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Narrative
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kuyanJ: It seems to me that there is a difference between Power of friendship vs Bullet and Optimism vs Pesimism, even if the two are associated. For example Dr Strangelove presents an end-of-the-world scenatrio that tries to be feasible, but it results from a man deciding that evil must be destroyed. In many fairy tales, good triumphs and the world is not presented badly, but the evil people end up dying.
Germaholic: I changed the Death Note example. The show is very cynical, particularly for a shounen series, but it's not because of what the creator thinks happens after death. Black Humor: Does anyone have an idealistic quote to replace one of the cynical quotes with? Killer Clowns: Did a bit of work on that. Cynical quotes tend to be funnier, unfortunately. Anyways, I think there's a better quote somewhere around for Discworld. And while it's sure to have some wonderfully idealistic quotes, I'm too lazy to go digging through Doctor Who's vast archives. puritybrown: Tweaking the Firefly example, because the first sentence bugged me for both style-related and factual reasons. The fact that the characters are freelances with no organisational backup doesn't make the show cynical; the fact that they willingly off people for inadequate reasons in scenes that are played for laughs does. (For me, the killing of the henchman listed in the example was a Rape The Dog moment, not a Crowning Moment Of Awesome. But mileage varies and I'm aware that I'm in the minority in this.) Also, removing this:
Lupis42: Whoa. Missed this one. I tell you, you get stuck without internets for a month or two... Anyways, reading over the forum discussion, I confess myself somewhat disappointed, since Romanticism vs Realism is both more literary and more alliterative. And idealism vs pragmatism seems more accurate. It's certainly not a change for the worse though. Vampire Buddha: This page has been renamed following this forum thread
Sunder The Gold: There any chance of making "Realism" the moderate middle of the scale, with Cynicism taking the proper place as the opposite of Idealism? I feel many people would agree that some works are more idealistic than realistic, and more cynical than realistic, so that idealism and realism are potentially as closely-related as realism and cynicism. This could still leave personal perspective as to what exact median point between (or ratio of) idealism/cynicism results in realism. In example, where Idealistically, you can always talk the Big Bad into turning over a new leaf, where Cynically, you always have to cap him between the eyes, in a Realistic work, it could fall either way based on a number of points, most notably the fact that people have free will and there's no telling (or forcing) what they'll choose to do, for good or bad. Lee: I think realism should be thrown out of the equation for this trope and it should just be a spectrum of idealism and cynicism. Think about it: life is obviously better for some people than others and might be harder or easier for one person than it would be for other people. I mean, there are plenty of dysfunctional families but at the same time some families, while they might have their little spats and disputes, aren't constantly trying to screw each other over and abuse each other either. Obviously for someone living in a poor starving country, or in a concentration camp is going to have a shitty life, whereas someone in a nice suburban area that's really nice and peaceful might have a good life that is at least somewhat ideal, and both of these possibilities are perfectly realistic. Therefore I would say that series that are lighter, have really lovable and endearing characters, where everyone is happy, and you really can save everyone with The Power Of Friendship would fall more on the ideal side and a series set in a Crapsack World where everyone is screwing everyone else over and people are generally miserable and there are absolutely no likable or sympathetic characters would fall very far on the side of cynicism. I also think it makes absolutely no sense to refer to a show like Neon Genesis Evangelion as being realistic. It Just Bugs Me. Having teenagers fighting in building-sized robots against building-sized aliens trying to take over the planet doesn't sound like a very realistic series to me. Yeah, I get what is meant by that line, but it still makes very little sense. It's the same problem with fantasy series that might fall on the "realistic" end of the spectrum. It makes absolutely no sense because a realistic fantasy is an oxymoron. This wouldn't be a problem if it were the Sliding Scale of Idealism versus Cynicism because being cynical and being a fantasy are not mutually exclusive; it would simply be a cynical fantasy, one that is much darker than perhaps other fantasies might be. There would also be no need for quotation marks either, which might be used when referring a series as being on the "realistic" end despite the fact that it contains numerous magical, fantastical, or supernatural elements and just happens to be darker and bleaker in tone. Sunder The Gold: The chief problem is that, we shouldn't have to hear or say that obviously Cynical shows are "realistic," and in doing so we have nothing to call a work