Tropes Explained - Types of Tropes & the Art of Subverting Them
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- Опубліковано 20 чер 2024
- Film Tropes Explained - storytelling tropes often get a bad rap, but they can be quite useful. This video explores the most common movie tropes, why they work, and how to be creative with them.
What are Tropes? ►► bit.ly/cl-gt
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Chapters:
00:00 - Introduction to Film Tropes
01:01 - Spoilers
01:17 - Trope Definition & History
02:07 - Chapter 1: Character Tropes
08:36 - Chapter 2: Plot Tropes
14:55 - Chapter 3: Tropes in Dialogue
20:12 - Chapter 4: Cinematic Imagery
24:18 - Takeaways
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FILM TROPES EXPLAINED
One of the most pervasive complaints about movies is that they all seem the same. The repetitions we point to are called tropes, which have since been considered negative. But there is a reason why film tropes exist and why they work. In this video, we want to dispel the notion that film tropes are always bad and never good. We will also provide some creative solutions to achieve the best of both worlds - familiarity, and freshness.
WHAT ARE TROPES
From the original literary definition, a trope is the use of figurative language. But the more common understanding these days is that tropes are anything that recurs in a story, often to the point of overuse. Film tropes can be found in character types, plot points, dialogue, and imagery.
CHARACTER FILM TROPES
Characters can easily become tropes. The Mad Scientist, the Bully, the Damsel in Distress - by name alone, these are recognizable character film tropes. When writers include these character tropes in their work, there is shorthand with the audience. But without tweaking those expectations in some way, the audience will notice.
PLOT FILM TROPES
Like characters, we can point to a number of recurring plot points, which are often genre-specific. Love triangles, dreams, the heroic sacrifice are just a few examples of plot tropes we’ve seen a thousand times. But, again, instead of rejecting these movie tropes outright, writers can embrace them as opportunities to challenge our expectations to create something new.
DIALOGUE FILM TROPES
Dialogue, too, is a common source of film tropes. How often have you heard lines like, “I’ve got a bad feeling about this” or “Don’t you die on me”? Because these lines are so overused, they can be repurposed for comedy instead of drama.
IMAGERY FILM TROPES
Locations, like abandoned warehouses or idyllic suburbs, can be tropes. Walking away from an explosion is a recent trope, as is the overhead crane shot as someone dies. The imagery itself is familiar, which can be an economical way to communicate an idea, but audiences still require something more.
Film tropes are ever-present but also always evolving. The idea is to embrace what makes these tropes work and find a way to make them work again with slightly new or different elements.
#FilmTheory #VideoEssay #Filmmaking
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“Binary Sunset” by John Williams
“Aegis” by Makeup and Vanity Set
“Simba” by Les Baxter
“Dojo Tradition” by In This World
“Unloved” by Sigh
“Nicaragua” by Jerry Goldsmith
“I Heard Ramona Sing” by Frank Black
“What Is Fight Club” by The Dust Brothers
“Previous on Jump Street" by Mark Mothersbaugh
“Escape From New York Them” by John Carpenter
“The Gambler” by Kenny Rogers
“Los Paramos” by Makeup and Vanity Set
“Baba ORiley” by The Who
“Off You” by The Breeders
“Tannhäuser Gate” by Makeup and Vanity Set
“Blue Velvet” by Lana Del Rey
“Mary Had A Little Lamb” by Stevie Ray Vaughan
“Arachnoventure” by Michael Giacchino
“The Wanderer” by Makeup and Vanity Set
“Hello Vietnam” by Johnny Wright
“Go” by Makeup and Vanity Set
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Hey, everyone! Just wanted to clear up the confusion regarding the hospital explosion in The Dark Knight. The delayed explosion was intentional. Nolan clears this up in a featurette called Gotham Uncovered: Creation of a Scene. Here's a clip: ua-cam.com/video/yUFiNuRAmmc/v-deo.html
Chapters:
00:00 - Introduction to Film Tropes
01:01 - Spoilers
01:17 - Trope Definition & History
02:07 - Chapter 1: Character Tropes
08:36 - Chapter 2: Plot Tropes
14:55 - Chapter 3: Tropes in Dialogue
20:12 - Chapter 4: Cinematic Imagery
24:18 - Takeaways
How about a video on the switcheroo?
