Dear Authors... Stabby, Stabby [CC]

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024
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Komentáře • 917

  • @ericduey9556
    @ericduey9556 Před 3 lety +520

    Fantasy parody idea: A guy who realizes that no one ever dies while giving their death monologue, so he's been monologuing for the past three years with a gapping chest wound to keep from dying.

    • @LoyaFrostwind
      @LoyaFrostwind Před 3 lety +5

      Ha ha! 🤣

    • @ApequH
      @ApequH Před 3 lety +2

      Hahahaha

    • @archiemcallister
      @archiemcallister Před 3 lety +103

      But he can't say anything important or he dies mid-sentence XD

    • @catelynh1020
      @catelynh1020 Před 3 lety +16

      @@archiemcallister even better

    • @geraldfrost4710
      @geraldfrost4710 Před 3 lety +9

      I'm thinking of the death scene in Masquerade, where Pratchett has the stabbed guy end and start again a few times before he talks to Mr Death.

  • @UdyKumra
    @UdyKumra Před 3 lety +1108

    "Remember the Avatar movie?"
    Nothing good ever comes of such sentences

    • @atharvadeshpande4749
      @atharvadeshpande4749 Před 3 lety +103

      What AVATAR Movie. There's no Movie in Ba sing se.

    • @_sobrao
      @_sobrao Před 3 lety +47

      There is no movie. There is no movie.

    • @billyalarie929
      @billyalarie929 Před 3 lety +29

      sir or madam or otherwise, you have made an egregious error in referencing something that does not actually exist.
      please enjoy this elevator music while we shoot off into the void at laughably extreme speeds.

    • @shaakirlamidi671
      @shaakirlamidi671 Před 3 lety +2

      If you like avatar try NARUTO .

    • @MediocreAtBesd
      @MediocreAtBesd Před 3 lety +14

      REMEMBER WHAT MOVIE? there is no such movie I have no Idea what ur talking about merph. No.

  • @rachelbronson5749
    @rachelbronson5749 Před 3 lety +507

    The whole main character not dying quickly compared to a side character dying quickly because of the same wound thing happens all the time in movies and tv as well, drives me nuts 😅

    • @alexanderwheeler3943
      @alexanderwheeler3943 Před 3 lety +6

      I would make an exception to this in cases like Boromir. One hit dead and the whole scene deflates

    • @rachelbronson5749
      @rachelbronson5749 Před 3 lety +1

      @@alexanderwheeler3943 Yeah there definitely are times where it doesn’t happen this way. Great example!

    • @l-mnf6517
      @l-mnf6517 Před 3 lety +2

      Spoiler - Perfect example of this idea: Avenger Infinity War...

    • @rachelbronson5749
      @rachelbronson5749 Před 3 lety

      @@l-mnf6517 Most definitely!

    • @Crimtaku
      @Crimtaku Před 3 lety +8

      I would like to say that while sometimes death is instant or quick, there is also accounts of people who have stayed up, still fighting for several minutes with multiple lethal wounds before collapsing. (Found only one reference quickly that one being video called "People sometimes fought on after massive wounds" from channel
      "scholagladiatoria" but I am quite certain that is not the only video I have seen on the topic. On the other hand, this might be one of those "just because your correct doesn't mean your right" times where even when you could be historically accurate it would still feel off.

  • @sorawill
    @sorawill Před 3 lety +311

    About the "How long can someone actually say their farewells whilst dying?"... Well, quite long, actually. I worked at a trauma center here in Brazil, and we see these man with 5-6 gunshot wounds to the abdomen and chest, and are still alive and talking, 12 stab wounds and to the chest and just waiting for a doctor to see them, people with their brains visibly coming out from holes in the skull and are just fine. There was this one guy who was spanked, stabbed, burned and shot and he was still alive for hours after, and one of the shots was in his brain. So it can really take a looong time for someone seemenly dying to actually die.

    • @joaoassumpcao3347
      @joaoassumpcao3347 Před 3 lety +66

      Seems like people writing books should come to brazil, huh

    • @ASmartNameForMe
      @ASmartNameForMe Před 3 lety +31

      @@joaoassumpcao3347 or literately anywhere with a high crime rate because fuck that Brazil tickets are expensive. I'd love to go but not during a recession thanks

    • @graysonbaker1744
      @graysonbaker1744 Před 3 lety +13

      Spanked?

