Eye Rolling Movie Tropes

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People that get in situations where they need to snap the blinds closed, have an inordinate number of windows in the house too. Big bay windows and side windows in the lounge room, each bay with separately operated blinds. Enough to make it a montage.

I'm looking at this room I'm in now. One window out in to the street. One roller blind. Two curtains either side. No dramatic potential.

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Small rooms with not many exits are a great prop,can build tension and suspense especially if you have a small budget.

Tommy Wiseau learnt with 'The Room'.
Grossed $1,600 cost 6 million.
Side by side with 'The Disaster Artist' they are the greatest movies about movies.
 
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One that shits me is the back seat in movie cars,crucial dialogue in back always seems a skinny car.
No middle seat.
I just get distracted by shit going on in the rear windscreen that turns out to be irrelevant.

Gonna look for that now.

When there is a middle seat, character sits on that. I don’t know anyone who will voluntarily do that when he or she is the only passenger
 
One that shits me is the back seat in movie cars,crucial dialogue in back always seems a skinny car.
No middle seat.
I just get distracted by shit going on in the rear windscreen that turns out to be irrelevant.
Not to mention the headrests of the front seats are always missing too
 

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When it’s winter and actor/s get into cars with coats and scarves on etc when modern cars are heated

I watched a current tv series this week and the characters went on a 6 hour road trip in a new Mustang with full winter gear on
Its so they can leave the windows down for the film crew to shoot through

Then leave said windows open when they get to their crime ridden destination
 
People that get in situations where they need to snap the blinds closed, have an inordinate number of windows in the house too. Big bay windows and side windows in the lounge room, each bay with separately operated blinds. Enough to make it a montage.

I'm looking at this room I'm in now. One window out in to the street. One roller blind. Two curtains either side. No dramatic potential.

Sent from my Nokia 7.2 using Tapatalk
Dramatic effect of roller blind going up seemingly on its own = intruder in house.
 
It's unusual, but not completely unknown for TV shows to write in new characters as though they had always been there.

For example, Captain Mike Yeates (played by the late Richard Franklin) joined Doctor Who for the first serial of the 1971 season during the Third Doctor era along with Jo Grant (Katy Manning). However, while Jo was a new character and introduced as such, it was said that Mike Yeates had been there all through the 1970 UNIT stories where Liz Shaw was a companion, only we didn't see him on screen.

It has happened in sitcoms too. When the Cosby Show debuted in 1986, Doctor and Mrs. Huxtable seemed to have four kids early in the debut season - a son and daughter in high school, a daughter in middle school and a younger girl still in elementary school - but a fourth daughter Sondra who was older and away in college suddenly appeared late in the first season, despite having never been seen or mentioned before. Julie, the sharp-tongued PA of Gordon Brittas in early 1990s UK sitcom only arrived for Season 2, but was later said to have worked at the Leisure Centre from the time it first opened. And in Everybody Loves Raymond around 1999, Raymond suddenly had a new friend named Gianni - only he wasn't a 'new' friend he had apparently been there all along and had even played a major role in Debra and Raymond getting together.

While in the above examples those behind the shows possibly hoped fans wouldn't notice so much, there was one show where a slight twist on this was attempted - and to put it mildly it didn't go very well. When the show runners for the immensely popular 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer' were looking for new plots for the 5th season, they came up with a novel idea. Why not give Buffy - until this point an only child - a younger sister aged in her mid-teens? Everyone on the show would believe that the sister was always there, with changed memories, photos and the like, but it would be lamp-shaded to the viewers that she had obviously not been there from the start and that there is a greater reason for her sudden appearance that nobody on screen is aware of it, not even the new sister herself.

Given that Buffy TVS was a supernatural show and that strange and outlandish things happened in every episode, one might assume that the show's large fanbase would like such an unusual plot twist. Those behind the show certainly did, hence the introduction of Dawn Summers - and fans were not impressed. They hated the plot twist and the new character Dawn, and this was not helped by the personality of the new arrival - she was an immature, irresponsible, whining and selfish spoiled brat with many behavioral problems. Aged about 14 at the time, Dawn often behaved more like a pre-teen than a middle schooler.

With the benefit of hindsight, it seems like those behind the show might have been trying to do too much with Dawn. It would be one thing for her to be immature and naive if she had just been created, sort of like aliens who are struggling to understand Earth and how humans think. But while Dawn indeed was newly created, she had 14 years of memories programmed into her so this doesn't hold up so well.

But its still a bit odd that fans of a supernatural show with numerous outlandish plots should dislike this innovative plot twist so intensely.
 

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