Thank you for interesting videos! Can we have a video about hidden things and easter eggs in shots?
the voice of the old white man sounds pretty toxic masculine
@@candide1065 too subjective comment
Turned out not to be true
One trope that I cannot stand is the "miscommunication" because a character doesn't take 5 seconds to explain or the other character won't take 5 seconds to listen. Like Character A walks in on their partner (B) at a restaurant with another person (C) and immediately assumes it's cheating, but won't listen to B explain that C is a sibling. OR B just doesn't explain. It's such a lazy way to create a conflict.
agreed, it's insulting
That's why rom coms are so bad. They depend on things like that.
But this thing really happened in real life, a married couple can fall to this trope in real life when they no longer communicate with each other
So over this one!
@@boboboy8189right!! And stories are meant to teach us
I think Hot Fuzz really needs special commendation on this, as they did the first 75% of the movie subverting buddy cop and creepy small town tropes, and then joyously dove right back in and played them all straight for the last 25%. Masterclass.
Spiderverse has a good subversion of the 'yup that's me' trope as they all intorduce themselves as if they are the main character and then also shows the character arc pf Miles as he becomes his spiderman and gets his own comic book intro
That's a great example!
A perfect subversion! That moment is goated!
My Name Is Earl also did this to great comic effect 👍
@@wwjjss33 which episode and in what way. Are you referring to the general intro
As the sites do tell, "tropes are tools", so a trope's quality, wether one uses it it straight, subvert it, or deconstruct it, do depends on the users.
exactly
One thing I'd like to comment on is how I absolutely love and appreciate how every movie title is listed at the bottom of every clip displayed. Makes life a lot easier.
It would be great to see a compilation of the first usage of what later became an overused cliché or trope!
Gotta love the ole antagonist/protagonist “we’re not so different, you and I”
I love setting up a familiar trope, and then turning it on it's head. It's the best kind of subversion. Like in Home Alone where the old man across the street is setup to be some kind of psycho killer then he ends up saving Kevin at the end and reuniting with his family, but then again I'm sentimental.
those are the best!
Like Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird.
I like it where the director has put time into making people think it’s going to be turned on its head because we all know the trope and then it plays out just as the trope would, but with extra comedy. 😂
If studio binder had a trope it would be always posting insightful and entertaining content. Love your work
Hopefully a trope that will never die :)
And a narrator with a British accent to make us feel - and them soung - smarter lol
The trope of characters who initially don't like each other getting paired to work together is really worn out but I think it will never go away. Same with the character of the cop's wife who is trying to keep her man at home instead of him going to work. "Do you have to go? Can't you stay home?" So tiring and can't be much fun for the actors knowing its been done so much. Thanks for showing so many different tropes and how some can be made to work.
👍
Ok but Walter White and Jesse Pinkman fit the "characters who initially don't like each other getting paired to work together" trope to a T and their dynamic is GOLD 😅
@@firiel2366 Well it can be fun. It's just funny how often in police dramas they figure out that if "they just work together" they can get ahead and solve the crime!
And the rogue cop who can't get along with anyone but is always right, making his bosses look bad, so he gets suspended or canned, but he carries on his own investigation and solves the crime, once again saving the day.
zzzzzzzz
@@maryclaremayo6157 The Dirty Harry films really worked the trope of the hero cop against the system. I liked a recent film called Dragged Across Concrete. Instead of just getting yelled at two cops get suspended. They then decide the way to make some money is to rob some dangerous criminals.
One comedy trope I love is when a character says a cool exit line in a car and hits the gas but the car goes backwards. I’ve seen it a thousand times and it always gets me
One of my favorite trope subversion is in "Palm Springs". A character says 'we're trapped in your basic reliving the same day over and over time loop'. But since audiences have seen this so many times, they can make a more complicated version
always looking for new creative ways!