    • @sorawill
      @sorawill Před 3 lety +22

      @@graysonbaker1744 Beaten*

    • @angelartamesia2
      @angelartamesia2 Před 3 lety +5

      Thanks for the comfort, I can say farewell to my dad and grandparents without regrets! ( very far into the future, of course)

  • @FmFpF1992
    @FmFpF1992 Před 3 lety +411

    To be fair, a stab wound (even multiple) are slow agonizing deaths in most cases. Movies do blade wounds a disservice by making it seem to the general public as if they are an instant kill. Some may be depending on internal trauma or how clean or rough the wound is. If a major artery is not cut (the body has several), they may take a while to die. This is why many armies had reserves follow the main army and just finish off the wounded enemies....

    • @hannanorstedt8753
      @hannanorstedt8753 Před 3 lety +80

      Yes! Did research on this kind of stuff for my own writing, and movies make up their own rules. Smashing heads into a wall three times over and the person is still cool to fight back AND win. One stab wound? Instant death. Not how it works in real life

    • @atharvadeshpande4749
      @atharvadeshpande4749 Před 3 lety +19

      yeah like an artery in the throat or the artery in the shoulder can kill faster instead of a Abdomen wound (depends on the depth of it though) or wrists takes a lot of time to kill the victim.

    • @Anna133199
      @Anna133199 Před 3 lety +9

      "This is why many armies had reserves follow the main army and just finish off the wounded enemies." That's kind of them. I kind of assumed most armies would let them die slowly in agony for however long it'd take them to die from their wounds/dehydration/other factors.

    • @austintheamerican3784
      @austintheamerican3784 Před 3 lety +7

      If you miss arteries and vitals you could theoretically survive depending if you can get to medical attention-

    • @LoisoPondohva
      @LoisoPondohva Před 3 lety +16

      @@austintheamerican3784 there are a lot of examples of people surviving dozens of wounds that are fatal in movies.
      I think the record is an American robber who survived 62 bullet wounds.

  • @korgaupisc129
    @korgaupisc129 Před 3 lety +472

    I really love how the death of Sirius is handled in Harry Potter. Harry is so sure he can talk to him through this mirror, and then he is certain Sirius will come back as a ghost, but he doesn't and that really got me, it broke my heart

    • @zainabr2245
      @zainabr2245 Před 3 lety +48

      Sirius' death is, to this day, the saddest I've read; almost a decade later, and I'm still not over it

    • @korgaupisc129
      @korgaupisc129 Před 3 lety +10

      @@zainabr2245 absolutely 😭😭

    • @jakehopkins6989
      @jakehopkins6989 Před 3 lety +5

      @@zainabr2245 What about the Red Wedding? Robb and Catelyn?

    • @user-yq2oq1qh3g
      @user-yq2oq1qh3g Před 3 lety +17

      Harry was like...desperate to get back sirius....😭😭😭

    • @zainabr2245
      @zainabr2245 Před 3 lety

      @@jakehopkins6989 yeah that's a good one, too. I've only watched it though, haven't read it, so perhaps that's why it didn't come to mind

  • @FouEliane
    @FouEliane Před 3 lety +666

    Most of the time people’s last word are something like “ah f*ck” and I want more of that.

    • @jackwriter1908
      @jackwriter1908 Před 3 lety +56

      In some movies where the bad guys are blown up with bombs and things like that, the moment they realise it...
      They don't run away like the heroes, they accept their defeat. And because of that, even if the bad guy was I don't know a child murderer I have still respect, because they accept it. And also say sometimes „Ah F*ck“

    • @nathanhall9345
      @nathanhall9345 Před 3 lety +54

      Howard Tayler gave the example of having a character's last thought be, "Wait, but I haven't--"
      And the fact I remember that example years later says something.

    • @rhydes_
      @rhydes_ Před 3 lety +24

      @@nathanhall9345 this had me shaking. Same with "And don't forget to..." but this one's such a let down that it's not used, like, ever

    • @iMirandaJae
      @iMirandaJae Před 3 lety +15

      @@rhydes_ oof yesss. And another one that really hurts is when a dying character is near someone other than the person or people they care about most, and try to ask them to pass on a message like "Tell (so and so) that -" but die before they can finish. It's heartbreaking for the character who died since they couldn't get their final thoughts out in time, and for the person they asked to pass it on since they have to deliver an incomplete message to the loved one(s), and especially for the loved one(s) who not only couldn't be there in those final moments, but will live the rest of their lives not knowing what that person's final words to them would have been. 😭

    • @DarthSnugglePuss
      @DarthSnugglePuss Před 3 lety +4

      I’m gonna have a character’s last words be “Ah, beans.”

  • @FlorTedesco
    @FlorTedesco Před 3 lety +85

    ⚠ Mockingjay spoilers ⚠ The way Katniss breaks down way after Prim dies because she is telling the cat and by doing so, making it feel real, GOT ME SO GOOD. It was perfect. I feel like you wanted to give this example so bad haha

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 Před 3 lety +7

      That is the perfect scene for grief, remembering something that you couldn't grieve for fully in the moment. Then it hits you like a touch when it sparks a memory, when you have time to grieve.

