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Aaryk Noctivagus
has no status.
Senior Member
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Quote:
I am speaking from the perspective of a writer and somebody who has gone about specifically studying the art of screen writing. For instance if a character in a movie was to speak like a real person, then the result would be boring, confused, disjointed, full of erms and ahs, poorly performed... etc. Dialogue is stylized speech, rather than real. Characters in plays and movies are stylized characters and not real people. For instance, in 'The Great Escape' (and every movie dealing with real events) in order to dramatise the story into an acceptable structure, often several real people and their actions are reduced into one character styled fit for the purpose of communicating they're united efforts and abilities. Hence a stylized character rather than a real person. After all, actors interpret roles and perform them, rather than simply impersonate real people. Some impersonation may be involved (if an action or voice is particularly well known), but it is mainly interpretation. Yes, writers use aspects of themselves and people they meet etc... but that does NOT result in the creation of real people on the screen or stage. It simply results in an informed, but no less stylized character. For instance the lead character in my most recent screenplay has roots firmly in my own self, my pains and my hangups (without being biographical)... even instances of my own past behaviour are mirrored in the character. However, that character is NOT a real person, but a character designed to carry the story, theme and message over to the reader/audience. Many aspiring writers fail, simply because they do not understand this fundamental truth about the nature of characters in stories. Some succeed regardless of consciously understanding it, but that makes it by no means less true... or by no means less useful to understand. |
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Aaryk Noctivagus
has no status.
Senior Member
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Quote:
You yourself spoke with the word 'mirror' - so to some extent or another you are aware of what I say, even if you have misunderstood me. A reflection in a mirror is NOT the person looking into that mirror but a resemblance in light reflected back. A representation... if the mirror is tinted or the image adjusted in some way, then a stylized representation. A character in a story (or even biography) is a stylized representation... not a real person, or even what people are like in reality. Last edited by Aaryk Noctivagus; 12-06-2007 at 12:50 AM.. |
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christoph404
has no status.
Moderator
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but doesn't "life imitate art" or is it "art imitates life" ? cinema reflects life as does life reflect cinema, and as the old bard said, "the world is a stage and we are all but actors on it" how does one define reality? is it possible? Im not so sure if it is! I suspect one persons reality can be another persons fantasy......
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kelp
is STILL working!
Senior Member
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Ok, lets see......The last episode of "THE PRISONER". I know it's TV , but it is British. I have read so many differing excuses (oops,) I mean explanaitions as to what it was all about, non of them making sense.
I do know that Patrick was ready with bags packed as he shot the last frame! |
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716Jones
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Senior Member
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I do remember this film, although it's many years since I saw it. If I remember rightly, not all the patrol were killed, though. Wasn't the David McCallum character captured by the Japanese, who then started to treat him the way the patrol had treated their Japanese prisoner, i.e. treating him as a figure of fun and mocking him? Could be wrong about this, but I'm sure I remember it that way.
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christoph404
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Moderator
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Moor Larkin
is passing the time
Senior Member
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I don't think there is any answer to that one......
You pays your money, you takes your choice. Personally speaking I just felt Mr. McGoohan sought inspiration from his theatre experiences and tried to utilise the indirectness and poetic licence of that medium. But I'm not really any expert on theatre either. So far as ending it is concerned, I think the funniest story was the one attributed to Alexis Kanner in an interview with Ian Rakoff, for Mr. Rakoff's book. Ian Rakoff wrote: Kanner was taken aback when he saw the final script. "Patrick," he declared, "there's every indication here that we blow the place up, and he said, 'That's right.' And I said, 'Pat, isn't this a pacifist programme?' He said, "Fuck it. Do you want to keep coming back here month after month?'" I've no idea if it's true, but it appeals to my sense of poetry.....
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smudge
is back at work now, but it pays for the weekends!
Moderator
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Quote:
I did in fact acknowledge your thoughts implicity by using terms such as 'fundamental unreality' and 'not whole real people'. One has to accept the concepts of compositing and dramatic licence here, but there must be (in most cases) a 'real' root. As you say, strictly real (in terms of dialogue) would be stultifying ; we oonly have to think of our own conversations with all the umms and ahhs and pauses (etc.) Indeed, it would be eminently preferable if someone was pre-writing our speech sometimes ![]() Smudge (I'm sure there's also a whole debate about how we perceive characters in fiction here, only slightly below the surface...) |
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Aaryk Noctivagus
has no status.
Senior Member
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Quote:
I repeat... I am not talking here as a member of the public talks, but I am talking about the art story-telling. I am talking about the nature and use of characters within stories. I am not talking about the impression those characters give to the casual reader/viewer. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Its quite funny really... there was recent complaint about me and others being too jokey and not serious enough on the forum. I get the distinct feeling that I am now getting too serious for the forum - lol. ![]() This is all down to understanding how story-telling works. Last edited by Aaryk Noctivagus; 12-06-2007 at 11:59 AM.. |
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