Jun. 20th, 2009

shadowkat: (Default)
Well this interesting - it is designed exactly like livejournal, with just a few distinctions. And very few people appear to be actually doing anything on it. Lots of watchers though. Except they have to be here to watch.

Sort of cool in a way. Certainly like the interface better, plus - sigh, no ADS!!! Yay!
shadowkat: (Default)
It's been a rough and tumble week. Work was hellishly stressful this week, and looks to be even worse next week. The rain, which has not let up in 11 days is making me crazy. Woke up this morning feeling like crap on toast, with eggs cracked on the side. Slept badly. Horrid headache. And wanting to crawl out of my skin. It was the weather of course - the changes in barometric pressure have an adverse effect on my body chemisty. If you have suffered any injury in your lifetime - changes/drops in barometric pressure will cause a dull throbbing pain.

So, I decided to wimp out on the multicultural writers meet and take the day off. Vegging in front of the telly, knitting, and playing a bit on the net. It's no big loss - I did manage to write the query letter that I had been procrastinating and am making progress on the dreaded synopsis. Also got the first three chapters printed off. I call that progress. Plus, I think I may have found another writer's group that is closer, that may or may not fit my needs. It meets on Tuesday - which is not a good night for me, so we shall see. Tomorrow, I have an appointment with a personal trainer to set up an exercise regime to get back in shape and strengthen my ankle/knees. The trainer has a background of knee and ankle injuries - so will most likely be able to give me some good pointers. I'm an active person and not being able to work out or walk off my tension/stress is driving me crazy.

trublood )

The other thing I watched was BuffyS4, which I finished my rewatch of this morning. Rather fascinating season - which I didn't appreciate as much the first go around. It's not an overly plotted or structured season, so much as a season that explores, often in sizable depth, character arcs. Of the seven seasons - Season 4 probably gives us the most in regards to character examination. And may actually develope and tell us the most about the characters and how the writers view them. The focus here was on character, then plot. It was also a season with a couple of fascinating thematic arcs - figuring out who you are and not letting society or someone else tell you (taking your own "initiative"), the moral quandry/ethical quandry of behavioral modification and changing someone to fit society's needs - which reflects back on the prior theme, and how people around us will influence our paths.
Very complex season.

What's also interesting about it - is in all the commentaries - the writer continues to tell us that he is literal minded and not good with metaphors. I disagree. No one who is literal minded could write Hush, Once More With Feeling, the Body, or Restless. Actually no one who is literal minded could write a tv show or come up with a tv show entitled Buffy the VAmpire Slayer. Purely literal minded folks tend to veer away from that series. To be honest? I think most of us are both, and like everything else, it depends on the situation. I'm very literal minded when it comes to social interactions - puns and jokes often go over my head. I can't always tell when someone is kidding. But give me a poem, and I can analyze it pretty quickly, and I had no problem figureing out Restless or Ulysess. Also I tend to use metaphors a lot in my writing. But the writer's statement that he is too literal minded - explains a similarily odd statement in commentary regarding S6, where he states he said au revoir monsieur metaphor - he didn't. I'm not sure he knows what metaphors are? Because Season 6 was filled with metaphors, they were just more subtle and less obvious than the prior seasons. The commentaries proved to me that writers can't be trusted to tell us about the meaning of their own work. They might be able to tell us the intent. But in truth? I doubt most writers know.
Another interesting comment that Whedon made, which I hadn't picked up on before - was that he usually carefully structures his stories. That he can't write if he doesn't know where the story is going. He has to have it outlined out first. Know exactly what the beginning, middle and end is. Restless was a departure from that - he'd never done anything like it before or since. He plots everything out ahead of time.