  • @rayamaritza4172
    @rayamaritza4172 Před 3 lety +75

    When you were talking about characters magically having time for all kinds of stuff during a battle all I could think about was how Elizabeth and Will got married while fighting in Pirates of the Caribbean 😂😂

    • @caileyrookids
      @caileyrookids Před 3 lety +26

      Same. In their defense, though, there was a lot of fighting and killing between words. There wasn't an actual pause for any of it; they just fit stuff in where they could.

    • @rayamaritza4172
      @rayamaritza4172 Před 3 lety +14

      @@caileyrookids It was a great scene

    • @caileyrookids
      @caileyrookids Před 3 lety +4

      @@rayamaritza4172 Agreed.

  • @abbys6260
    @abbys6260 Před 3 lety +259

    I hate "final words" so much. I'm a nurse in a nursing home and never have I seen someone give a heartfelt goodbye, close their eyes and die.
    Also on a related note if you are going to write a medical scene ask you healthcare friends if it makes sense. Nothing brings me out of the story more than an unrealistic medical scene.

    • @ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108
      @ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108 Před 3 lety +6

      I don’t have any medical friends but if I want to write a medical scene that is not based off of something in my fictional world with its own rules, I am going to ask this comment if that’s okay. Thanks and sorry in advance!!

    • @abbys6260
      @abbys6260 Před 3 lety

      @@ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108 this agreeable! Lol

    • @ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108
      @ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108 Před 3 lety

      @@abbys6260 okay, thank you!

    • @ransherman1611
      @ransherman1611 Před 3 lety +9

      it's interesting, the part about final goodbye. my grandma, may she rest in peace, had cancer and knew her time is limited so she had a onr on one talk with each of us. and while she did die, it was months later. so yeah, she had her final goodbye, but didn't just die right after.
      PS: in a scale of 1-10 how would you rate the medical accuracy in scrubs?

    • @abbys6260
      @abbys6260 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ransherman1611 I'm so glad you got to say goodbye in a special way like that.
      Srubs: I'm bad at ranking stuff with a number, but the stuff that is supposed to be serious is actually surprisingly accurate. The biggest difference between the show and reality is that doctor's aren't going to have that much of a hand on approach. A lot (but not all) of the things they do would be delegated to a nurse

  • @Grace-zr8vv
    @Grace-zr8vv Před 3 lety +348

    Me, a wannabe author
    Takes out pen and paper* writes everything down*
    This is good

    • @prabhavchaturvedi7314
      @prabhavchaturvedi7314 Před 3 lety +22

      Me too!!
      Good luck on your writing endeavours, fellow dreamer!

    • @dolphone6748
      @dolphone6748 Před 3 lety +14

      SAME I have a writing youtube playlist and it is like 50% Dear Authors

    • @Grace-zr8vv
      @Grace-zr8vv Před 3 lety +5

      @@dolphone6748 Omg yes can you send it to me writing inspiration is always welcome!!

    • @bitsmalls933
      @bitsmalls933 Před 3 lety +8

      Don’t say wannabe! If you write, your a writer! Have confidence in yourselves and get some close friends or/and family to read over your WIPs or completed stories. Getting opinions and criticism is very good when it’s not someone being plain mean.

    • @ladyi9178
      @ladyi9178 Před 3 lety +2

      I whish I could do that. I always think about my stories in the weirdest ways but all these doesn't make any sence ;-;

  • @madisonsalter4527
    @madisonsalter4527 Před 3 lety +73

    14:36 To add onto that being a real thing: when my grandpa died in 2016, a few days after the entire family went to eat at his favorite restaurant that we went to a lot when he was alive. There was a total of about 12 people, so in the chaos, I went to go tell my grandpa something about the koi fish they had outside- I don't remember specifics. I knew he was dead. It had been days. So I turned to my aunt and made the comment, "I was just about to ask where grandpa was" and we spent the lunch kinda quiet

    • @luuuuux_
      @luuuuux_ Před 3 lety +19

      That was kinda sad but mostly bittersweet. Hope you’re doing better now

    • @rodgerlang884
      @rodgerlang884 Před 3 lety

      That would be such a Monty Python scenario

  • @FantasyTenshi
    @FantasyTenshi Před 3 lety +142

    I haven't seen this done in books too often, but I really hate it when a character in a series or anime or something suddenly gets all the attention in one episode, where previously they were just kind of there. You just know the writers want you to attach yourself to this character and then BAM they die at the end of the episode for shock or whatever.

