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You won´t come in with that shoes

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

It´s always annoying not to get in somewhere you´d really like to be – but if there is no reason for it that really sucks.

Many US websites behave like an awkward doorman, but let´s start at the beginning.

When Dexter´s first season started the website was only accesible by US citizens – why?

I´ve been really curious to watch the web series Gemini Division since i read an article in the latest issue of Creative Screenwriting – it sounds like a great idea.

So how do i like the show? I don´t know, i´m not allowed to watch it – it´s not allowed for Europeans, i mean not even for Canadians.

Could it get any more ridiculous? What is the damn internet for? Not only to get content from your own country, the big advantage of the internet is that it is should be international.

Gemini Divisions explanation for that is the following: GD and the Geo-Lock.

Nothing would be easier to adjust the advertisment on the particular country, i mean thats what porn sites do since ages (No thanks, i don´t want to meet a girl near Vienna).

There is a big promising benefit by letting the world take part:
With web series you´ve got the incredible chance to reach audience in real time all over the world – that should be one key marketing point in difference to TV. But they really mess this chance up.

Sure there would be solutions, but i don´t get why i should use a proxy server, or spoof my ip, or search for downloadable episodes, or or or. But why so difficult, it could be so easy.

And by the way: i´d really like to watch movies when they come out and not have to wait for the translation. Just take The Dark Knight for example, i never watched the german version but still had to wait a month until it reached our cinemas.

I don´t really think that anyone would actually loose money – the people who want to see it in original sound can do – the others can wait. It´s just another way to promote illegal downloads (just like the annoying anti-piracy ads on DVDs).

I think there are quite some people like me who orient themselves on the international (and that often means American) market. I read American magazines, read American blogs, watch American series and movies but still it´s unnecessary hard to catch up with some stuff – and i don´t see a reason why.

What "The Dark Knight" can teach us

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

While it really sucked to wait a month for the movie to start in Austria, i finally saw it. As you may have read a hundred times by now, the movie is great, it is epic and it is Heath Ledgers legacy (and yes, i´m going to watch it a second time).

The thing i enjoyed most in the first place are not the amazing action scenes, it´s the story. It´s not important if that movie is about a super-hero, it´s an epic story and every single detail of the movie fits. And just to mention it again, Heath Ledger plays an incredible Joker.

Now that i saw the movie i finally was ready to read Dark Knight´s Screenwriting Lesson by Mystery Man (and even when i have posted it before, when you´re at it you should read 10 Reasons Why I Loved The Dark Knight as well).

One key element why the story is that fascinating are the inner conflicts of the characters (not only of the protagonist but of all the characters). Mystery Man wrote down the inner conflicts of the most important characters in his post, here is a quote:

Bruce: Reveal himself to Gotham or endure the terror? And that’s a conflict rooted in his origin story, too. Because we understand now his dark, inner needs to put fear into the hearts of the criminals. I think he knew the truth about his unlikely future with Rachel, too, but he couldn’t face it. And there’s also Harvey Dent. Should he fight or support him? He’s a good guy, yet he’d love to knock his teeth in. Later, should he save Rachel or Harvey? Well, that wasn’t much of a conflict. He told Gordon he was going to save Rachel, but the Joker had switched the addresses. There were conflicts about Bruce’s limits, too, his physical and moral limitations as Batman. And we also sense that he was conflicted about his one rule – should he kill the Joker?

Rachel: Bruce or Harvey? Accept the proposal or not?

Harvey: Should he work with or against the Batman? Should he arrest him? He, too, faced his own inner conflicts about staying within the ethical limits of his power. Remember that scene where he tried to interrogate one of Joker’s minions? He wanted to go too far and Batman stopped him. And later in the third act, shoot or not?

Gordon: Should he work with or against Harvey Dent?

Alfred: Share or destroy Rachel’s letter?

Lucius: Help eavesdrop on the city in a way he doesn’t approve?

Lau: Cooperate with Harvey or face the Joker?

Salvatore Maroni: Work with or turn in the Joker?

People on ferries: Turn the pins or not?


I don´t really understand why the plot lacks or completely sucks in so many high budget action movies. The Dark Knight not only features ground-breaking action scenes and IMAX shots, there are so many little details in the story that are just ingenious.

Take just one little example: for the second time the Joker tells about how he got his scars – it´s a different story than the first. So what do we learn about the Joker in this moment? He lies. You can´t trust him.
It would have been a very easy exposition if someone talked about the Joker and told us “He lies. Don´t trust him.”. Yeah, great exposition, but what the screenwriters have done here is stick to one key principle of screenwriting: Show, don´t tell (and still so many high budget movies do it over and over again). Thanks to Amanda for that little article that says so much.

I think it´s pretty amazing how any setting or genre can make a great movie wheter it´s “in” or not. Christopher Nolan and his brother Jonathan proved that a movie works in any genre, time or structure. They have told a story backwards (Memento), showed two rivalling magicians (The Prestige) and made two super-hero movies (Batman Begins, The Dark Knight).

These movies don´t have a lot in common, except the amazingly constructed plots coupled with a solid (in some cases even overwhelming) execution.

It´s all about the story.