Just admit it, you were also annoyed that, for example, the powers of characters in the same Marvel film could differ radically throughout… no, not the entire franchise, but simply from scene to scene of the same movie – just to maintain a balance between the dozens of characters, almost each of which is an ‘imba-‘ in themselves.
However, not only comic book movies suffer from such problems. Even many movies and TV series that fully claim to be a realistic reflection of life are, in fact, crammed with all sorts of clichés, both plot and visual. And it’s these clichés that we’ll be talking about in today’s selection from this viral thread on the AskReddit community.
More info: Reddit
The bad guy will be pointing a gun at the good guy. All he needs to do is pull the trigger. But he talks instead. And that’d buy time for our good guy so that he could outwit the bad guy.
*”When you have to shoot, shoot. Don’t talk.”*
In fact, we are not just talking about clichés, many of which appeared at the dawn of cinema. The fact is that almost every famous director has their own visual or story style. For example, Terrence Malick’s emphasis on landscapes and colors, Wes Anderson’s exaggerated frame geometry, or slow-mo scenes in Zack Snyder’s films. Sometimes it looks like a ‘corporate style’, but when it is overused, movie lovers begin to get genuinely annoyed.
Nothing to do with the protagonist being a creep.
In fact, the constant repetition of one, even the most outstanding, stage move can, over time, develop into annoying absurdity. “History repeats itself twice: the first time as a tragedy, the second time as a farce,” the great German philosopher Georg Hegel once said, and it’s hard to disagree with this. Therefore, if some plot twist was successful in the past, then with repetition in different movies, it no longer causes anything but irritation to viewers.
“What is one of the main differences between cinema and literature is that the writer is not formally limited by timing and frames, so they can tell the story down to the smallest details and trifles,” says Dmytro Kosygin, a film director and cameraman from Ukraine, to whom Bored Panda reached out for a comment.
“Therefore, the cinematic presentation of information is, in a certain way, a set of conventions. And during its existence, cinema has acquired special techniques that facilitate the story. And it isn’t surprising that over the decades the viewer has become bored with many of the techniques…”
“And besides, we should not forget that cinema or television is still art, which implies a certain distorted perception of reality. For example, the main character of many blockbusters in reality would have ended their journey already in the first or maybe second action scene. But then what what would be the point of a two-hour movie?” Dmytro wonders.
Turn the TV on
*turns tv on to the exact channel at the exact time the exact thing they need to hear is being talked about, without missing anything.
In recent years, cinema has been experiencing a certain genre crisis – especially in comparison with the colossal box office and successes of the previous decade, but we will still go to cinemas, renew subscriptions to streaming services and buy popcorn. And every time we watch another movie, we’ll be sometimes livid over the ridiculous moves made up by screenwriters or directors – that’s how we are built. So please feel free to scroll this list to its very end and maybe add your own ideas on the silly plot twists you’ve ever seen. Camera, action!
Take your toast and go
Character: oh what’s that? Let’s check it out
Character: dies
For thousands of years, the family never branched? It’s always only one kid at a time?
• The main character is like a waitress or works at a gas station and lives in some bad**s apartment in NYC and nobody mentions how.
• Someone “hacking” something on a computer. They just press a ton of random keys and then go “I’m in”. I don’t know s**t about hacking but I know it’s not that.
You know in teen movies when someone does something a little salacious and they walk down the hallway the next day and *everyone is staring at them and pointing and laughing and covering their mouths etc?* Yeah that isn’t how teens *actually* act
Falling through windows, because apparently toughened glass doesn’t exist.
When digging a hole to bury a body, the hole always has perfectly vertical sides. Anyone who’s ever dug a hole knows this is impossible.
At the end of any class, as everyone is leaving, the teacher tells them to “read chapter 4”. Never happened in real life.
When someone tells a joke but you only hear the punchline.
Then, they get asked something like “Is everything okay?” and they ALWAYS say “yeah yeah everything’s fine”
And then something bad happens and nobody is prepared because they didn’t tell ffs
Something along this line is in SO MANY movies and shows and it always pisses me off
Realising they’re the one before the other person is about to board a plane/train, and rushing to reach them at the gate and running through traffic/airport as final take off announcement is made… and making it in time to stop them, kiss, and have a 10 minute conversation.
P.S I hope writers who are on strike right now have a lot of time to read these comments. We can do with a rebirth of cinema!
When two characters are about to kiss and it’s so obvious someone is going to walk in an interrupt them from doing it.
It’s raining, they have just had an argument, they both walking their own way, one looks back but the other is still walking then they swap. Both not knowing that they did indeed look back.
The premise it takes zero $$$ to travel anywhere either airfares or gas money.
Poor exposition, it honestly f*****g sucks and feels like it’s on the rise. I read a theory that it’s because streaming execs are asking filmmakers to cater for a generation that is on their phones whilst watching movies, so everything needs to be audibly explained to the nth degree, even between characters that ABSOLUTELY would have that info anyway.
“Well, you are my brother after all”. “Wait, so this will cause a singularity to emerge that might consume the universe?” Ugh, just f**k all the way off. It’s so, so lazy and makes you feel like you’ve been lobotomized.
And the thing is, it’s not big info dumps that are the issue, it’s the way you present it. One of the strongest parts of The Matrix is the sequence when Morpheus literally explains everything to Neo. Its totally enthralling and feels earned because we are learning along with the central character.
