Conversations in public places where anyone can hear. And the right/wrong person always does.
No, that's just bad writing.Is this a trope? I was channel surfing and came across a scene from Chicago Fire where a firefighter is going undercover to help the cops bring down another firefighter, and he's meeting with the cops in broad daylight with the crooked firefighter watching the entire thing from across the street in his vehicle, and no one notices him.
I was more focused on the cases like Monk that imply that the characters wouldn't be expected to show empathy for someone who has a mental illness if he weren't useful, but yes.
This actually needs lampshaded, with the shy character saying "Oh, my dad used to " whatever, and the kid sucks at it, admitting "Well, I did say it was my dad that did it well."Watched a bunch of movies over the weekend and this kept coming up...
When an otherwise quiet, anxious, or shy character suddenly becomes a NASCAR champion when they have to outrun the cops or the Bad Guys, usually saying something like "Oh, my dad used to fix up old cars and he taught me to drive like this..."
Same scenario with "Oh, my dad/brother/whatever..." was a sniper in the army, nuclear physicist, pilot, safe cracker, jewel thief, stuntman, etc.
Boo, hiss - just stop.![]()
Tough to do these days when no one reads newspapers anymore.The characters see a story about a local crime or murder in a newspaper, it's the top story on the front page and the headline type is the size they'd use for Pearl Harbor or the Kennedy assassination.
Started watching Wentworth recently, the Australian prison drama, and was shocked at how many prison tropes were in the first episode. They didn't take their time, but got right down to business, but it also makes me wonder how they could have kept things fresh for 8 seasons at that rate. Drug smuggling: check. Prison riot: check, staff being killed: check, etc. It almost felt like it tried to do too much during that one episode. Felt like saying, Whoa, slow down!
If it's a public TV show i guess the soap drop in the shower was skipped?
What's the idea behind it anyway? To add some kind of intimate, low budget feel, as though the audience doesn't know they're watching a movie that cost a kajillion dollars to make that used 17 cameras at different angles for each shot and then edited them 47 times?Speaking of shaky cam, I can understand a certain amount of dynamic camera movement in action scenes. But it easily becomes overdone and nauseating.
And I'm not big on the meandering 'handheld camera' thing going on with more stationary scenes like ordinary conversations, such as these for instance:
I suppose it's meant to add a feel of documentary-type 'realism' or 'immediacy' to this type of scene, but to me it comes off as lazy filmmaking.
Kor
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