cinema, six scripts waiting, raised on the Gita in one hand and Save the Cat in the other. Let me show you how the two are the same book.
Karma is a machine, not a judge
The Sanskrit word simply means "action." The teaching is that no action is free, every one sends a ripple forward that returns to you changed, sometimes in a shape you never predicted. Notice there is no judge in that sentence. There is no one keeping score. It is closer to physics than to a courtroom: you push here, something moves there, always. A character who lies in act one is not "punished" in act three. The lie he told simply grew, the way a lie does, and met him coming the other way.
This is exactly how a screenplay works when it works. Screenwriters call it setup and payoff, and the craft sites at ScreenCraft will teach it as technique. But it is older than technique. When Michael Corleone chooses violence to protect his family, no god punishes him. The choice itself, repeated and compounded, becomes the thing that hollows him out and takes the family anyway. That is karma as structure. The seed of act one is the harvest of act three.
You have a right to your actions, but never to the fruits of your actions.The Bhagavad Gita
The harvest has to feel inevitable and surprising at once
Here is where the karma model beats the scoreboard model for a writer. A scoreboard is predictable and dull: bad guy does bad thing, bad guy gets hit by a bus, the end. Karma is subtler. The consequence returns, but transformed, so that the audience feels two things at the same instant: of course, and I did not see that coming. The lie about a small thing costs the character the one big thing he loved. The mercy he showed a stranger in act one saves him in act three, in a way he could never have planned.
Think of it like planting in the monsoon. You drop the seed in June and forget it. By the time the plant breaks the soil, you have half-forgotten your own hand in it, and when the fruit comes it feels almost like fate. That gap, between the quiet planting and the loud harvest, is where good structure hides its machinery. Plant early, plant small, let the audience forget. Then let the harvest arrive on time.
Plant the seed in act one so quietly the audience forgets. Let it break the soil in act three so loudly they gasp.
How to build with it
Practically, this changes how you outline. Instead of asking "what happens next," ask "what did this character plant, and when does it come due." Track the seeds. Every meaningful choice, every small cruelty and small kindness, is a debt the story now owes the audience. Your third act is where those debts get paid, all of them, and a satisfying ending is really just a field where nothing was left unharvested. When people say a film's ending felt earned, this is what they felt: every seed accounted for. When they say it felt cheap, a harvest arrived that was never planted, or a planting was left to rot.
The discipline is patience and honesty. Do not plant a seed in act three and pretend it was always there, audiences smell that instantly. And do not let a major action pass without a consequence somewhere down the line, or the world of your film starts to feel weightless, a place where nothing matters. Karma, as craft, is just the promise that in your film, actions have weight. Which is the promise every real story makes.
Why this is philosophy, not just plotting
It would be easy to stop at technique and call karma a fancy word for cause and effect. But there is a reason this particular structure has moved audiences across three thousand years. It answers a hunger we all carry, the hope that our actions matter, that the world is not random, that what we do echoes. A film built on clean karmic structure is quietly telling the viewer: your choices count. That is a philosophical statement dressed as a plot, which is precisely the sleight of hand I described in how films think without telling you.
And it only lands if the consequences fall on people we understand and ache for, which returns me, as always, to the skill that cannot be faked. A harvest means nothing if we do not care who planted the seed. If you want to go deeper into where this model comes from and how it reshapes the familiar three acts, walk on to what Indian philosophy can teach the three-act structure. But keep the core with you: in a story that works, nothing is free. Everything is a seed. Write like every action you give a character will come back to find them. Because in a good film, it always does.