Villains casually killing one of their henchmen to intimidate everyone
Just admit it, you were also annoyed that, for example, the powers of characters in the same Marvel film could differ radically throughout... no, not the entire franchise, but simply from scene to scene of the same movie - just to maintain a balance between the dozens of characters, almost each of which is an 'imba-' in themselves.
However, not only comic book movies suffer from such problems. Even many movies and TV series that fully claim to be a realistic reflection of life are, in fact, crammed with all sorts of clichés, both plot and visual. And it’s these clichés that we’ll be talking about in today’s selection from this viral thread on the AskReddit community.
More info: Reddit
*"When you have to shoot, shoot. Don't talk."*
In fact, we are not just talking about clichés, many of which appeared at the dawn of cinema. The fact is that almost every famous director has their own visual or story style. For example, Terrence Malick’s emphasis on landscapes and colors, Wes Anderson’s exaggerated frame geometry, or slow-mo scenes in Zack Snyder’s films. Sometimes it looks like a 'corporate style', but when it is overused, movie lovers begin to get genuinely annoyed.
Nothing to do with the protagonist being a creep.
In fact, the constant repetition of one, even the most outstanding, stage move can, over time, develop into annoying absurdity. “History repeats itself twice: the first time as a tragedy, the second time as a farce,” the great German philosopher Georg Hegel once said, and it’s hard to disagree with this. Therefore, if some plot twist was successful in the past, then with repetition in different movies, it no longer causes anything but irritation to viewers.
“What is one of the main differences between cinema and literature is that the writer is not formally limited by timing and frames, so they can tell the story down to the smallest details and trifles,” says Dmytro Kosygin, a film director and cameraman from Ukraine, to whom Bored Panda reached out for a comment.
“Therefore, the cinematic presentation of information is, in a certain way, a set of conventions. And during its existence, cinema has acquired special techniques that facilitate the story. And it isn't surprising that over the decades the viewer has become bored with many of the techniques...”
“And besides, we should not forget that cinema or television is still art, which implies a certain distorted perception of reality. For example, the main character of many blockbusters in reality would have ended their journey already in the first or maybe second action scene. But then what what would be the point of a two-hour movie?" Dmytro wonders.
Turn the TV on
*turns tv on to the exact channel at the exact time the exact thing they need to hear is being talked about, without missing anything.
In recent years, cinema has been experiencing a certain genre crisis - especially in comparison with the colossal box office and successes of the previous decade, but we will still go to cinemas, renew subscriptions to streaming services and buy popcorn. And every time we watch another movie, we'll be sometimes livid over the ridiculous moves made up by screenwriters or directors - that’s how we are built. So please feel free to scroll this list to its very end and maybe add your own ideas on the silly plot twists you've ever seen. Camera, action!
Take your toast and go
Character: oh what's that? Let's check it out
Character: dies
For thousands of years, the family never branched? It's always only one kid at a time?
• The main character is like a waitress or works at a gas station and lives in some bad**s apartment in NYC and nobody mentions how.
• Someone "hacking" something on a computer. They just press a ton of random keys and then go "I'm in". I don't know s**t about hacking but I know it's not that.
You know in teen movies when someone does something a little salacious and they walk down the hallway the next day and *everyone is staring at them and pointing and laughing and covering their mouths etc?* Yeah that isn't how teens *actually* act
Falling through windows, because apparently toughened glass doesn't exist.
When digging a hole to bury a body, the hole always has perfectly vertical sides. Anyone who's ever dug a hole knows this is impossible.
At the end of any class, as everyone is leaving, the teacher tells them to "read chapter 4". Never happened in real life.
When someone tells a joke but you only hear the punchline.
Then, they get asked something like "Is everything okay?" and they ALWAYS say "yeah yeah everything's fine"
And then something bad happens and nobody is prepared because they didn't tell ffs
Something along this line is in SO MANY movies and shows and it always pisses me off
Realising they're the one before the other person is about to board a plane/train, and rushing to reach them at the gate and running through traffic/airport as final take off announcement is made... and making it in time to stop them, kiss, and have a 10 minute conversation.
P.S I hope writers who are on strike right now have a lot of time to read these comments. We can do with a rebirth of cinema!
When two characters are about to kiss and it’s so obvious someone is going to walk in an interrupt them from doing it.
It's raining, they have just had an argument, they both walking their own way, one looks back but the other is still walking then they swap. Both not knowing that they did indeed look back.
The premise it takes zero $$$ to travel anywhere either airfares or gas money.
Poor exposition, it honestly f*****g sucks and feels like it's on the rise. I read a theory that it's because streaming execs are asking filmmakers to cater for a generation that is on their phones whilst watching movies, so everything needs to be audibly explained to the nth degree, even between characters that ABSOLUTELY would have that info anyway.
"Well, you are my brother after all". "Wait, so this will cause a singularity to emerge that might consume the universe?" Ugh, just f**k all the way off. It's so, so lazy and makes you feel like you've been lobotomized.
And the thing is, it's not big info dumps that are the issue, it's the way you present it. One of the strongest parts of The Matrix is the sequence when Morpheus literally explains everything to Neo. Its totally enthralling and feels earned because we are learning along with the central character.
Villains casually killing one of their henchmen to intimidate everyone
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