Sentences with phrase «obligatory scenes»

The phrase "obligatory scenes" refers to specific moments or events that are expected or required in a certain situation or story. These scenes are essential to the overall narrative and are necessary for the audience to fully understand the plot or themes of the story. They are like important puzzle pieces that must be included to create a complete picture. Full definition
The cast go from room to room discussing stuff, from location to location looking at stuff, explaining scenarios to each other, lots of driving around and of course the other obligatory scene where everyone watches an old educational news film reel about their enemy and how it lives.
If a genre novel is missing obligatory scenes and / or conventions, it can lead to an unsatisfying experience for the reader, even if they are unable to precisely put their finger on why.
Again as with «Mall Cop» the best bits are watching these guys trying to be real cops, using cop jargon they've seen from movies and TV, acting the fool, getting away with all kinds of shit and of course the obligatory scene where they eventually come face to face with some real cops.
Admittedly, irrespective of the movie, this obligatory scene is almost always false and contrived, but if we believe in the romance, we accept it.
There are some funny moments along the way and the obligatory scenes to pull at the heart strings.
It has no obligatory scenes.
There's even the obligatory scene in which Napoleon hangs off the edge of a mountain, dearly clinging to a rope attached to his lion.
The lovable actress shows some surprising range throughout the movie, particularly during one obligatory scene that panders to the audience's sympathy vote.
Shawn goes into story structure and also spends a great deal of time on genre — each genre's conventions, obligatory scenes, and characteristics.
Each has certain obligatory scenes and a set of conventions / expectations on the part of readers; the obligatory scenes must be present and the expectations met in order to give the reader a satisfying experience.
He identifies where parts of a story aren't working and suggests how to resolve issues with plot and character arcs, turns in scenes, missing genre conventions and / or obligatory scenes, etc..
Shawn Coyne's The Story Grid is a deep examination of genre, including genre types and sub-types, expectations, conventions, obligatory scenes, plot structures, characters arcs, and more.
Each genre has certain expectations, conventions, and obligatory scenes that pertain to fiction within it.
Second, genres each have conventions and obligatory scenes (Shawn Coyne's «The Story Grid» has much, much more on obligatory scenes).
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