Arigatomina wrote:
That right there explains why people were so quick to take offence, then. You're part of a minority. ^.~
They should watch TNT. They know drama.
In all seriousness, a drama video requires a storyline, regardless of source. My bias against multi-source is due to the extra factor it causes the already difficult process. However, any single-source video is capable of the same issues. In fact, as I think we both agreed, many do have the same issues.
Arigatomina wrote:
This is strange to me. I think of the horror genre where the 'theme' is violence/angst/death - the theme is there and the story, if there is a story, is built by using scenes that show the theme - dark violence, crying face shots, tearful death scenes. If the theme is sappy romance (think Inuyasha/Kagome videos), a video based on that theme will revolve around sappy romance clips - hugging, wide-eyed face shots, cutsy blushing face shots, tearful sappy face shots, romantic standing and staring at each other clips - anything that fits the theme and comes together under the 'romance' category. A drama vid that uses the "I hate myself" theme would involve angsty/angry face shots, scenes of self-mutilation or self-isolation, clips of the solitary character standing by himself (possibly with potential friends separate in the background to show his angst), and any other clip that will build the "I hate myself" theme.
I'm confused. I don't see where this is different from what I had mentioned before. The last truly disturbing video I saw still had a coherent plotline. It was of Dreams and Shadows by Kerydwenn. It had all you speak about about. Dark, forboding, violent, and eery music to match. It still followed a character through a story. I admit I didn't really understand it, but I can say the same for many movies. Character went from point a to point b to point c. A horror video without story coherency is no better than any other type of drama video without story coherency.
The same goes for romance. If you're going to use literal lyrical synch, is it that hard to put the clips in chronological order, or otherwise in such a way that they flow together in a coherent storyline that explains the relationship? I don't think it is. My second video was a marked improvement on my first. It was a KareKano romance video. Literal synch was only taken so far in this one, and the clips were roughly chronological. I wasn't just showing clips of the relationship, I was trying to follow the relationship through time. I wanted to give the viewer a sense of the steps taken to get to the relationship's present. In other words, I was telling a story.
I have never encountered a "I hate myself" video. Doesn't sound like my type of thing, but I can only assume that my reasoning applies to them as well. Surely if the character is mutilating herself, there must be a shot in the anime of her doing it. Furthermore there is usually a reason for such things. I had an ex that cut once. These things do not develop instantaneously. There is a story there, and many times there is footage you can use to show it (even if you have to manipulate it, not something I'm fond of, but that is another thread entirely). So I really cannot fathom an excuse of why a coherent story would be left out of the equation in such a video.
Arigatomina wrote:
I can see where any story will need thematic consistency - if you start wanting to show how two people got together, and you want to do it in a bright and positive way, you'd stick to clips that match that theme. But if the point of the story is 'upbeat romantic clips that make you go awww' - you don't need a story to match the theme. It would depend where you start, whether or not the theme is an addition to a preset story, or if the story is an addition to the preset theme.
I concur entirely with the last sentence, but in either case, and I don't care which, there must be a story. You say so yourself. A random collection of clips to make me go aww without telling me why I should go aww just makes me go wtf instead. Especially if I have not seen the anime before. Why should I care these two characters are being sappy? Show me, even if you think anime x is the greatest evar and I should just know that character z and character y love each other so much. Frankly, I don't know why they love each other and I'm not going to care if you don't walk me through their relationship.
Arigatomina wrote:
If you like watching a video that will make you smile without making you think, one of those thematically sappy romance vids will do the trick - no story necessary so long as there are enough sappily romantic clips to go with the music track. I like story-based vids, but I also like theme/emotion based vids where the only consistency is in the emotion the clips instill in the viewer. It just depends on my mood at the time.
Here is where you and I will have to agree to disagree. Fun videos make me smile without making me think. Back to Odorikuruu. Technical videos make me go wow without making me think. Romantic videos? No, by their very nature they make me think. My reaction will be "Uh, okay, so why are they together now?" You point out I'm in the minority, so I'll take your word for it. Story is important to me. You can't write a dramatic novel with fluff and expect it to be memorable. My experience suggests the same is true of any art form, AMVs included.