More than Meets the Eye (IDW ongoing comic)

The modern comics universe has had such a different take on G1, one that's significantly represented by the Generations toys, so they share a forum. A modern take on a Real Cybertronian Hero. Currently starring Generations toys, IDW "The Transformers" comics, MTMTE, TF vs GI Joe, and Windblade. Oh wait, and now Skybound, wheee!
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andersonh1
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Re: More than Meets the Eye (IDW ongoing comic)

Post by andersonh1 »

JediTricks wrote:I'm going to do something unprecedented, I'm going to discuss MTMTE now.
We have gone off on a major tangent, haven't we! :lol:
Having gone back over LSOTW, I feel like bringing Overlord back into the mix is a pretty cheap move here. Had it been in RID it might not have felt as cheap, but here it's really convoluted and doesn't pay off on the point of LSOTW at all. It also diminishes that expression of Overlord because he was violent and angry for a much better reason than he is in MTMTE. Thoughts?
I don't mind seeing him in the series, but Prowl's reason for secreting him away on board (so Chromedome could examine his memory and see what makes phase six bots so powerful) seems very thin to me. I don't really buy it. There are better ways to investigate that particular question, and far more secure places to hold Overlord. Chromedome's not the only mneosurgeon around.

So is it a cheap move, done just to trade on the reputation of LSOTW? Possibly. I still think it will depend on just what the effect of his presence on the ship and the death of whoever he killed has on the characters and direction of the series before I can really make the call.
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Re: More than Meets the Eye (IDW ongoing comic)

Post by Sparky Prime »

