ext_82219 (
shahni.livejournal.com) wrote in
fandomsecrets2007-06-12 03:30 pm
[ SECRET POST #158 ]
⌈ Secret Post #158 ⌋
Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.
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Notes:
This is a magic post and I'm not really here. :D
Secrets Left to Post: 03 pages, 58 secrets from Secret Submission Post #023.
Secrets Not Posted: 0 broken links, 0 not!secrets, 0 not!fandom.
Next Secret Post: Tomorrow, Wednesday, June 13th, 2007.
Current Secret Submission Post: Here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

Re: (spoiler warning, before anyone clicks on this collapsed thread by accident)
Though honestly, it was a journey she and Will took together. They even took turns being the damsel in distress!
Although someone's just going to argue that her "being the most important character" only further proves she's a Sue. :P
Re: (spoiler warning, before anyone clicks on this collapsed thread by accident)
Then I'd call Sue.
Even though the moment they brought it up, I figured it was Tia Dalma, I was still terrified there for a second.
Then Barbossa did all his complicated: "WTF, oh, ooohhh, lol Sao Feng I'm gonna con yoooouuu" eyework and I was relieved.
Re: (spoiler warning, before anyone clicks on this collapsed thread by accident)
Turning the example gender wise, if half way through Buffy, Joss Whedon came out and said the protagonist of the show was Xander and suddenly started designing plot lines around him, I'd scream Stu.
Now, the comparison is not exact since Buffy is *clearly* the protagonist of Buffy, and you could argue with me that Will isn't the protagonist of Pirates and that Elizabeth should have been all along. But then I'd just have to say, I don't see it. Her character really was used mostly as a plot device and had very little arc. I'll give you that Elizabeth might have been intended to be the storyteller, the one whose eyes we see things through, but that doesn't make her the protagonist.
Re: (spoiler warning, before anyone clicks on this collapsed thread by accident)
I believe it, i just thinks it's odd. Keep in mind, I'm technically disagreeing with the writers about *their* character. Basically, I'm saying, regardless of their intention, that's really not how I feel it came across. So take that for whatever that's worth.
Elizabeth was *not* a cliched damsel-in-distress in PotC 1.
This is tricky because I agree and disagree. She had pluck and initiative and took plenty of her own action. More and more I'm beginning to see the other side. It's especially tricky since the movie didn't really follow one character's perspective. It was very 3rd person omniscient in that way. It spent significant time developing Will's character and adventures as well as Elizabeth's.
I guess that would imply that it would be equally both of their story. So why did I have a strong impression it was Will's story rather than Elizabeth's? I guess in the end I keep coming back to the character arc. I really don't know how Elizabeth changed, learned, grew throughout the movie. She started out with a desire for adventure and she got it. I guess that could be an arc? Part of my problem is she seemed just as capable of the adventure at the start as she was at the end. It was Will that started the movie very differently than how he ended it. His potential at the start was totally buried. So when he broke out, it was powerful. His arc is so clear to me, it upstages Elizabeth's "breaking out of her corset" arc. It never really seemed like she was in the corset to begin with.
Re: (spoiler warning, before anyone clicks on this collapsed thread by accident)
no subject
I guess I always felt like it was more naturally Will's story. In the first movie, he's the one with the Pirate father. He's the one with an adventure that takes his character on an arc. At the start he hates Pirates, and by the end he learns to appreciate his heritage. At the start he's too wimpy to try to get Elizabeth, and by the end he learns the initiative to win her. What was Elizabeth's arc? At the start, she though pirates were cool, and by the end she still thought pirates were still cool. At the start she wanted Will to pay attention to her, and by the end Will started to pay attention to her, but what did she *do* or *learn* that made that happen? Elizabeth was the plucky damsel in distress with plenty of initiative, but she was still more of a plot device to get Will on the his adventure or a goal for Will's happy ending than a protagonist.
I guess it just seemed artificial to me that suddenly Elizabeth was the one rallying the pirates to war. She'd been artificially (IMO) thrust into being *the* main character. And, to me, that's the Sue-ist thing of all--when a character steals all the attention from the character who's story it truly is.
no subject
So yes, Elizabeth is a plot device, but actually, so are all protagonists. They're not mutually exclusive.
no subject
In my eyes, these two things make Elizabeth the narrator of the story, but that doesn't necessarily make her the protagonist. For example, in "The Shawshank Redemption", Red is the narrator, but Andy is the protagonist.
It is she who finds Will, it is she who dreams about him...
You have a very valid point with all of these examples. You're right in that a lot of action not only revolves around Elizabeth, but she takes a lot of action. But again, I come back to the question of arc. And it doesn't really feel like Elizabeth has one, definitely not when compared to Will. To me that is what differentiates between a character who's integral to the story and a protagonist.
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I suppose this kind of character arc could be Sueish if she actually HAD stolen all the attention from who the viewers felt was SUPPOSED to be the main character, but Will's character arc was still strong. She just got to do more cool stuff in AWE. But EVERYONE did cool stuff in DMC. Jack fought on the mast of a ship, Barbossa sailed through a maelstrom (while fighting and reciting wedding vows SIMULTANEOUSLY), Will got to talk smack to the villains and Ragetti freed a Goddess. It was a movie full of people doing cool stuff. :P
... that was a markedly less coherent argument than I anticipated it would be. -___-;;
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No one did cool stuff in DMC. Everyone SUCKED in DMC, which was kind of the point. :PPP
no subject