On Canon, Narrative Tendencies, Etc.
Apr. 29th, 2019 08:38 amI was having lunch with a friend and we were talking about what we're reading and watching, and he said that he doesn't love when the people working on a series/franchise/universe choose to go backwards rather than forwards -- to get into doing prequels, filling in backstory, rather than stories about what comes NEXT.
And so I've been thinking shaggy thoughts about that, and about how safe it is to know where things are going to end up, and about how if your audience is really knowledgable about and attached to existing canon, to the point where it becomes part of their identity, then it's really pleasurable to do prequels and revisits and so on. And time travel stories are part of that.... a time travel story is a way to turn something into a bit of a prequel or a revisit to an earlier part of the current story. And this spoilery post about MCU and HP by
I'm pretty handwavy about all this.
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Date: 2019-04-29 02:41 pm (UTC)Also, I'm an optimist, and I don't like getting invested in what I know is going to be a tragic ending. Which is depressingly common in prequels.
I've been thinking of a similar thing that annoys me about MCU and HP (and, I think, the Dresden Files), which is that I apparently Do Not Like attempts to wrap up series with big world-saving Finales that are supposed to tie up all the strings for a whole bunch of people at once. Partly, I think I just don't like the stakes; again, optimist, and these things always culminate in Tragic Battles with High Stakes that leave me torn between going "well, these characters just went through a whack ton of trauma, not sure I buy everything's going to be fine" and "goddammit, half my faves are dead and the other half are scarred all to hell; what am I doing?" and "look, life doesn't end as neatly as all that, I see eight other stories that could branch off of this one, and the attempts to sew them up neatly and echo the beginning points mostly just feel constricting now."
Related, but a different thing, I think.
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Date: 2019-04-29 04:37 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2019-04-30 11:46 pm (UTC)McGuire has been doing interesting things with prequels in Wayward Children. The first story begins with Nancy introduced to all these other children who had their own magic-portal fantasy. The followups mostly explore the origin stories of those secondary characters.