JediTricks wrote:It's bad writing because it's using a cheap trope to jerk the audience around only to later reward them with a scene backing off the moment.
I'd agree it's a cheap trick, but that doesn't make it bad writing in itself.
The "I, Robot" movie example didn't apply at all from what I could see, so I ignored it because you just seem so angry and want to argue about everything, it's my prerogative to respond or not as I choose, and I was trying to stay on topic and get us through this as quickly as possible. The reason "I, Robot" doesn't apply is that the narrative continues on and shows Sonny alive again in that same narrative, that the intent is made clear by later events within the same story, while AHM has no such scene intended by the author. I Robot movie also sets up the idea that Sonny is visually identical to his fellow robots in the film, thus giving credence to the possibility of that switch later, yet there's nothing I know of in AHM which thematically suggests the content might be jerking the reader around in that way.
I wasn't angry, but now I am a little, because this is not any reason to dismiss that example. It doesn't apply because it's in the same narrative and Sonny is visually identical to the other robots? While Thundercracker may not have been brought back in AHM, he is brought back in the same narrative. The Ongoing is part of the same storyline. And Sonny does have some visually distinctive features. He has blue eyes rather than green that all the others have, and he is made from harder alloys that makes his appearance seem a little bit more pristine than the others. And the point of the example is to show a situation where we see a character seemingly killed off, yet something happens off screen that allows him to survive. Just like Thundercracker.
As for AHM being part of the story, I am not buying that argument on any level, the story as a whole is under a specific banner and a specific set of circumstances which surround that idea, later issues continue from that point but are only reflections and extensions because they came later and aren't part of that AHM story or in this case written by its author. You are willing to accept later material to alter original material's intent, I don't think that's valid in this particular situation, so we've come to an impasse.
If AHM was meant to be a stand alone story, I might be able to buy your argument. But the fact is, it isn't. What banner it's under is irrelevant. AHM itself was a continuation of Fuman's storylines, each of which had their own banners as well, yet no one tries to claim they are "only reflections and extensions" because they are more than that. These stories are all connected as part of a larger ongoing story line. You're unwillingness to accept that is altering the intent of the publisher which supersedes anything an author may or may not have intended. Of which, nothing you've said has convinced me McCarthy actually intended for Thundercracker to die. The scene is ambiguous. It really seems to me like you're selectively ignoring anything that contradicts your own views here.
Not enough about AHM 12's particular material is ambiguous enough to fit that mold, those 4 panels are a clear chain of events that Skywarp intended to shoot Thundercracker in the eye out of anger in feeling as if TC betrayed the Decepticons. You can argue the survivability of the wound, but I'm not willing to entertain the idea that there was enough ambiguity in those 4 panels to allow for anything more, hence, impasse.
The scene is clear enough Skywarp intended to shoot Thundercracker, but it's not clear enough to know where he actually hit Thundercracker or how badly he was damaged.
That would be a great example because the author intended the character of Sherlock Holmes to be firmly dead at the end of "The Final Problem". Holmes' survival of the fight at Reichenbach Falls was an intentional retcon to appease readers who demanded the character's return, and Conan Doyle had to change the circumstances surrounding the situation in order to make the unsurvivable battle survivable - in other words, Conan Doyle intentionally cheated to change what his previous story had intended.
I know. Point being he never confirm Holmes was dead in that story as Watson didn't actually see him go over the waterfall with Moriarty, allowing for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle a way to bring Holmes back, despite his intentions to kill him off.
He's a wizard and it's magic and the character did die and had to be reborn which that story's universe supports.
It's still really not that different from any other example here. SOMETHING allows the character to come back from an implied death that happens off page, at least until Gandalf fills us in.
Are you seriously trying to cite Dragonball Z as a quality example? It's a cartoon made for another society entirely.
You realize this entire discussion came up as a result of a comic book, right? It doesn't matter that it's a cartoon, and it doesn't matter what society it was made for, the circumstances of the scene still fits. You're making up reasons to try and dismiss a perfectly good example.
Unfamiliar and your example itself seems to require a modifier.
Not really a modifier, I was establishing the context. The Turman show is a movie about a guy whose whole life is a reality television show, and Truman is the only one who doesn't know it. In order to keep him from finding out his whole life has been a lie, and keep him confined to this city set they built, the shows creators engineer ways to keep him from trying to leave. One of those ways is that they 'killed off' his father while on a boating trip to make Truman afraid of the water. But of course they don't actually kill off the actor playing his father. Years later, the actor breaks back onto the set to see Truman, which starts Truman to start questioning everything. Eventually the creators decide to write the father back in to try and stop Truman from rebelling against the 'reality' of the show. So in effect, the father disappears under the water, suggesting he drowned, but is later revealed to still be alive and explain his absence as amnesia.
Wow, you really nailed me there by using the worst piece of Trek writing of its era, writing so bad that even the authors of it in the DVD commentary apologize for how clumsy it was. The Nexus is a MASSIVE cheat, possibly the most intentionally awful cheat in all of entertainment.
Generations was clumsy, but you can't dismiss the whole thing just for 'bad writing'. That's completely subjective. You're not even addressing the point here.
Are you content that I addressed all of your examples? No, because they didn't convince me of anything at all and thus wasted both of our time? Right. Well, now you know why I'm going to pick and choose what I respond to, don't freak out at me next time.
I'd wouldn't call that addressing them at all. You basically found anyway you could to just ignore them with out actually addressing the point of any of those examples. So what if DBZ is a cartoon? So what Sir Arthur Conan Doyal intended for Homles to be dead? It doesn't change the facts. All these characters were implied to die with out actually showing it in the story, and they were later revealed to be alive.
