Tumgik
#8 episodes is not enough
ladyknight33 · 3 months
Text
Opinons on the New Style of Live Action Storytelling
Tl:dr: The 8 episode format for the new Live Action stories is too limited for the complex stories of the original source material. Action scenes and Magical displays are not substitutes for building tension and climatic battles. The characters and storytellers deserve better. 
*
As much as I am enjoying this new era of small screen scripted fiction through the streaming services, I am a bit disappointed in how rushed every show feels. The six to eight episodes force the story to hit key points without allowing the story to actually breathe and endear itself to the viewers. 
First of all, I do not believe all stories must be done in the Live Action format because locks the world into the physics we understand within our own physical world. This limits much of the imaginative qualities a work of fiction inspires. 
Example: when watching an animated Star Wars Jedi do amazing feats accredited to the Force, it is spectacular and defies the known laws of physic. When a live action Jedi attempts the same feats, the action is dulled down to fit the current CGI limitations. This holds true for any magic or anything non-real. 
This leads into a second issue live action formats fall victim to: intense focus on special effects.  Storytelling is forced to take a backseat to the long sequences of beautiful CGI images or fight scenes. T.V. and Film are visual media and they thrive on fantastic imagery. These scenes are necessary when trying to tell a visual story, but not when it takes away from character development and slows the pace of the story. 
Example: The epic fantasy series I grew up reading, The Wheel of TimeI, was long due for a visual adaptation. I have accepted that the show is not the book, but there are pacing issues that could have been avoided if the limited time had not been spent on the intense focus of weaving magic or on action sequences that took the majority of the episode.
The pacing issues are found when significant plot points must be achieved within a limited time, to the detriment of character development, dialogue, and space for the viewer to absorb what is happening. Plot points are the anchors of the story. They are what pulls characters across continents to fulfill destinies. But the story is what happens along the way. 
The plot points of Lord of the Rings are how Frodo gets the ring, is told to destroy it, and finally destroying it. The story is the emotional and physical toll it takes on Frodo and his companions on the way to destroy the ring. The pacing must allow for this internal conflict to which is so central to Frodo’s development. Action scenes are the point where all the built up tension must break. Jumping from action to action, fight to fight, gives no time for the conflict to build. 
Example: Avatar: The Last Airbender is an epic tale of young teens trying to save the world. But they encounter so much during their journey that it takes 20 episodes to tell the first part of the story. The live action is only allowed 8 episodes to introduce the four main characters and the many important secondary characters, and then take them across the four nations, improve their talents, create love interests (Sokka really has two women fall in love with him on two separate occasions in under a day? Really?), and every episode must have an epic fight scene which does little but show the impressive powers of Bending. 
It doesn’t seem fair. 
Why does a book that requires nearly a thousand page to tell a complex story get reduced to 8 episodes. Why does an animated series that required 20 episodes to tell a complex story get reduced to 8 episodes. Why does a manga which required a hundred  chapters or 50 episodes to tell a complex story get reduced to 8 episodes.
Who decided 8 episodes was the new standard? Even at almost an hour long, 8 episodes constrain the story and leave the audience annoyed and how much potential was wasted. 
The anime One Piece is another epic story I grew up with and am still thoroughly enjoying. It doesn’t seem fair that it was reduced to 8 episodes. The series still had the same trouble as all live action remakes, but they embraced the new format and retold the story with the limited time. It cut many scenes I personally enjoyed and believed to be integral to character development (I’m looking at Zoro’s fight with Arlong and Sanji rescuing Luffy from drowning) but it allowed time for the characters to interact and find a balance. The special effects are blended into the story telling and not showcased in their own long, though pretty, sequences. 
Even the shows created with the 8 episode limited series in mind have trouble getting the right blend of character development and epic fight scenes. 
Obi-wan Kenobi had great potential but left viewers unsatisfied. Ahsoka fell into the same pattern of long silent solo scenes or abrupt violent clashes. For me Ahsoka at least felt like a very long movie if watched in one sitting. Kenobi left me wanting to know more about the new character, Reva, but she was stuck as a one dimensional villain in favor of a Darth Vader Kenobi duel. Ahsoka spent much of its time trying to introduce the characters and plot of Star Wars: Rebels and revisiting Ahsoka’s past that they almost forgot that they were trying to tell a new story. 
Each of these shows have great scenes and showcase wonderful characters. The creators of these shows have wonderful shows that came before. 
