DrDelirium
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- May 14, 2017
- Posts
- 889
I'm posting this in Authors even though it involves some graphic art decisions because, well, people visit this forum and I might actually get some feedback. The principle applies to purely text descriptions too, in a way, but there are some issues regarding the honesty of the narrator there that take it to a different place.
The basic issue is this- I am contemplating a story- illustrated, part comic strip, something- but not purely text. The main character is a very ordinary girl, not a vogue model or playboy bunny. Her perception, and indeed, everyone else's, is that she's pretty homely, but she's also pretty well hidden in big glasses, too much unruly hair, and several layers of oversized sweaters, so who really knows?
And the 'who really knows' part is important because she becomes internally transformed over the course of the story, in ways which cause people to regard her differently, although objectively she's never going to be a classic beauty, and maybe not even pretty.
In doing some preliminary thinking and sketching on this idea, I ran up against issues about this transformation. It's something that could easily be worked in a movie, because we know the actress is in fact the same person throughout and the transformation of impact comes from things like demeanor, grooming, and so on. Whatever the wardrobe department, hair and make up, and the actress herself do, it's just assumed to be real, because we know the same human being is there. This knowledge is not present when we look at a series of hand-drawn pictures, so the transformation has to contain some core elements of consistency to make us feel the character is actually the same character.
So the question is- how plain, or ugly, or unattractive should those core elements be? At what point does it stop being sexy to the majority of the audience? I am not trying to write the Great American Novel with an emphasis on feminist discourse, deconstructionism and participation prizes. Porn, ladies and gentlemen. I'm trying to write porn.
The basic issue is this- I am contemplating a story- illustrated, part comic strip, something- but not purely text. The main character is a very ordinary girl, not a vogue model or playboy bunny. Her perception, and indeed, everyone else's, is that she's pretty homely, but she's also pretty well hidden in big glasses, too much unruly hair, and several layers of oversized sweaters, so who really knows?
And the 'who really knows' part is important because she becomes internally transformed over the course of the story, in ways which cause people to regard her differently, although objectively she's never going to be a classic beauty, and maybe not even pretty.
In doing some preliminary thinking and sketching on this idea, I ran up against issues about this transformation. It's something that could easily be worked in a movie, because we know the actress is in fact the same person throughout and the transformation of impact comes from things like demeanor, grooming, and so on. Whatever the wardrobe department, hair and make up, and the actress herself do, it's just assumed to be real, because we know the same human being is there. This knowledge is not present when we look at a series of hand-drawn pictures, so the transformation has to contain some core elements of consistency to make us feel the character is actually the same character.
So the question is- how plain, or ugly, or unattractive should those core elements be? At what point does it stop being sexy to the majority of the audience? I am not trying to write the Great American Novel with an emphasis on feminist discourse, deconstructionism and participation prizes. Porn, ladies and gentlemen. I'm trying to write porn.