It is not the simplest explanation, that's why. If the author isn't showing us the character moving away in the next panel, the simplest explanation is that the character hasn't moved. If you assume that the character "moved slightly" in this case, what you're actually saying is that he moved considerably because there's a gun in someone's eye, a slight movement isn't going to change the outcome in a meaningful manner. It now has to be a movement slight enough that it doesn't change the dynamic of the relationship of characters yet significant enough that he entirely misses, that's not within the reasonable scope of the material presented, you have to make that up in your own mind contrary to the most likely thing you're seeing on the page.
I have yet to see you explain any reason why it isn't the simplest explanation. Not everything the characters do the author has to show us. I mean, you cannot say with any certainty what McCarthy's intention was here since we don't have a specific comment from him other than it was 'out of his hands'. For all we know, he may have wanted to kill Thundercracker, but IDW told him to make it ambiguous so they could bring him back. Whatever the case, the result is still the same.
Characters can only do in a story what the author intends, on-panel or off-panel, and that activity still has to be communicated to the reader for it to be an acceptable part of the story.
And again, we have no idea what the author or publisher really intended. All we know for sure is what we've got from the comic. And what we've got is an ambiguous scene where we don't really see what happened and the fact Thundercracker survives.
Your example from MTMTE is the very expression of a story communicating an idea of an off-panel event, the resulting action is expressed when Swerve uses a meta-bomb meta-joke to whisper to Rewind (not Brainstorm) "it must have happened off-panel", that's expressing the result. No such moment is expressed in AHM 12.
Aside from the fact we don't actually see Thundercracker take the hit? And then we see Thundercracker did in fact survive in the ongoing?
I'm done with this. You apply your own standard to "holding perfectly still" despite nothing saying one way or the other, yet expect that I should accept your take on this. You don't follow the chain of events as presented. You flat out ignore the fact that no other content is shown in the moment or the overall story arc to support your conclusions of "maybe he moved". You are applying the "anything at all can happen" mentality to this without thinking through what would most likely happen. Have you ever had a weapon pointed at you at close range? I have. Even the slightest movement can get you killed, when there's a gun in your face there is no movement you can do that can outrun a triggerfinger when that gunman is intending to shoot. Even the subtlest evasive movement is obvious and trackable at that range, and certainly any evasive movement at that range would still put Thundercracker in the 4th panel, miss or hit - if he drops down, the gun would be fired into his forehead; if he slides left or right and somehow the gun in his eye doesn't simply get pulled along with it since it's an indentation, he'd still be there; if he falls backwards he'd still catch the blast in his face. So you have to ignore all that by saying "someone moved", you have to literally break the chain of events in your mind to get away with your argument for panel 4, you have to say "he moved between panels 2 and 3" and then retcon a reason why that'd make any sense at all - that's not simple, and it's not logic, and it's surely not shown in the story before, during, or afterwards.ou guys are arguing that the MTMTE false-deaths are reasonable given Thundercracker's survival, yet the only reason you believe Thundercracker's survival now is because of recent books like MTMTE that have jerked you around into not trusting the original presentation of the narrative chain of events from 4 years ago. How can something presented at the time as a clearcut intention of a character being killed off, the character left out of that storyline altogether afterwards and then left off the pages for another year, work as an example of context that justifies itself when it finally reverses its statement? AHM makes a statement on its own, that's what I'm trying to say, within that context the argument that he might have survived should be treated as skeptical at best and a retcon at worst, neither of which make for good contextual argument support.
If you're really done with this, then my last $.02... I am following the chain of events as presented in the book. I'm using everything we see in the comic to support my view and what we don't see, which is equally important in this case. You're the one who has said that not seeing Thundercracker take the hit "says nothing". You're the one who has been denying any possibility that Thundercracker could have survived, despite the fact that we see he does, in fact, survive. What you really mean by the chain of events is simply your own interpretation of those events. I can see why you'd think it should be so clear cut, but the fact is, it isn't clear cut at all. There is a reason why we don't actually see Thundercracker get hit, because they are intentionally leaving it open to the possibility he survived. And once again, I'm not applying an "anything at all can happen" mentality. I've supported my view based on what we are and aren't shown in AHM and by what we see when Thundercracker turns up alive in the Ongoing. You're deliberately ignoring these facts. Even if you don't agree with the "he moved off panel" idea, Shockwave makes a good point the perspective we see Skywarp aiming his gun might be a little off. Whatever the case might be, the outcome is still the same. We don't see Thundercracker take the hit, and he is shown to survive. And you can't assume a Transformer weapon is the same as a human weapon. We've seen Transformers take some close range shots before. They didn't get knocked back. Heck, with that scene where Optimus shot Soundwave in the face I posted a while back? Soundwave doesn't move at all. He just falls down. This isn't a retcon and it isn't back-writing because we don't see what actually happened. You cannot discount the Ongoing just because you believe AHM was making it's own statement. AHM is only a chapter of a larger overall story. The context in AHM leaves Thundercracker's fate wide open, to the point we can, within reason of that context, say he could have survived. Which he did.
andersonh1 wrote:
JediTricks wrote:I'm going to do something unprecedented, I'm going to discuss MTMTE now.
We have gone off on a major tangent, haven't we! :lol:
Yes, indeed. More proof that AHM should have been better written.
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Re: More than Meets the Eye (IDW ongoing comic)

