All of your examples do not have things like copywrite afflicting them as well as constant milking.
The Shakespeare mention reminds me of the comedy Hamlet 2 where time travel is used to side step the all the dead at the end of the first, all simply done to continue the story on.
Winter wrote: ↑Mon Jun 14, 2021 8:19 pmYou don't need to have a story that is deep and meaningful to stand the test of time. You don't even need to be a technically GOOD story to stand the test of time. You just need to connect with people and as a result they will keep that story with them forever and often they will share that story with their kids and their children's children.
But A Christmas Carol and the other examples you cite are deep and meaningful stories. Whatever motives were behind them mean little because those motives did not get in the way of the storytelling that would cheapen them. Not all of writing is conscious, and often the best writing comes from when it is the least conscious; the Prequels are a testament to that fact, IMO.
If Plan 9 From Outer Space can stand the test of time then Superheroes and Star Wars will be just fine. Dumb and Fun, is often enough.
The best that can be said is that the detritus will wash off and the solid core of value will survive. We don't know how many stupid variations many Greeks bards did to one up one another retelling the Iliad, but we know they didn't survive.
Hopefully in time, what contains and limits popular fiction will fall away, but for the present it dominates and chokes it.
Romeo and Juliet which is about 2 dumb teens and their equally dumb families fighting for reasons that are never elaborated on and as a result of everyone being stupid several people get killed and the title characters take their own life. The play even tells you at the start how this is going to end so there are very few surprises before the story even starts. This is considered one of Shakespeare's most popular stories and is easily the most iconic love story of all time. Hell, Much Ado About Nothing is as stupid and fun as a Shakespeare play can get and it's still hugely popular.
And yet there are things to analyze within them with some of that stupidity being part of the meaning. R&J is about how dumb, naive and even dangerous teenage concepts of romance are, but so many love those concepts that it was taken at face value (one could argue that it fell prey to the trap Catcher in the Rye did)
I love Plan 9 because it reveals the underbelly of a lot of Modernist thinking that is better buried in more polished up works. It's the mirror image of "The Day the Earth Stood Still" stripped of it's idealism and charming moralizing. It has the same message and is delivered in a way to make you reflect on the silly aspects of its misanthropy and its whole-hearted self-fear that apply to The Day the Earth Stood Still.
This clip as so much about us in the past 400 years, both in the arrogance cried out against and the arrogant contempt towards it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qro7oBzUBos
Both movies compliment one another by showing the valid criticisms of both positions the movies present.
You can say a lot about Plan 9, but you cannot say it was soulless.
phantom000 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 15, 2021 2:37 am
Shakespeare and Dickens, as well as others like Chaucer and Dante, are writers whose stories have been re-invented countless times. Their work has been retold again and again, but usually it's someone else interpretation of it. Every film version of
A Christmas Carol is someone else telling the story. You could perhaps make an argument that each would qualify as a different story, but I personally won't go that far. Still, saying they are all the same because it's
A Christmas Carol is really over-simplifying it.
All works are birthed this way. The new is birthed from the old and doesn't stand completely on its own.
Everyone of us is a mix of our parents and those which came before us which the newness that makes us unique is sublimated in.
Superheroes, especially ones that have been in print for decades like Superman or Spiderman, are a kind of fuzzy grey area between these two because in theory it is a single story, but they have been written by so many different people that each has written their own version of the character. Things can get interesting when you have someone writing a character they have been reading about for as long as they can remember because that's how long the comics have been in print. The result is that the same character can be radically different. That is what DC wanted to explore in Crisis on Infinite Earths because the Superman of 1985 was not the Superman of 1938.
Superheroes are archetypes that can be expressed in many similar, yet different ways. See the different takes upon the Joker as people play with his relation to things like humour, darkness, mischief and chaos.
I do not deny elements like this, I just wish they were freer to be expressed rather than restrained by the need to repeat nostalgia or to rake in more money.
"Deep," "meaningful" and especially "good" are very subjective terms because people usually have very different ideas on what they consider "good" and even if two people agree that something is "good" they can have very different opinions on how or why it is good.
Things resonate with people for a reason. Take fantasy and why the archetype is set in a vague Medieval atmosphere (and why the exceptions are so deliberate in avoiding repeating that setting). Even Game of Thrones was a produce of that in that its themes were a direct counter-reaction to typical fantasy tropes.
McAvoy wrote: ↑Tue Jun 15, 2021 4:37 am
BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Mon Jun 14, 2021 1:45 pm
The structure of Force Awakens is emulative of New Hope, but it's fine for telling a new story. Inversely, the negative reception to Last Jedi had to do with it sprawling too much, though it's still emulating Empire Strikes Back in structure. The positive reception on the other hand greatly applauded its ability to expand the story, I'd say stronger than that of Force Awakens in the same vein.
As much as I dislike The Last Jedi, I do like something different was tried story wise. I think usurping expectations went too far, among other things. I do think it's definitely better than Rise of Skywalker since that movie is just one giant mess.
You don't go testing new waters in the middle of a three part arc. It should have been a stand alone or its elements should have been better integrated. It was thrown in because those behind this trilogy don't care about storytelling, however much Rian Johnson might. It doesn't matter whatever that reason is, but some practically hold it in contempt.
phantom000 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 18, 2021 4:41 am
George Lucas seems to be kinda the opposite; great writer, lousy director. With one exception, that being ANH, most people seem to agree his directed films range from okay to bad.
ANH was good because of all the pressures placed on Lucas and everyone else to make it work. Adversity produces the best of humanity, which is why the Prequels did the opposite.