There's a time loop episode of The Magicians that makes great use of the characters' awareness of the trope. One character is even a fan and recites a list including Groundhog Day and Source Code
the trope of someone secretly watching a funeral happen from afar
One of the most noticeable tropes I've seen in action and horror movies is the "in weapon's vicinity" trope. I don't know if it's known by some other commonly known term, but in this kind of trope we see a character held down by another (usually at the neck) holding onto his/her life while reaching his/her hand out to anything a few inches away that would serve as a weapon and in time would help the character to get released and fight back. For example, in Kill Bill vol 1 the bride's neck is squeezed by Gogo with ball-chain thingy weapon, while bride tries to get hold of broken wooden leg of chair. Something similar happens during the hospital scene in Spider-man 2, with one of the doctor and doc ock's arms, and also in Spider-man 3 during Peter-Venom fight and many more movies which I can't seem to recall at the moment but I'm sure others must have noticed it as well. Also, in mostly horror movies there's a trope of character being suddenly dragged or pushed by unseen or unclear entity (not counting jumpscares because jumpscares are the cheapest trope in horror).
Interesting point!
I hate that. I do krav maga, and my friend and I tried this to see if there's actual blind spots are tunnel vision when your adrenaline is pumping when you have someone pinned down. Nope you see exactly what their arms are doing.
Well you must hate any Jackie Chan movie then, because that's what he does, it's called interacting with the environment. And it's actually pretty common in dirty bar fights when one or both of them just grab onto anything close to their vicinity and uses it to hit the other person.
In movie Saw,
the guy cannot reach the mobile phone with his arm, so he cuts his own leg with the saw,
however he could easily reach the mobile phone WITH the help of the saw, elongating his arm with it.
@@szabolcsjobbagy30 Wow, True Point!
Pouring rain to signal sadness and thunderstorms to signal a huge internal conflict are among the most overused clichés in cinema. Especially when they are used as a link between the second and the third act in a romantic context. It is like one of those flashing "applause" signals in TV studios who inform the viewers that, in case they haven't noticed, the protagonist is now sad or struggling with conflict.
Good ol' Pathetic Fallacy in visual form. My English teacher had a particular hate for this literary device, so it sticks out like a sore thumb for me. Not always bad, I love a dramatic vista, but always noticeable.
Another variation is when they show a time lapse shot of clouds moving quickly to signal things falling apart or events out of control in the character's life. I think I first encountered it in the non- narrative film, Koyanisqusi, then saw it used effectively in Oliver Stone's Nixon. Since then, it appears so frequently that it has gone from cliche to parody fodder.
In Walking Dead season 1 they’re looking for Glen and get into hot water with seemingly violent local survivors who work out of an industrial, grimey warehouse. Then in the span of a few moments so many tropes are subverted when the leader’s Abuela comes down to check in, asking to see if medicine is available. The warehouse turns out to be a place where they care for the elderly, and the “hardened survivors” are really just looking out for them and trying to protect them. The subversion does so much to establish a theme of good people forced to do hard things, and is one of the reasons the show was so good early on.
Great example!
My favorite trope is when a character in a movie is facing hard road ahead and says "A storm's coming." Bonus points when it's accompanied by a clap of thunder or ominous clouds.
Tropes are perfectly fine as long as the film isn't overrun with too many of them...and the performances are captivating enough.
Even if a movie IS overrun with tropes then it can be okay as long as the performances are hammed up enough to make it clear that the tropes are being made fun of.
As long as it's done right with a great direction
Bodyguard trope : used to be everywhere, very rarely seen now.
I enjoy it ; I find it very flexible and entertaining
What's your favorite example?
@@StudioBinder I really enjoyed Tangled and Green Book, very different examples that I consider functionally similar.
Of course The Bodyguard plays it straight, but I also enjoyed it for the modern twist on Knight Servant that it was at the time.
The transition from the John Wayne film being screened in The Postman to actual riders on a trail is a great transition in trope from wild west to post apocalyptic.😉
I'd love a video on Artifice vs. Verité style filmmaking, and why both exist, and why both are needed!
Thanks for the suggestion!
You got me exited about the Time Bandits reference. I loved that film.
I think one of the more famous trope subversions is Indiana Jones where Indiana takes the simpler solutions and just shoots the guy with the sword. Subverts all the monologuing that's done in action movies that The Incredibles satirized.
