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For me, when I read one of those stories I described, the wish is fine but the author’s imagination about how they’re going to either fulfill it or get it fulfilled just doesn’t ring true.why is wish fulfillment a negative thing anyway?
For me, when I read one of those stories I described, the wish is fine but the author’s imagination about how they’re going to either fulfill it or get it fulfilled just doesn’t ring true.
They say “write what you know” and I don’t feel like they know what kind of banter would actually achieve their wish or what kind of banter the wish-person would ever actually utter.
And that leaves aside the absence of emotion. There’s a lot of talking and you’re just supposed to understand that it’s resulting in attraction, but the attraction isn’t present in the written story or the quoted, ostensibly-clever dialog. Neither are any of the feelings around the attraction.
Wish fulfillment isn’t objectionable. Ham-fisted execution is.
Maybe a way to explain it is, a good writer can make me share the wish and believe in it. I’m talking about stories which don’t, and have the additional flaw of implausibility and unnatural scripts.
HehSo, basically, good writing is better than bad writing.
Sad to say, that is sort of a controversial opinion around here.
The stretch is when it isn’t witty but the author thinks it isWitty reparte seems like a minor stretch of plausibility compared to ninety nine percent of the plot devices here
That goes for almost anything a writer does poorly though, doesn't it?The stretch is when it isn’t witty but the author thinks it is![]()
Sure, I guess?That goes for almost anything a writer does poorly though, doesn't it?
After watching Netflix for a bit tonight, I was reminded that I miss the days when they didn't show actual puking in movies and tv shows. It's unnecessary. The suggestion was always enough, until it wasn't.
Bleah. No thanks. And I don't need to see anyone taking a dump, either. I want to be entertained, not grossed out!in the "Nostalgia ain't what it used to be" thread, @Off_base said:
My controversial opinion is that I kind of respect it when movies and tv show a proper puke when a character is sick or traumatized or something, and I think it's a weak copout when they just have the actor spit out a mouthful of vegetable soup or something...
Either get into character and vom, have props rig up a hidden tube for a good realistic spew, or don't bother filming it at all![]()
I do not need to see poop or peeWhere do you stand on
Bleah. No thanks. And I don't need to see anyone taking a dump, either. I want to be entertained, not grossed out!
Amen!in the "Nostalgia ain't what it used to be" thread, @Off_base said:
My controversial opinion is that I kind of respect it when movies and tv show a proper puke when a character is sick or traumatized or something, and I think it's a weak copout when they just have the actor spit out a mouthful of vegetable soup or something...
Either get into character and vom, have props rig up a hidden tube for a good realistic spew, or don't bother filming it at all![]()
Season 1 of The White Lotus had a pretty good poop. I found out that the actual turd was CGI. Pretty convincing.I do not need to see poop or pee
BUT if filmmakers choose to include a bio scene, peeing on a pregnancy test, throwing up in a toilet, cleaning up after sex... I'm going to judge them on how realistic they choose to be!
https://wiki-gateway.eudic.net/wikipedia_en/List_of_choral_symphonies.htmlSymphonies don’t have lyrics, except for Beethoven’s Ninth. But I wouldn’t expect the residents of hell to know that.
I never wondered what was happening, when they just used to show someone running towards the bathroom gagging, then playing sound effects from behind the door that they slammed shut on their way in. What fueled the change amongst producers? Shock value? Either way, ewwww.I do not need to see poop or pee
BUT if filmmakers choose to include a bio scene, peeing on a pregnancy test, throwing up in a toilet, cleaning up after sex... I'm going to judge them on how realistic they choose to be!
MyThe stretch is when it isn’t witty but the author thinks it is![]()
Excuse me, this thread is for controversial opinions, not obvious truths.Adam Yauch should have won the Oscar for his work in "Sabotage" based solely on his portrayal of Cochese/Nathan Wind.
The fact that he also played Sir Stewart Wallace is an embarrassment of riches.
But a witty repartee every time, in any decently sized story, is less believable than love potions, 12” dicks, and all incest tropes combined.Witty reparte seems like a minor stretch of plausibility compared to ninety nine percent of the plot devices here.
But a witty repartee every time, in any decently sized story, is less believable than love potions, 12” dicks, and all incest tropes combined.
I like her videos.As for plot twists, I recently watched this great video where it’s explained how to write one that works:
She specifically discusses an example where the twist is not at the end of the story, like everyone here seem to imply it should be, but in the middle, and how it retroactively shapes the audience’s understanding of the story so far while still allowing it to move forward.
Are they always like that, or do you just remember the zingers that land?Is it though? I know some people who are a sharp and always have a line in the chamber, ready to go at an instant. Like, proper "perfect line a day later in the shower" type answers, only in the moment every time. Maybe it's an Irish thing, I dunno. I realize we don't all live in an Aaron Sorkin play, but the idea that there aren't witty people out there is "nothing ever happens" terrirtory.
Theseven percent solution is the only one of his I have read. I enjoyed that.
Are they always like that, or do you just remember the zingers that land?
Is it though? I know some people who are a sharp and always have a line in the chamber, ready to go at an instant. Like, proper "perfect line a day later in the shower" type answers, only in the moment every time. Maybe it's an Irish thing, I dunno. I realize we don't all live in an Aaron Sorkin play, but the idea that there aren't witty people out there is "nothing ever happens" terrirtory.