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Yes, indeed. More proof that AHM should have been better written.
Editorial and writing aren't the same thing. If McCarthy writes down, "Skwarp shoots Thundercracker and kills him," and DJ Tipton says, "Hold up, he can't die, Costa sees what you're up to and wants to use him," then whose fault is that?
BWprowl wrote:The internet having this many different words to describe nerdy folks is akin to the whole eskimos/ice situation, I would presume.
People spend so much time worrying about whether a figure is "mint" or not that they never stop to consider other flavours.
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Re: More than Meets the Eye (IDW ongoing comic)

Post by Sparky Prime »

Onslaught Six wrote:
Yes, indeed. More proof that AHM should have been better written.
Editorial and writing aren't the same thing. If McCarthy writes down, "Skwarp shoots Thundercracker and kills him," and DJ Tipton says, "Hold up, he can't die, Costa sees what you're up to and wants to use him," then whose fault is that?
I don't see that really makes any difference with what I said. Wether that was something that came from editoral or McCarthy himself, that is how the published story is written to be. I didn't specify one or the other there did I? No. And you know full well there are plenty of complaints about AHM's story for fault to go around, as far as I am concerned.
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Re: More than Meets the Eye (IDW ongoing comic)

Post by andersonh1 »

I would just like to point out...



Spoiler
... that Ultra Magnus is on the cover of issue 17.


http://darksidecomics.popshop.comixolog ... Ongoing-17

Of course, maybe we can't trust the cover, but since I keep insisting he will probably survive, here's evidence in favor of my prediction. :mrgreen:
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Re: More than Meets the Eye (IDW ongoing comic)

Post by JediTricks »

Gonna float all MTMTE conversation to the top of my reply...
andersonh1 wrote:
JediTricks wrote:I'm going to do something unprecedented, I'm going to discuss MTMTE now.
We have gone off on a major tangent, haven't we! :lol:
Worse, we've gone off on THE SAME TANGENT WE DID 4 YEARS AGO! It's the same conversation for the most part. :oops: :P
I don't mind seeing him in the series, but Prowl's reason for secreting him away on board (so Chromedome could examine his memory and see what makes phase six bots so powerful) seems very thin to me. I don't really buy it. There are better ways to investigate that particular question, and far more secure places to hold Overlord. Chromedome's not the only mneosurgeon around.

So is it a cheap move, done just to trade on the reputation of LSOTW? Possibly. I still think it will depend on just what the effect of his presence on the ship and the death of whoever he killed has on the characters and direction of the series before I can really make the call.
I absolutely agree with you, it's super thin. Yeah it gets Overlord out of his jurisdiction, but that's not a real solution and it ultimately risks releasing an exceptionally dangerous Decepticon back into the wild for minimal gains. And your point about there being other mnemosurgeons is exactly right, the book makes that clear, so it has to use this connection to Shadowplay and from Chromedome to Prowl as a trusted person to prop it up, and then you realize there's a mountain of stuff written in just to prop up Overlord's inclusion. The payoff next issue better be damned convincing to put that much weight on what is essentially just a retread of LSOTW's big deal. Honestly, I feel like LSOTW and Chaos Theory are weighing far too heavily on this book right now, like this series is merely an epilogue to those rather than striking out on his own new ideas.

andersonh1 wrote:I would just like to point out...