A personal favorite trope subversion was in Scicario when Emily Blunt Pulls a gun on Benicio Del Toro, and instead of doing the "let's talk it out..." with the strong female character, he shoots her and says if she does that again he'll kill her. Really solidified his character and how extreme the world the characters deal with really is.
Tropes I'd like to see go away permanently are the "Nooooooooooo....." undramatic moment.
The arch enemy that the good guys finally are able to capture, but it turns out he's the only person that can help them with their next mission. And of course, he gets away while helping them in their next mission.
Third, mistakenly picking up someone else's cell phone or knocking over somebody's computer, and the one picture or thing that the cell phone/computer owner would never want that person to see, is right there on full display on the screen.
And fourth, women who are able to beat up trained missionaries or guards that are twice their size.
That's why those scenes are iconic!
Time bandits is epic. RiP to Evil/ David Warner both a childhood cush for me
Time Bandits is great. I haven't seen it since it came out! This is dumb, but I still remember that scene where the whole gang is standing in the woods, and you might miss it, but one of the guys picks his nose. I remember because my sister was so grossed out.
"If it's done well, it's a trope. If it's done badly, it's a cliche."
There are two awesome "Walk away from the explosion" subversions that get me every time.
One is the mentioned Joker scene, which was purely accidential. Ledger was expecting more explosions, since they were in the script, but they didn't come. He just rolled with it and the rest is epic history.
The other is in Megamind, when he is too close to the explosion of the museum and is "genuinely scared right now".
The Joker scene was planned as it is.
No detonations can be executed on accident or improvised. They would cut.
The Ledger improv is an internet myth; Nolan and special effects supervisor Chris Corbould stated it was rehearsed so Ledger would have enough time to get away from the rest of the explosion
One stupid guy claims this on tiktok and everyone goes with it. Screen rants and snopes have debunked this myth.
@@BohoAstronaut0819that myth has been around a lot longer than TikTok. It sticks around because it’s such a compelling story even if it’s not true.
Third one would be from The Other Guys where they even hang lapshade on how loud the real explosions are.
Studio Binder is saving my life. I can't afford film school. I'm addicted to every video.
Happy filming!
Two recent additions to the collection: The Wise Teen, always on hand to teach all of the adults profound moral righteousness from the depths of their 15 years of experience, and the Sad Sack Detective who is struggling with depression/having relationship issues with his family/haunted by an incident in their past (or all 3) but is still on the force functioning as a ticking time bomb for his fellow cops.
Whoever voicing this, should narrate a book.
haha maybe in the future
My favorite trope is the ticking bomb. I’m know is a little tired trope, but I feels like it’s add to suspense in any movie, doing it in a right way. It’s a classic one. The one I dislike the most is the hero walk out explosion, to catch a cool image. It’s so overdone and lazy nowadays. Even for me, I personally love (a good) action movie. Fantastic video, guys!
Appreciate a lot for educating about the film media.
As long as it's done well 💯
@@StudioBinder Goldfinger in *1964* did the "stop the countdown at 007 seconds" which I've always taken to mean that directors thought the trope was overdone *60 years ago* :-)
Die hards bomb on the roof and jumping off the side of the building. Improved the trope because the explosion was a ticking bomb and he wasn’t in control of any of it.
LOL.. Have you seen Galaxy Quest? There's an interesting take on this trope. And a different take in The Fifth Element.
"Mad Max: Fury Road" (2015) subverts - or avoids - all six main tropes associated with women in violent films. The channel "Innuendo Studios" has a great series of videos on this topic called "Taking Back What's Stolen". Highly recommend.
Thank you, StudioBinder, for another great video!
Thanks for watching!
Or...mad max fury road is woke feminist propaganda.
I guess you think Terminator Dark Fate also *subverts* tropes, it doesn't actually.
We've all heard of a "whodunit " before, but maybe a video on "whydunit's" if not already made.
As the audience, we know who the killer is, but the protagonists may not. They may even be close friends with them, or even family - thus greatly raising the tension of individual scenes where both are present. In the end, it's up the main characters in order to uncover the mystery behind the killers true intentions, even though they may not like what they find.
A somewhat recent example of this is "Invincible", who did this with the character of 'Omni Man' (The main protagonists father).
