Scott Pilgrim does tend to get a lot of bad images put up. Eh, I guess that's what happens with visual works with fandoms, though.
Motion to pull.
Infinite Tree: an experimental storyLemme check the history.
Fight smart, not fair.Christ, that's awful Fan Myopia. Never read the comics and only saw 2/3 of the ovie, so there's no context for the image that I know of. That thing needs to be pulled and thrown into the darkest depths of the TV Tropes dungeons.
I TELL YOU HWAT!The avie above me offends me. Don't know why.
1+ in support of removing the pic.
edited 22nd Jul '11 8:24:17 PM by TheDeadMansLife
Please.It is kinda disturbing, isn't it?
I'd say it can be pulled.
This◊, possibly?
That's weird, because when I was searching for a possible picture replacement if the pull went through, that picture jumped out at me on the Google Images page.
The only thing holding me back from referring on here was that I could hear people claiming that it only showed the crazy side of the trope, and didn't show how this trope is about leaving room for ambiguity.
Besides that small reservation, I like it, and think it is a strong image that at least communicates someone caught in a delusional hell.
Get a slant at this glossary of Pulp Detective terms. It rates. Pipe that?The vision of Fuminori◊ from Saya No Uta.
To make it clearer we can put his face◊ with it.
Bump.
edited 12th Aug '11 7:13:39 PM by ArtemisStrong
Get a slant at this glossary of Pulp Detective terms. It rates. Pipe that?Bump again...we could possibly combine the two Saya No Uta pics. Thoughts?
I'd prefer to see what the room looks like normally. Also, if we use it, let's crop out the watermark.
Yeah, contrast between what the room really looks like and what it looks like to the protagonist is essential here.
Infinite Tree: an experimental storyThis trope isn't about perception of madness. It's about a character never sure if he/she is mad or not. This we should take the name to trope repair?
I'm on the internet. My arguments are invalid.Clock is ticking.
Clock's up; locking for inactivity/lack of consensus. No action is to be taken based on this thread.
I don't think the image is illustrative of the trope. Maybe it's explained in the context of the comic, but I've never read it, and it doesn't communicate much to me.
(This aint a knock on Scott, I loved The Movie.)
Get a slant at this glossary of Pulp Detective terms. It rates. Pipe that?