Odd. I assumed he did the opposite. This sort of throws my assumptions about his writing, including my defense of some of the plot holes and wonky metaphors out the proverbial window. Although to be fair, he implies that he sucks at metaphor and tends to be too literal minded to use them consistently or effectively. Not sure what to think about the writer's process now. Except that he is right in Restless - his main theme is sex and sexism. His metaphors regarding sex and sexism are obvious - perhaps that's what he means by literal - that he goes for the obvious sexual metaphor, not the more subtle literary ones people were finding in his work. I'd agree with that. A huge theme in the series - from Season 1-Season 4 is sexism, how men objectify women and demean them, how sex is used as either a weapon, a means of control, or manipulation or power play. That women from a male perspective are sexual objects and/or mothers. And what is wrong with that perspective, why it exists, why it is skewed, and why we should question it and not cater to it, as well as why we often fall into the trap of doing so. Very heavy theme in the series. At times, I felt as if he were hitting me over the head with a hammer regarding it - and I think, to be fair, the writer states just that in his commentaries, almost apologetically. Stating - yes, I was going for the sex metaphor there.
And yes, that was a statement about sexism. It also, if you know anything about Whedon's personal background or writing history - makes sense. He studied westerns and horror films,
his mother was a founder of NOW - the feminist movement, he wrote Buffy for his mother,
and his first job was on Roseanne.

If you have the DVD's? Go rewatch the S4 Overview and the first part of the Restless commentary - that's where I heard the bits about sexism, sex, and metaphors.
shadowkat: (find your sale)
Is there room to tell a story in more than one way - a more internal way?

Martin Scorsese from the documentary Scorsese on Scorsese.

I've always written structured stories, plot focused tales. In the seasons before this one,
we had a clear plot arc. But here, this season was more chaotic. More anarchic. We were telling a lot of standalone tales that focused on our characters. The main plot arc - the Initiative and Adam was really in the background, not the true focus. That's why we chose not to end the season with the battle at the Initiative, which many fans expected and wanted. Instead we chose to do something I never done before nor have really done since - which is write an sort of coda that focused purely on the characters and addressed their arcs over the course of the season. In some respects, our best episodes were done this season - because we chose to move away from the tight plotting and focus more on the characters.


[paraphrased and by memory] quote from Joss Whedon's interview in his commentary on The Overview of Season 4 and commentary from Restless.

Of all the seasons of Buffy the Vampire Slayer - Season 4 may be the most experimental. In some respects it was also the season that television critics took notice. Prior to this season, many felt that Buffy was really just a show for teen girls. It was not until Season 4 that Buffy got nominated for an emmy - with HUSH, or that the HUGO's took notice. The story for the first time veered away from the high school metaphors and the angsty gothic romance trope which is currently being replayed almost to death by Stephanie Meyer's Twilight Saga,
Tru Blood, Moonlight (okay not current), Laurell K. Hamilton's novels, and countless others - it was by no means new when Whedon did it with Angel/Buffy, and it's not new now. Although Whedon did put a horrific twist on it that has yet to be copied, and he did in some respects put an end to it in Season 4, moving on with his tale. I mention the Buffy/Angel relationship because it is the reason a lot of fans disliked Season 4. It's not the only reason. Season 4 is not formulaic tv. It did not follow the pattern fans had become accostumed to. The big bad sat mostly in the background, seldom used. The gang did not solve a mystery each week and fight bad guys. Buffy had a romance, but it wasn't quite as hot or angsty as with Angel nor was it front and center. And the plot unlike most tv series of this type was not the main point.

The tale in some respects was a more internal as opposed to external one - another thing that fans of action adventure/science fiction tales may not be used to. Plus the characters were less comfortably together. At times, in fact they seemed to be on the point of breaking apart.
Evil and good became blurry. The metaphors mixed. And if you shipped a specific character or relationship in later seasons, especially Spike and/or Spike/Buffy, or hated Riley - this season may have bugged you. At least these are the critiques I've read over the years since the season aired way back in 1999-2000. And I admit when I first watched the season, I remember being a bit frustrated with it and confused. Now, years later, rewatching it, I find myself fascinated and impressed by what the writers/actors/directors and producers managed to accomplish in a difficult and fast medium. It may in fact be one of the most brilliant seasons to ever air on tv, it is certainly amongst the riskiest and experimental. It also, I believe influenced others.

I mention Martin Scorsese above - because a)I was watching a doc on him tonight and b) his quote fit I thought what Whedon was trying to do.
meta on Buffy S4, specifically all the characters journey's throughout that season. And how those journey's support specific themes. )

Ugh, up too late again, to bed. And hopefully to sleep.
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