Thanks for the suggestion!
Great video, as always. One trope I'd like to end is the "I'm showing how angry I am by breaking things". Particularly, a glass or a cell phone. Are we supposed to believe the character is so distressed they aren't even thinking about the hassle of getting a new phone or cleaning up tiny fragments of glass? On the subject of phones, treading on a screen doesn't normally damage the SIM which can then just be put in a new phone and retain all data.
Would love to see this channel dissect more of these tropes soon!
Feel free to mention what tropes you'd like covered!
I want to give a shout out to Hitchcock and North by Northwest : clean sunny day, open field and a plane. Hitchcock himself said he did it like this to do total oposide of an expected crime place, dark alley.
brilliant shot!
The presentation, research, and production of this video are all first class! Highly informative and entertaining. This must have taken so much time to create. I don't understand how you do it.
The editing is fantastic!! Love all the timely movie references
I like “the Mexico filter” that was popularized by Traffic. Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul made excellent use of this color grading style as well.
Interesting!
What about a video about the dystopian genre? There are some interesting examples.
we might!
@@StudioBinder Yes! One of my favourite things!
Fantastic editing! Love all the movie quote inserts
I’m extremely thankful to this channel! It’s very educational!
The trope I continue to hate even when it’s done well is the villain who rises again for one more round after the climactic battle.
The bad guy always comes back three times😅
Except in Aliens - best ending ever
Man this episode was unexpectedly funny. Great class as always! Thank you guys!!
Thanks for watching!
My favorite trope is when is monday night and i see my favorite channel release a new video of pure cinematic quality.
I just say: here we go again.
Let's go!
As far as I've known, Joker's delayed explosion was unplanned and resulted in some explosives failure. Heath Ledger just went along with it.
did Nolan tell you that?
I can confirm this, I am Christopher Nolan
I think it was a part of the behind the scenes. So, yeah, Nolan did tell us that
With the cost of an stunt that can't be duplicated, there is no way everyone wasn't on script for the scene. I could see using a louder 'bang' on the delayed explosion that Ledger may not of known about, but it was all planned.
@@brucea3103
Again, Christopher Nolan explained this in the behind the scenes. Its actually more common than u would think that there are mishaps in movie explosions. But it was just a simple delay, Ledger rolled with it, they used the take instead of doing it again
Please, do something on those seemingly UNAVOIDABLE totally worn out CLICHÉS! For example:
- people falling from tall buildings always land on the roof of a car
- when someone unsure or with stage fright grabs a mike, there is always a feedback shriek
- people do not just awake out of bad dreams, they always jerk up 90° and sit upright, panting
- the two men watching the entrance from across the street are completely invisible... because they sit in a car!
- bullets fired into the back windshield of a getaway car only smash the rear glas, then evaporate, never touch the front windshield!
- there are slits under doors high enough to push even thicker envelopes through
and so on and on! I would LOVE to see this episode!
Thousand Thanks you StudioBinder for this Inspiring video. I didn't know before what is a Trope in Storytelling. Now I understand.
Thanks for watching!
The Scream movies are great with the way they play with the tropes of Slasher movies. One of my fave bits from Scream 2 is when the black camera man tells Gale he's leaving because he's read her book and the black guy always dies in these situations.
The antagonist's monologue when they think they've won and just before they get dispensed with.
Specifically a villain monologuing in a superhero film. a trope to the point some superhero films reference it
Thank you so much!!! very informative and well explained 💛💛💛💛
Cheers!
Thank you again, wonderful lessons of studiobinder - to be continued
Thanks for watching!
I don't know how you would frame the video, but I'd love to watch one on the different ways films interpret history. Whether they're based on a real event, use historical inspiration, or intentionally rewrite history to explore a new narrative outcome.
Thanks for the suggestion!
That's a very good topic! All the different levels of authenticity that storytellers use to label their work. What do they actually mean regarding amount of artistic freedom, and why does it matter so much whether a story is "true" or not?
"Based on a true story". Documentary. Biopic. "Inspired by real events". Etc. It can be quite embarrassing and even dangerous if you take a made-up story for a historically accurate record and internalise it as facts.