balanced between the ends. This whole things feels like a Fallacy of the Excluded Middle (such as brought up in If Jesus Then Aliens). The White Hat: I'm inclined to agree, but the main problem would be that someone(s) would have to hunt down every reference to the trope and change it. Its not that there is some huge group that thinks that realism is the One True Word, its just that few people care enough to make the alteration. Bobfrank: Gotta agree with "Realism" being a badly inaccurate word for the concept being portrayed, especially as a contrast with idealism. Just look at Ghandi, at what he accomplished and how he accomplished it. You don't get much more realistic than something that really happened. "Cynicism" is a much better word. And it's not necessary to hunt down every reference, White Hat. Just make the current page into a redirect. White Hat: What I'm saying is that even if we change the name here, now, thats all good and well, but most people will still know it as its present name, it'll still be referenced as its present name, and it will take a great deal of time and some zealous editors to stop the trope from still being called what is right now. Further, even though those of us discussing it here agree, I think we should probably post in the forum to make sure there aren't any serious objections to the name change. Sunder The Gold: Well, we've got to start somewhere, and no time like the present. Please, go ahead and post on the forums. I don't know my way around them, otherwise I'd do it. But, I'm perfectly willing to edit this article and hunt down the wicks. Guessmyname: Moved the Sailor Nothing entry to literature (it was in anime previously) —- Bluetooth The Pirate: I was thinking, maybe there's a Y-axis to this little graph, a complementary continuum, like the Sliding Scale of Realism vs. Slapstick? On an unrelated note, it seems to me, from what I've actually set time aside to read, that Fan Fic writers really love to monkey with this slider, usually pushing it all the way to the "realistic" side. I think it may have to do with the writers in question taking the show really seriously. Ununnilium: On the latter - yeah, I've seen that more than once. x.x But I've also seen it go the other way - for instance, numerous "Rewrite the Plot of Evangelion" fics. As for the Y-axis, there may be one, but I don't think "Realism vs. Slapstick" is it; it seems more of a comedy-show slider, while this trope is more drama. Looney Toons: As any disaffected teenager can tell you, angst is easy. Comedy is hard. That's why the vast majority of Ranma 1/2 fics (and thus the even vaster majority of bad Ranma 1/2 fics) all take it way, way too seriously. (Then again, there are the rare dark masterpieces like Zen's 1997 fic "The Bitter End" A Carlssin: This sentence: "Remakes of "cheesy" idealistic series will often be more "realistic", especially if the original series first aired in a time period that's seen as less self-aware." needs to be expanded upon, but I can't think of how to do without messing up the flow of the original page. The classic of course is "Star Trek" — STTNG was "medium-hard" sci-fi while the original series lived in the fuzzy line between sci-fi and fantasy. We also need to mention that some shows and comics like to pretend that they take place in the real world, but then they have huge, earth-shattering plotlines that should cause major changes. For example, "Doctor Who" is assumed to take place in "our" world, but the various invasions of earth make that impossible. But they gloss over it anyway. Blork: "Realistic", in this page is not meant literally. It's not about how accurate a portrayal of reality the show is but how cynical it is, so "There's no time to negotiate, we must use our magic powers to destroy the evil subterranean mutants before they get a chance to attack!" counts as "realistic". Shay Guy: Anybody up for a page like the Mohs Scale Of Sci Fi Hardness for this? Or has that been proposed and shot down already? Cameoflage: I was actually wondering why this trope doesn't have something like that... Zeke: I've taken out this line...
Ununnilium: Again, people, using This Troper is pointless if you just put your name in there. Replacing:
Bob: Cutting some stuff from the Code Geass example:
Austin: I haven't seen Grave of the Fireflies, but I've read that it's not meant to be a cynical statement overall, and that it's more a story of people than of war. A couple of the things I read are that the bombings at the start of the movie are presented as an abstract fact, like a natural disaster instead of a commentary on human nature. Also that the author intended the film to be an apology to his dead sister, and was surprised that people were so sympathetic to the main character, who didn't pull his weight and help contribute to his family's well being. —- Wellington: Rewrote this:
Dookie: Perhaps we could rearrange the examples not by media but actually scaling from idealism to cynicism the way we have on Moh's Scale of SF Hardness? Just a suggestion. Anonymous Mc Cartneyfan: Good idea. It'll make the trope clearer. Zephid: Not perfectly certain on the picture. MikoGalatea: I've cut out the natter from the Bokurano/Naru Taru example and consolidated the important stuff into one paragraph. Here's what I snipped:
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