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Posts tagged as “Lost”

Trippin' on the suitcase

The following is a pretty pointless post with various pics of my suitcase and trip planning so there’s a pretty great chance you’ll die from boredom if you do intend to read this post.
You have been warned.

Moving on.

Preparing for la vida local is not an easy task. It indeed requires tremoundous thinking beforehand, and by thinking I mean praying that your suitcase won’t get lost or stolen by some dude at the airport.
With that in mind, let’s take a look at my wonderful picture album collection awkwardly named “A trip down memory lane“. Oh my God. I think I just had an orgasm thinking about that word play.

We’ll start off gently with the little mascot I like to bring with me on every trip:

Yeah, he’ll get the job done.

Now on to the magnificent suitcase:

“Sesame open up” would be the most clichéd sentence right now, so I’ll just go with the bland but still powerful (in that it is not powerful) sentence:
“Suitcase open up”!
And voilà.

Holy crap, clothes! And an…other bag?
This is like a Kinder Surprise but, you know, not in chocolate…

Are you as hungry as I am right now?

Anyway.

With good trip planning comes great money exchange. This is why I decided to photograph my hundreds and thousands of dollars, and then got a call from the Secret Services.

Oh, what the hell, here is my joyfull richness in all its splendor:

The Old and the Beautiful.
But what is Elizabeth II doing on a dollar bill?

Damn, that post was hi-la-rious.
You are now going to die.

P.S.: Sorry for the poor quality of the pics, I have a fail camera.

And FYI, TheWB.com has finally launched.
The future is now (maybe)!

Mythic structures and hero psychology

It has been some time now since my last book checkup and since then I have found other interesting books.

This post will primarily focus, as the title says, on so-called “mythic structures” as well as “hero analysis” and the psychology of characters.
Why this specific theme you ask? Well for starters I like reading/studying/talking about the human nature and specifically heroes/villains and other tragedy-based structures (what a previous post hinted at).
I also believe that to make something “new” you have to make it with some “old” (Faire du neuf avec du vieux as we say in French). What we call “original” is only a mixture so dense of things that we can’t pin-point where it’s coming from and/or what has inspired it.
For instance in storylines, Lost has put a “new” spin on time-travel (or at the very least made it hype) but stories about time-travel has been around for centuries.

Beyond the content is probably something greater: structure.

Structure has been analysed for centuries, even millenniums, way back when Homer wrote (or rather told) his Iliad.
In the last decades, this analysis has been transposed to scripts and screenplays. Scripts and movies were broken down and compared to other literary pieces to try to found out the common links, not the least of which being Robert McKee’s Story.
Besides script acts, and structures, “heroes arcs” and “heroes journeys” have been analysed and also broken down. These mythical archetypes lead obviously to mythic structures.
This is one of the specialties of mythologists, including Joseph Campbell.
Campbell wrote a fascinating book around his theories of the journey of archetypal heroes in various mythologies from around the globe. This book led to a memo written by Christopher Vogler (a development exec) to Disney studios about how to use Campbell’s book for screenwriting. This memo led to various critically-acclaimed movies Disney movies such as The Beauty and the Beast, Aladin and The Lion King. Vogler also worked on a small movie called Fight Club.
Soon after, Christopher Vogler expanded his memo and published a book around it where he explored not only Campbell’s work (and Jung’s) but expanded it to correlate directly to screenwriting.

Vices, virtues and dilemmas should also not be forgotten in the world of screenwriting. Identifying the “moral premise” behind a story is essential to understanding why this particular story touches us, affects us. It is also what will ultimately give dimension and consistency to a great story. Few books deal with this in direct correlation with screenwriting. The Moral Premise by Stanley D Williams appears to be right on target by clearly and easily linking past and present stories, both in theory and practice.

On the other side of mythical stories and structures we have what is inside the character’s head, the character’s psychology. A lot of books have been written on the subject but few aimed at screenwriters. William Indick’s Psychology for Screenwriters seems to be one of the only books I have come across dealing exclusively with this. Comprehending the psyche of your characters can only benefit your writing and your story, especially in the television medium where characters are the medium.

ARGhhhhh!

It’s ARG day!

Let’s start with this:

Isn’t that the weirdest book ad you’ve ever seen?
Especially when there’s in it Joss Whedon, Damon Lindelof and Brian K. Vaughn!
I bet you want to know more.
Let’s hope it’s not another “Da Vinci Code” wannabe.

Speaking of ARG, the third Lost ARG, AKA “The Project”, began a day or two ago: it is total failure.
Everyone has been waiting for this one, especially after that video at Comic-Con.

It finally starts and what do we get for our wait? Lousy tests.
Damn you DHARMA!

In non-ARG news, there’s this promotional site that CBS and Sho oppened to promote Dexter and where you can find out if you too have a killer instinct…or not.
But don’t forget, as the website states on the bottom:
This website is for entertainment purposes only. It is not a scientific, diagnostic or therapeutic tool.
Who would have known?