"The montage" is probably one of my favorite, especially when the sequence of events have not happened yet, a single character or a group are playing it out. I also love the old Miami Vice styles. Example Sonny Crockett is driving in his Ferrari, rayban sunglasses at night, florescent colored lights flashing by, Phil Collins is singing in the background and a witness to a murder and it's emotional consequences replay in Sonny's mind. Never gets old for me.
Good points! I'll be mindful about how I use and subvert tropes in my own stories.
Great content as always! I hope, I'm sure others as well, to see more beat sheets breakdown. Its such a great learning tool to see a story from conceptualization to final product. More power to your channel!
Cheers!
I appreciate y’all for even mentioning “The White Savior”, I wish y’all gave more examples. Could y’all do a video on stereotypes & how they play a role in a screenwriters character development? Whether it be related to race/gender/nationality/sexual orientation?
Another delicious masterclass! Thanks!!
Cheers!
The trope I wish wouldn't be used so often is the "Nobody's ever talked to me that way before" as reason for romantic interest.
haha nice
Another great video. Suggestion: a comparison of character arcs between Groundhog Day, where only the main character has an arc, and Being There, where only those around the main character have arcs.
this was a very interesting video
there are so many tropes, a good writer knows how to use them well
You guys are something....I liked the conclusion - all the way. You put in the effort and it shows. Thx
Appreciate it!
StudioBinder just can't help but be the best
A good video! Informative analysis
i was expecting a call out to The Other Guys when you brought up the explosions trope XD
💥
Great video! I always thought that the dark knight joker delayed explosion was an accident that was improvised. Great subversion by Nolan if he came up with it!
Studio binder❤
Thanks for watching!
The letter voice over trope is also one of the effective ways to deliver a lot of info on the image or screen at once.
I loved the bomb in Galaxy Quest, the realisation was so well delivered. The other one was in the TV show the bridge, you think itll run as always but no this is more real world than that. The bomb guy doesn't know what to do... so he leaves and gets to safe distance. Such a gut punch.
brilliantly done!
Another trope is Studio Binder using Inception in every video! 🤣 The only reason I know is because I keep watching, so it’s all good. 😊
haha you can see our preferences
I wish you talked more about the differences between tropes and clichés.
Regardless a great and informative video once more.
Thanks for watching!
I think it would be really Cool to make a video about Jokers on movies...that DC joker.... That Batman joker....cuz he is the trickster Archetype
we did! ua-cam.com/video/7KjHsurAJpc/v-deo.html
@@StudioBinder wow man....thanks a lot, really love what you're doing.... someday I might make a movie too XD...
The biggest trope is the one where they say the line twice to end the scene, "We must do what what we need to do, no matter the cost, no matter the cost."
Studio Binder team have amazing database of films with these many terms and storytelling topics
please share most fruitful films list which have everything to learn as filmmaker
And you left in “I Heard Ramona Sing” beyond its place. Brilliant.
This video was brilliantly done. I felt like I was in film school.
Sherlock getting shot in the series and rather than getting emotional and or even diving into old blur memories of his childhood.. We get a totally different approach which is a masterclass in subverting or harnessing the slow -mo dying trope. Absolutely nailed it.
Great example!
The guy trying to sacrifice himself with the grenades only to get whipped into the cliff edge in Kong: Skull Island is a very good subversion of the hero’s sacrifice trope 😂
Love all this! Another great video. (One small request; can you make the text where you list each movie that's being played in the bottom right/left corner a little bigger/brighter? My millennial old lady eyes would be super grateful!)
Yes! I was having trouble too.
Hey ho, thank you for yet another video of What is! Please, consider to make the second video about animation. I am keen to know more - especially about the principles of animation (Genndy Tartakovski says there is 27 of them, OMG)
second one is coming soon!
Opening of Lego Batman movie also is a good example of trope subversion where batman narrates that all important movies start with black screen and edgy music and long logos. it essentially subverts the narrator dumping exposition about movies by instead making it kind of Meta commentary on movies itself
Liked that intro
I just used Time Bandits in my film class today! And how it first uses the trope and then subverts it.
I found it useful to distinguish between tropes and genre conventions.