Spoiler
... that Ultra Magnus is on the cover of issue 17.

http://darksidecomics.popshop.comixolog ... Ongoing-17

Of course, maybe we can't trust the cover, but since I keep insisting he will probably survive, here's evidence in favor of my prediction. :mrgreen:
Well, then we also can't trust the original solicitations for the series: http://ryalltime.wordpress.com/2012/01/ ... ra-magnus/

But then again, did you read the blurb for issue 17?
Spoiler
"RODIMUS leads his crew to the gates of heaven-or hell", to me that fits the idea that our dead friends might be on this cover if Rodimus is going into the afterlife, maybe he's there to have one last adventure with them, or maybe, and more likely, he's there to rescue them. Either way, I guess the idea of death cheats are going to continue to resonate in this title.

-----


Shockwave wrote:
Dominic wrote:
And actually, the panel that shows Skwarp pointing his gun and Thundercracker looks a little off, like he's aiming just above his head or at the top of it.
That is a deliberate misreading, intentionally searching for something that might retroactively play in to a back-write.
No it isn't. Look at the panel from an artist perspective. If you follow the vanishing point of where Skywarp is aiming, it doesn't line up with where Thundercracker's head is, it's just above it (or, at best, you could say it's maybe the top of TC's head). And Skywarp's forearm isn't perfectly parallel to his weapon like it is in the panel where the shot is fired so obviously he had to move his arm betweent he two panels. Again, the vanishing points don't line up. This is basic art taught in art classes that vanishing points are there for a reason and that's to establish where things are in the picture.
Interesting interpretation, you are saying that the gun is being drawn at least 2 feet away from Thundercracker, while to me it looked like it was drawn zero inches away, ie right in his fuckin' eye. Either could be correct, I suppose, but given the angle and context I still think it's right in his eye the way it's obscuring it so specifically, especially considering how close the characters were in the panel previous.

If we're opening this to interpretation, technically I don't think he HAS to move his forearm for that final panel beyond just straightening it forward (also he has to recolor his hand from black to purple and lengthen his arm about 6 inches or more depending on the barrel and hand's scale).
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Dom wrote:The writer is trying to keep the book from being too predictable. And, the writer has a plan and is following through on it. In the case of a back-write, the writer is being lazy because they cannot come up with any ideas that work in the setting as it is.

Costa also made clear that Ironhide's return would be difficult, if not impossible, to duplicate. (Of course, I fully expect some lazy hack to go back and change this.)
That's all fine and well and good, but don't pretend that it's also not a cheat. It's not a ripoff because it's intended and clarified, but it's still a cheat to resurrect a character.
Barry Allen surviving was back-written long after this became a problem though. In fact, Barry Allen staying dead was often an example of an exception to the problem.
*Was*, yeah. But your point is on the money.
Shock wrote:Also, I showed this page to my Mom and she said "I'd say he's dead." (when I asked her what she thought the outcome was). So it was pretty clear to her that TC was dead. At least until we started comparing how similar comic books are to soap operas and I asked her what she would think if it was in an episode of All My Children, she then said that she would expect him to come back. So apparently comic books literally are soap operas for geeks.
Ha! What funny timing, I posted that thing about the similarity to soap operas at virtually the same time you did.