The 8 episode choice is a poor one. It must be longer than a movie but shorter than a stander T.V. series. The stories chosen are far more complicated than what a movie can handle but need more time to truly develop into an epic story that is revered by audiences long after its conclusion. Yes, I’m referring to Avatar: The Last Airbender Animated Series. 
A story as complex as The Wheel of Time or One Piece deserves a T.V. soap opera treatment. The Live Action Avatar: The Last Airbender needs at least twice as many episodes to follow the characters and show their development without everything feeling cramped and rushed. Ahsoka could have been a two night event. A two hour movie on each night, one before Peridia and one after. Kenobi would have benefited from at least two more episodes to allow Reva to really shine as a new villain or to have removed the character all together.
After a long drought of scripted sci/fi and fantasy, I am thrilled to see the development of all of these stories. I can’t wait for more. But I am terrified that this 8 episode format is going to kill the movement because none of these stories have the staying power or time to draw in new audiences. 
Remakes are lovely, but if they are only done as fan-service or fulfillment of a single person’s desire to have their name on it, then don’t. Live action has some how become synonymous with legitimacy. As if animation is not simply a method of storytelling, but as a child only form. Live action should bring in new audiences to beloved stories, not infuriate the old. The pace of storytelling should be of prime importance, not constrained to an arbitrary number of episodes. 
So I am saying farewell to the many scenes I wished could be recreated in this world of live actions remakes. We each have them. And I retain hope that new seasons and series will do better. 
9 notes · View notes
sapphos-daydreams · 8 months
Text
The fact that there is only one more episode left of this season is driving me up the wall
6 notes · View notes
bee-in-a-box · 5 months
Text
I just watched school spirits and I really like it...
1 note · View note
crismakesstuff · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
“What if I become him and I don’t even know it?”
4K notes · View notes
egophiliac · 1 month
Text
innocently logging in to look at the Twst schedule for May like
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
2K notes · View notes
poisned · 4 months
Text
This was the start of the best dynamic in the show no one can tell me otherwise
407 notes · View notes
fakedimebag · 27 days
Text
"Magneto was right" was so heavy this week 😩
Tumblr media
248 notes · View notes
Text
Joe in complete and uterly distress: NO, NOOO! THAT'S GONNA BE CLEVER
Hypno, Cleo and Xisuma start laughing hysterically while Joe keeps repeating the word "No"
204 notes · View notes
wild-saber1337 · 11 months
Text
HIGH METABOLISM NOT FAT!!! (Art by: alastorsart) on Twitter
Tumblr media
Vivzie finally confirmed her choice of disign and confirmed that why bee isn't fat is because she is one the rare people with super high metabolism, I know a girl that has a high metabolism she can out eat me a 425lb man (I'm working out and dieting to get healthy again) and not gain a single pound and I'm jealous of her
Tumblr media
445 notes · View notes
pers3phone399 · 5 months
Text
“mastermind” by taylor swift belongs to percabeth i don’t make the rules i just enforce them
120 notes · View notes
notyournightsky · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Rip good television. You have been missed 😔
62 notes · View notes
igor-gn · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
When you’re short incel boyfriend actually wants your moody goth girlfriend
168 notes · View notes
straylaughs · 4 months
Text
arajin man.. maybe idk.. have an actual conversation with matakara and maybe u wont have to agonize over ur past with him
52 notes · View notes
myfandomistingling · 1 year
Text
Bella Ramsey on her way to get her Oscar after this episode:
Tumblr media
273 notes · View notes
sysig · 8 months
Note
Hello! I feel like rereading Vargas these days so, I'd like to request some Edgar, Scriabin interaction (maybe one of them being vulnerable), if that's okay?
Tumblr media
Day 14 - Stop making your lack of imagination my problem ò///q
82 notes · View notes
blueskittlesart · 2 months
Note
AAAAAH omg Case Closed fan!! I had the fattest crush on Harley Hartwell (Heiji Hattori) when I was a preteen. Looking back idk why my parents let me read that LMAO
i do sincerely love case closed but it also fascinates me because i cant for the life of me figure out what the target audience is supposed to be. conan is both 7 and 16 and theyre dealing with like actual real life murders and the solutions are so complex that i, a 21 year old obsessed with mysteries, have yet to actually solve a single one before the reveal 400 chapters in and the setup is so fundamentally ridiculous that no one over the age of 10 or so could ever hope to take it seriously and the most recent case i read involved actual literal cocaine and multiple armed thugs kidnapping and beating up a teenager. I can only conclude that it's written for guys like me who love detectives so much they don't care if the story is actually good. and im obsessed with it
33 notes · View notes