Good point!
solid vid. thanks dude
This video was very calming 😊
I can't believe there was no mention of the "hero falls off cliff. There is a 7-second pause. Hero's hand grabs edge of cliff and hauls himself up" trope.
It's one of my personal favourites.
Can you make a video on recording sound for movies or the post production process? It would be really helpful.
Foley?
@@Jeremysteenyes, and on set recorded sound and the post process like file transfer, colour grading, dcps, vfx etc...
we might!
My favorite Trope is the mean popular girl, great start for so many stories and social commentary
haha it's a fun character for sure
One question started growing in my head throughout this video... could it be harder finding a scene thats not a trope in some way
Maybe you could do a video on how to create a sequel that doesn't feel repetitive and unnecessary.
Thanks for the suggestion!
Great video! Can you talk about the settings next time?
Thanks for the suggestion!
The thing that strikes me about that Blind Side trope is that it really happened. A case of art imitating life imitating art etc. Tropes aren't all just artificial story-telling constructs and contrivances. And they work best when they feel real, and sometimes that means they run true, and sometimes they get subverted. I didn't like the end of Inception because to me it was predictable and felt like the weaker choice, but apparently it worked for some people. But tropes are just tools, and it's how they're used that matters. Excellent video!
agreed on both points.. end of inception was predictable and frustrating but anything else happening to the spinning thing would have maybe taken away from the philosophical approach of the film
Still have this opinion after all the stuff that came out recently? 😂
@@lauracgc Well, I never expect any movie "based on a true story" to be all that close anyway. The story is supposed to take the core and fantasize it for us, and when it's "based on" real life, filmmakers have a tendency not to care about the truth if it doesn't serve their story. (Woman King, for instance.) So I guess I'm not really surprised at recent events with respect to how the film told the story. That's pretty standard. It's usually just a matter of how long it is before the whole truth comes out.
Could you do a video about Tragic Heroes?
Decent Examples: Oedipus Rex, Anakin Skywalker and Randle McMurphy
Thanks for the suggestion!
Thanks so much for the video :)
Thanks for watching!
22:17 The JOKER walking away in a nurse's uniform solidified HEATH LEDGER as THE BEST JOKER for me. Sorry, Mark Hamill.
haha it's iconic
The heroics sacrifice is perfectly subverted by the scene in SCP secret laboratory where one of the MTF members guides his comrades into an elevator and tries to stay behind to face and distract SCP-106, but the SCP ignores him, going straight for the closing elevator doors and killing his allies as he screams.
I’d like to see you look at scripts like Wind River.. scripts that may not be as popular as Star Wars, but subjects that deal with semi real story lines that are hard edge reality. There are so many aspects in which you might look at the subject and I’m sure your knowledge of this subject far exceeds mine. I find your selections do focus on the brilliant directors and the successful movies, but there must be an amazing assortment of movies that feed all the right baskets which you can develop brilliant content from movies that are a little off beat.
Thanks for the suggestion!
Your videos are stunning. I would love to watch a video on the following:
1. Director Sofia Coppola.
2. Alternative cinema/ cult favorite films
3. Mel brooks and Gene Wilder- comedic brilliance.
Thanks for the suggestion!
Excellent video as usual. How about a video on the Zombie movie. There are various examples. Many conform, many subvert expectations and it appears to have lost its impact lately. All of that couod be explored.
Thanks for the suggestion!
LOVE your content @StudioBinder! Always get so much out each video. The way you all analyze scripts & clips side-by-side, is such an invaluable tool. Plus they're so well researched & written & VO'd. And of course, gorgeously edited. Often wind up just watching them like mini TV marathon style. :)
The "movie open" video is a fav. I would love to see your take on TV, &/or on "effective prologues" as well. Also, on musicals! Bc a lot of videos & articles cover how their songs & themes should speak to characterization, but not how to find/write song themes. Thanks again for all your work! All the best!
Thanks for the suggestion!
I reached a point where I don't care if a movie gets spoiled for me,I am gonna watch your videos anyway.😅
Amazing video!
I would love to hear what you have to say about AI and it's new approach with scripts or directing!
Thanks for the suggestion!
Thank you for the video …❤