Dearelliot
Really Experienced
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2010
- Posts
- 1,548
The men in my stories wouldn't dare! I have mean hard nosed sadistic ladies in my stories that support me 100%. They keep the men in line!
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Roger Rabbit?What was the movie (maybe TV show) where the characters were afraid of the artist's pencil?
That reminds me of being a kid. Coming home on Sunday, going down stairs and playing with miniature people in a toy village.I don’t know, but for some reason it reminded me that there was a really cool issue of The Fantastic Four where they got to meet God and it was Jack Kirby sitting at his drawing board. That pretty much sums up my attitude concerning the author/character relationship.
I think I remember watching such a short as well... But ya know it's so easy for the brain to fabricate memories that it's hard to be sure.^^^ Maybe. Or Cool World.
But I remember something else. Maybe a Disney or Warner Brothers short where the character was interacting with the animator, doing things and getting erased and redrawn.
^^^ Maybe. Or Cool World.
But I remember something else. Maybe a Disney or Warner Brothers short where the character was interacting with the animator, doing things and getting erased and redrawn.
I don't get this so much as side characters spinning off into their own stories.You're going in to write a story and include a throwaway character to give someone some depth, but the throwaway becomes MUCH more interesting than the original plan?
The first fourteen stories of my original series were written like that, but I had no idea where the series was going or if it would ever end.I'm a pantser, and I usually start writing from a single image or action. The whole process of plotting and character creation is in constant flux, right up until I finish my first draft.
I try to avoid having strong thoughts about my plot, because as soon as I do that I lose interest in telling the story. So I let the characters take the story where they want, with perhaps some key moments along the way to steer them.
Loving the idea of a panther on a glade path.The first fourteen stories of my original series were written like that, but I had no idea where the series was going or if it would ever end.
My SO gave me enough grief about that that I felt obligated to plan out a glade path down for the series. It was originally supposed to be 4 more stories, but they got split into seven as I wrote them. But I think the writing and the story telling was much worse for the planning. And there is a marked drop in ratings for this last seven stories. I now have rough plot points I am aiming for, but I also view them as optional. I let new subplots evolve naturally, some plot points become irrelevant or implausible.
This seems like a middle ground between the panther I started as and a complete plotter that I would have guessed I would be.
Most of us are probably somewhere in between. Like I mentioned, I do have certain key moments that I want to incorporate. But getting there is the adventure.This seems like a middle ground between the panther I started as and a complete plotter that I would have guessed I would be.
There's a couple Loony Tunes cartoons with that premise, I thinkWhat was the movie (maybe TV show) where the characters were afraid of the artist's pencil?
There's also a Daffy Duck one!Wasn't there a Bugs Bunny like that?
Edited:
EB speaks in tongues. He’s quite good at itThat sort of thing can lead to needing an exorcism.