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Narrative
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From Rule Of Cool Discussion:
Ununnilium: (Besides, those pesky laws are just part of the physics of the Matrix that's completely null once you step back into the "real world"!) Took this out because a.) it pulls focus from the point of the entry and generally clutters things up, and b.) whaaaa? I don't remember anything from the movie that said the "real world" doesn't follow the laws of thermodynamics. Morgan Wick: Well, I put it in because it was funny. I never saw the Matrix, but I do know that the laws of physics and time at least seemed to be different, so it seemed to me that they had a built-in nigh-universal A Wizard Did It. In other words, no, the movie might not have said that the "real world" doesn't follow the laws of thermodynamics, but it could have, and fanon could hold it true if it wanted to. Ununnilium: Ohhhhh, I see. By "real world" you meant "world in the Matrix" and not "post-apolcalyptic computer-ruled real world". I was confused. Binaroid: Well, some people did think they were in for the "Blue Matrix" Dream Within A Dream plot twist after Neo forced the robots to stop in the real world at the end of The Matrix Reloaded. Seth: Remember most of the Real world discrepancies in the matrix can be hadwaved by all the Black Box technology they use. Kendra Kirai: Also the fact the Wachowski brothers ran out of biblical references after the first movie. Seth: I'm glad for it, Jesus throw in a few bible Shout Out's and everyone starts seeing meaning where there is none. Kind of a lame attempt to add class to your work when you think about it. Andyzero: Sounds like a trope. Kendra Kirai: What, like... Imagined Depth? Its Better When Youre Stoned? Drunken Stoner Meaningful? What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic? Seth: What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic rocks, please let me make this one :D Tabby: Love it. Ununnilium: See, this is a good name. It's memetic, which those other names weren't. ``v Seth: Why do i think that was aimed at me? Eh. Tulling: Again that clumsy term "Judeo-Christian". Replaced with "Abrahamic". "..Japanese culture isn't familiar with most of it." is a ridiculous expression, something abstract like "culture" cannot be familiar with anything. It makes more sense to refer to the audience in this case. Looney Toons: Give it up, Tulling. No matter how much you insist on your favorite neologism, it will get changed back to the commonly-used term you despise, by any number of people here, as often as necessary. Being snarky in the discussions doesn't help your case, either. Tulling: "Neologism"? I refer you to the following for an explanation of the term: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abrahamic Looney Toons: Excised the following: (suffice to say that neither Judaism, nor Christianity, nor Kabbalah, have ever really caught on in Japan)
because strictly speaking, it's not quite true. There is a small but noticeable Christian minority in Japan, but it's big enough that various characters can be identified as such. (Kasumi in Ranma 1/2 has been known to wear a cross, for instance, and the live action Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon has one episode that spends much of its time in a Catholic church in Tokyo.) It used to be bigger, but Japanese Christians suffered a number of pogroms before the middle 20th century. And believe it or not, there is a tiny yet stable population of Japanese Jews dating back at least to the 16th century, mostly settled in Tokyo and Kobe. (And that's ignoring the fringish speculation that the Japanese are somehow related to one of the Lost Tribes of Israel.)
That a character wears a cross is not necessarily intended to signal that they are christian, in most cases it is probably just decoration.
Ununnilium: You know what I'd like to see? An anime whose Multinational Team is made up of one of each nation that's rumored to be one of the Lost Tribes of Israel.
BT The P: I think that'd fall under Loads And Loads Of Characters. (maybe, lots of folks make the claim).
Pepinson: One little bone to pick with The Matrix -- some of this stuff really is symbolic. Take a look at the Merovingian, for example--if you take a good, hard look at the film, you'll see a ton of little hints that add up to imply that he used to be the One in a previous version of the Matrix. Of course, Dan Brown made the whole exercise pointless when he dragged that bit of mythos back into popular culture a year later, but in '02 this was a fairly obscure reference. Seth: We're not saying it isn't there is some genuine symbolism. But there is also a lot of stuff that is thrown in for the sake of it. Tonkarz: How does this trope relate to Crystal Dragon Jesus? I guess it's because this one is faux attempts at deeper meaning and the other is just appropriating real world symbols for flavouring of an in world religion. Seth: I dont think it does relate to CDJ. That is a trope about a fictional stand in for a real world religion. This is a trope about random symbolism used to up the class factor of your program/film. Morgan Wick: The similarity between [[www.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/avatar.jpg this scene]] from Avatar The Last Airbender and [[www.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pieta.jpg this sculpture of Christ and Mary]] is too conspicuous to go unnoticed. I don't think Avatar is alone... references to that sculpture, and in particular to the cover of Crisis On Infinite Earths that referenced that sculpture, just in comic books is almost a trope in itself Paul A: I'm taking this one out
Tanto: What the hell is wrong with the bar at the bottom? I thought someone just didn't understand the formatting, but it appears to be placed correctly. Is anyone else just getting text down there? Seth: It was a simple markup problem someone deleted one of the > that closed the brackets. Andyroid: Does the symbolism have to be religious for this trope to apply? 'Cause I know for a fact FLCL is loaded with seemingly gratuitous sexual symbolism. Lale: Do you mean it looks sexual symbolism but isn't? Cause that would be Innocent Innuendo. If you mean full of sexual symbolism but with no reason, that sounds like Fanservice. Andyroid: No, it's definitely sexual, so it wouldn't fall under Innocent Innuendo. And by "sexual symbolism" I mainly mean "phalluses out the wazoo" (all the big guns in episode 5, and especially the horns coming out of Naota's head), so it's not exactly Fanservice. Perhaps it would fall under Does This Remind You Of Anything? Sci Vo: Oops, when I was a newbie, I didn't realize that this was an index -- or how indexes work, for that matter. I'll put the indexed ones back in bullet points. Dr Dedman: Whoever put in the bit about bioshock. "Rapture of the deep" is a distinctly different condition from decompresion sickness. They both occur due to pressure and involve nitrogen, but they are entirely different conditions (rapture takes effect imediately on reaching depth, the bends can't happen until accent). Killah Mate: Same question as Andyroid: does the symbolism have to be religious for this trope to apply? I was thinking of the 'eclipse' events and references in Heroes, which is a powerful image that, by the writers' own admission, doesn't really mean anything and was put there to 'look cool'. Mary: Actually, contrary to what was said after the quote near the top, Ezekiel 25:17 is, in fact, the bit at the end about "you will know my name is The Lord when I lay my vengeance upon thee." I don't know where the rest of that quote is from (it's not in Ezekiel 25, at least), but it doesn't sound anything like the 23rd Psalm. Gentlemens Dame 883: Actually, the bit about "shepherds the weak through the valley of the darkness" is reminiscent of the original Psalm 23:4, which starts (in the NIV) with "Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death...." The mention of "brother's keeper" can also be seen to have its roots in Cain's use of it in Genesis 4:9.
Fast Eddie: Too long: "There's this passage I got memorized. Ezekiel 25:17. "The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the iniquities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he who, in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of the darkness. For he is truly his brother's keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers. And you will know my name is The Lord when I lay my vengeance upon thee." I been sayin' that shit for years. And if you heard it, that meant your ass. I never gave much thought to what it meant. I just thought it was some cold-blooded shit to say to a motherfucker before I popped a cap in his ass."
Please see Administrative Policy.
-- Jules Winnfield, Pulp Fiction
Pulled natter. |
