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Posts Tagged ‘story’

Creating Characters in Wabbit Season

September 22nd, 2009 Administrator 1 comment

BugsBunny_blog

Suspension of disbelief. Empathy for the protagonist. A quest led by an unconscious desire by the protagonist to attain a perceived unattainable object becomes the story.

In some cases, the main character fails (The Wrestler), and the audience witnesses something called tragedy. A few characters employ humor to elicit sympathy from the audience, and these are comedies (The Hangover).

The most difficult part of creating fiction is the issue of authenticity, and its cousin believability.

Truth is indeed stranger than fiction. With that, it’s often less difficult to insert simple, anecdotal truths into fictional characters, because the audience might not accept their credibility.

A simple problem, like Bugs Bunny wanting to live in peace. An antagonist, like Elmer Fudd, acts against this desire. But, Bugs Bunny holds a certain unconscious desire — to make a fool of anyone who attempts to sully his idyllic, rustic existence.

elmer_fudd_blog

The two opposing forces act and react, and the realm of drama is revealed. Throw in a sub-plot — Daffy Duck‘s desire to thwart his own shotgun demise — and the plot is interwoven and energized with complexity.

See what happens when Elmer tries to Kill Da Wabbit! For copyright (Warner Brothers) purposes, the original audio is censored in places.


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Melrose Place 2 – Taking Art from a Fart?

September 15th, 2009 Administrator No comments

MelrosePlace_blog

Just some good, nasty, clean, dirty, crass, and mindless entertainment here. Not trying to hate on anybody (Kanye’?), but it seems a little shallow and a lot silly. Remote, please.

Storyline for this “New” Melrose Place? This episodic synopsis is taken from the CW Network‘s website:

An updated version of the popular 1990s series, the lives and relationships of a diverse group of 20-somethings intertwine to form a close-knit surrogate family. Heading up this group is landlady Sydney Andrews (Laura Leighton, the original “Melrose Place”), still beautiful and a central figure in the lives of all her tenants, especially handsome and rebellious David Breck (Shaun Sipos, “Shark”), the estranged son of her former lover Dr. Michael Mancini (Thomas Calabro, the original “Melrose Place”).

MeetMelrose_blog

Other tenants include up-and-coming publicist Ella Simms (Katie Cassidy, “Harper’s Island”), Auggie Kirkpatrick (“All My Children”), a successful sous chef at the trendy restaurant Coal with a dark past, Lauren Yung (Stephanie Jacobsen, “Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles”), a medical student in desperate need of money to pay her student loans, and Jonah Miller (Michael Rady, “Swingtown”), an aspiring filmmaker who has just proposed to his live-in girlfriend Riley Richmond (Jessica Lucas, “Cloverfield”), a first-grade teacher.

The newest tenant, wide-eyed 21-year-old Violet Foster (Ashlee Simpson-Wentz, “7th Heaven”), has just arrived in LA and is horrified to find a bloody body floating in the courtyard pool. Suddenly everyone is a suspect.

Davis Guggenheim directed the episode written by Todd Slavkin & Darren Swimmer.

Davis Guggenheim directed this pilot? I preferred It Might Get Loud.

Digital Ink Los Angeles says everybody’s gotta make a living, and mindless soap operas are better than Judge Judy reruns. But not I Love Lucy reruns…


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Tim Burton’s Alice In Wonderland

September 1st, 2009 Administrator No comments

AliceInWonderland_blog

Lewis Carroll‘s Alice In Wonderland was published in 1865, and his Through the Looking Glass was the follow-up in 1871.

Tim Burton‘s cinematic version of both comes out in 2010, with Johnny Depp as the Mad Hatter.

Doesn’t the 60s rock-band Jefferson Airplane have their own rendition of this story? Go ask Alice, when she’s ten-feet tall…

Watch the sneak-peek trailer here.


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