There's some terribly distasteful
human drama going on at all times, filled with ridiculously artificial dialogue.
But given Darkest Dungeon's preoccupation with numbers, organisation and making sure everything is just so, on paper, its efforts toward
human drama go to waste.
Not exact matches
Given that there's so much
going on in this situation, why not tell a story that has real
human drama?
The mythological view of the world has
gone, and with it
went the possibility of speaking seriously of a Heilsgeschichte: a historical «
drama of salvation,» in which God is said to have acted at a certain time in this world to change the state of
human affairs.
As an uberfan of the so - bad - it's - good masterpiece The Room and a solid admirer of The Disaster Artist, The Room co-star Greg Sestero's tell - all book about the making of mysterious vampiric figure Tommy Wiseau's «Tennessee Williams style melodrama as told by an alien who has apparently never seen normal
human beings interact»
drama - turned - dark - comedy - after - initial - audience - reactions - full - of - howling - laughter, I was a bit reserved in my excitement when I found out that James Franco was
going to direct the film adaptation, as well as portraying Wiseau himself.
Even the visual effects look less polished than past installments, and if you're
going to surround your action with dull
human drama, the least Bay could have done is make it look good.
Not that I have anything against DDL or Charlize's magnificent performances... I just have a soft - spot for
human drama that doesn't feel this need to
go all out on the «transforming into the character» stuff... but maybe that's more a flaw with me (it's certainly not a flaw with those performances!).
In You Know When the Men Are
Gone, Siobhan Fallon has done the same thing for our current conflict, showing readers the
human faces and hidden
dramas of war.
I mean, the Japanese magazine scans said it was
going to be a squad based 3rd person shooter that was a
drama about questioning what it is to be
human.