Sparky wrote:I know. Point being he never confirm Holmes was dead in that story as Watson didn't actually see him go over the waterfall with Moriarty, allowing for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle a way to bring Holmes back, despite his intentions to kill him off.
And my point was that the author had intended to make it clear that the character was dead without having to show a body, but after years of audience demands, he had to retcon that to make it work. The latter work doesn't affect the intentions of the earlier work when it was written. When "The Final Problem" was written, the author's intention was to make it clear that the character could not have survived, that he most definitely died - anything written after won't change Conan Doyle's intentions when he wrote "The Final Problem", at the time he didn't need the graphic depiction of a body to kill his character definitively, he intended the letter to Watson and the inescapability of the scenario to be enough context to sell his intent, that Sherlock Holmes had gone to his grave sacrificing himself to end the biggest criminal threat known.
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See, that one's a camcorder, that one's a camera, that one's a phone, and they're doing "Speak no evil, See no evil, Hear no evil", get it?
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Re: More than Meets the Eye (IDW ongoing comic)

Post by Dominic »

That's all fine and well and good, but don't pretend that it's also not a cheat. It's not a ripoff because it's intended and clarified, but it's still a cheat to resurrect a character.
How is it a cheat when Costa planned to raise Ironhide? The "Ironhide" series was solicited when the death happened. Despite how characters on the page handled it, most readers knew that something was up.
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Re: More than Meets the Eye (IDW ongoing comic)

Post by Sparky Prime »

Jeditricks wrote:And my point was that the author had intended to make it clear that the character was dead without having to show a body, but after years of audience demands, he had to retcon that to make it work. The latter work doesn't affect the intentions of the earlier work when it was written. When "The Final Problem" was written, the author's intention was to make it clear that the character could not have survived, that he most definitely died - anything written after won't change Conan Doyle's intentions when he wrote "The Final Prqoblem", at the time he didn't need the graphic depiction of a body to kill his character definitively, he intended the letter to Watson and the inescapability of the scenario to be enough context to sell his intent, that Sherlock Holmes had gone to his grave sacrificing himself to end the biggest criminal threat known.
So much for being unconventional eh? It isn't clear that the author killed the character off if they can bring them back so easily. Sure Sir Doyle intended to kill off Holmes with "The Final Problem", and we only know that from what he said. You can't be certain of his intentions beyond that. Given how he wrote, it is it not possible he also intended it as a loophole in the event he changed his mind? It is possible to be clear that a character died with out being graphic about it you know, but that isn't how this was written. And of course he did eventually change his mind, given he did bring Holmes back. He really didn't have to retcon anything to accomplish it either because the story ends with a letter to Watson with only an assumption Holmes went over the falls. And that was the point of this example in the first place. It isn't so clear cut as you make it out to be.
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Re: More than Meets the Eye (IDW ongoing comic)

Post by Shockwave »

JediTricks wrote:
Shockwave wrote:
Dominic wrote:
And actually, the panel that shows Skwarp pointing his gun and Thundercracker looks a little off, like he's aiming just above his head or at the top of it.
That is a deliberate misreading, intentionally searching for something that might retroactively play in to a back-write.
No it isn't. Look at the panel from an artist perspective. If you follow the vanishing point of where Skywarp is aiming, it doesn't line up with where Thundercracker's head is, it's just above it (or, at best, you could say it's maybe the top of TC's head). And Skywarp's forearm isn't perfectly parallel to his weapon like it is in the panel where the shot is fired so obviously he had to move his arm betweent he two panels. Again, the vanishing points don't line up. This is basic art taught in art classes that vanishing points are there for a reason and that's to establish where things are in the picture.
Interesting interpretation, you are saying that the gun is being drawn at least 2 feet away from Thundercracker, while to me it looked like it was drawn zero inches away, ie right in his fuckin' eye. Either could be correct, I suppose, but given the angle and context I still think it's right in his eye the way it's obscuring it so specifically, especially considering how close the characters were in the panel previous.

If we're opening this to interpretation, technically I don't think he HAS to move his forearm for that final panel beyond just straightening it forward (also he has to recolor his hand from black to purple and lengthen his arm about 6 inches or more depending on the barrel and hand's scale).
Image
Shock wrote:Also, I showed this page to my Mom and she said "I'd say he's dead." (when I asked her what she thought the outcome was). So it was pretty clear to her that TC was dead. At least until we started comparing how similar comic books are to soap operas and I asked her what she would think if it was in an episode of All My Children, she then said that she would expect him to come back. So apparently comic books literally are soap operas for geeks.
Ha! What funny timing, I posted that thing about the similarity to soap operas at virtually the same time you did.
That's funny! And it's really true.

Man, I totally missed that thing with the hand, between this and that one issue the bridge out of place, the art really is inconsistent! I guess he could also be pointing at TC's eye, it's just that it's at such an odd angle that we really can't tell how far apart they really are (within reason, obviously, they're not miles apart, but it could be a difference of a few feet which would definitely change where SW is aiming).
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Re: More than Meets the Eye (IDW ongoing comic)

Post by JediTricks »

In email, Dom and I were continuing conversation of ideas related to MTMTE and he likened the comic to the sitcom "Friends". I think however that the comic is more akin to the sitcom "M*A*S*H", and just needs to be a little tighter to its framing device to earn similar admiration. Thoughts?

Dominic wrote:
That's all fine and well and good, but don't pretend that it's also not a cheat. It's not a ripoff because it's intended and clarified, but it's still a cheat to resurrect a character.
How is it a cheat when Costa planned to raise Ironhide? The "Ironhide" series was solicited when the death happened. Despite how characters on the page handled it, most readers knew that something was up.
Because he's resurrecting a dead character through arcane fantasy methods. He may be honest about bringing the character back, but the death itself is still a cheat, it's still a fictional device outside reason. That's ok, you don't need to be defensive, it's hardly alone or worthy or scorn for said cheat.

If Ironhide were a patient in a hospital having an arrhythmia and the doctors hit him with a defibrillator and his heart returned to normal rhythm , that would be an example of a story NOT cheating. If Ironhide were a patient whose heart had stopped for 5 minutes and they hit him with a defibrillator and he came back to life, that would be an example of a story cheating because that's not how defibrillators work, they don't restart hearts that have stopped (most TV shows cheat in this respect). If Ironhide were a patient whose heart stopped for 5 minutes and was given CPR and he came back to life, THAT would not be a cheat because that is how CPR is supposed to work (although it has a pretty low percentage of working).

Sparky Prime wrote:So much for being unconventional eh? It isn't clear that the author killed the character off if they can bring them back so easily. Sure Sir Doyle intended to kill off Holmes with "The Final Problem", and we only know that from what he said. You can't be certain of his intentions beyond that. Given how he wrote, it is it not possible he also intended it as a loophole in the event he changed his mind? It is possible to be clear that a character died with out being graphic about it you know, but that isn't how this was written. And of course he did eventually change his mind, given he did bring Holmes back. He really didn't have to retcon anything to accomplish it either because the story ends with a letter to Watson with only an assumption Holmes went over the falls. And that was the point of this example in the first place. It isn't so clear cut as you make it out to be.
It is clear, that's why I said previously that Conan Doyle had to retcon a fantastic tale of survival by the character to bring him back. We don't "only know that from what he said", we know that from the content and context of the story. Have you read it? I re-read it about 6 months ago, it still is plainly clear what was being conveyed by the author. He intended no loopholes, he later states he wanted to be done with the character for good, there's even a letter he wrote his mother from prior expressing that very sentiment when he felt unfulfilled by merely writing the stories, and his personal diary has shown expressing the same sentiments. It took him 8 years to return to Holmes, and even then it was in pre-death flashback stories, it took a whole decade to finally retcon Holmes' death. You are actually trying to retcon history with your argument.
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See, that one's a camcorder, that one's a camera, that one's a phone, and they're doing "Speak no evil, See no evil, Hear no evil", get it?
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