    • @nathanhall9345
      @nathanhall9345 Před 3 lety +11

      I won't say where, but there's an example in the Netflix Marvel series where I thought this was happening, but the writers were very aware of it.

    • @wariolandgoldpiramid
      @wariolandgoldpiramid Před 3 lety +5

      This is why Expose is the worst episode of LOST

    • @z-beeblebrox
      @z-beeblebrox Před 3 lety +13

      To use a trading term, this is what I call a 'pump and dump' moment. The writer wants a dramatic death scene and knows they fucked up because nobody cares about this character, so the writer pours as much attention as possible onto the character at the last minute, hoping they can dupe the audience into caring right before they die.

    • @matthewpatrick7263
      @matthewpatrick7263 Před 3 lety +2

      How many times did they do that in "The Walking Dead?"

    • @FantasyTenshi
      @FantasyTenshi Před 3 lety +3

      @@z-beeblebrox exactly! I like the term pump of dump :D

  • @lindsaymorrison7519
    @lindsaymorrison7519 Před 3 lety +115

    If you REALLY want a death monologue, research an injury and make it realistic. One of my favorite death scenes in television made sense because a character still had the weapon in her stomach, a healer came over and explained to her fiance that nothing could be done, whenever the weapon was removed she would die (explained this pretty much just by looking at him), and she was able to have her final words with him, realized what the healer's face meant, and then pulled the weapon out of her body so her fiance and friends wouldn't have to. It slayed me, and it seems realistic.

    • @ginge641
      @ginge641 Před 3 lety +1

      Sauce?

    • @lindsaymorrison7519
      @lindsaymorrison7519 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ginge641 I don't understand what you're asking, but if that's the name of the TV show... no

    • @ginge641
      @ginge641 Před 3 lety +8

      @@lindsaymorrison7519 Sauce = source. I was asking what show this is from.

    • @coffeedude
      @coffeedude Před 3 lety +21

      @@ginge641 internet slang going wrong

    • @persismedina288
      @persismedina288 Před 3 lety +2

      Maybe I’m wrong but that kinda sounds like the end of Robin Hood season 2 by BBC. Again, I could be wrong.

  • @alphanight-fang6423
    @alphanight-fang6423 Před 3 lety +62

    Random Idea: What if a character doesn't realize their friend died till after the battle when they're collecting/counting the bodies? Especially if they're not used to seeing their friend in armor. They pass by the bodies of comrades, it hurts but it doesn't truly sting because the MC didn't know them well. Then they pass by one body and when they take off their helmet they realize it was a major character. Then they mourn. No long monologue, no stopping battle to mourn, just a sudden punch in the gut after a celebration.

    • @ribhuhooja3137
      @ribhuhooja3137 Před 3 lety +12

      Three words: Attack on Titan

    • @Kibatsume1
      @Kibatsume1 Před 3 lety +1

      Mikhail by nash lateney. She did a beautiful job writing the after war scene

    • @melancholygirl7793
      @melancholygirl7793 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ribhuhooja3137 His death was so sad and unexpected, especially when you learn the truth.

    • @ribhuhooja3137
      @ribhuhooja3137 Před 3 lety +2

      @@melancholygirl7793 No one even half saw it coming! (Sorry). But it's sad how it was so pointless in the end

    • @melancholygirl7793
      @melancholygirl7793 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ribhuhooja3137 Yeah, butbat least he got justice and didn't just die without anyone knowing the truth

  • @kayleighbrown459
    @kayleighbrown459 Před 3 lety +24

    I'd argue that character's reaction to death is honestly much more important and powerful than the deaths themselves. Best example I can think of is the first Lord of the Rings movie where Gandulf "dies." It's tragic, but I wouldn't say that scene in itself is all that sad. However, the scene directly after where the Hobbits are uncontrollably sobbing, Gimli's having to be held back from running back into the mine, Legolas is just kinda wandering around in a daze not sure how to comprehend mortality and Aragon's just trying to keep everyone going because they don't even have time to grieve.
    THAT shit is powerful.

  • @mikem1585
    @mikem1585 Před 3 lety +102

    I don’t really mind the death-monologue as long as it isn’t overused (and the surrounding action/danger has passed). I know we’re talking books and not movies, but the Boromir/Aragorn scene in fellowship of the ring is one of my favorites.

    • @thanks8589
      @thanks8589 Před 3 lety +3

      From what I remember it also happens in the book

    • @Saidor570
      @Saidor570 Před 3 lety +6

      @@thanks8589 True, but I checked and the dialogue is shorter. I preferred the scene in the movie though, one of the most emotional death scenes in fiction!

    • @thanks8589
      @thanks8589 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Saidor570 Ah ok. And I agree. It's just 😚👌 (chef's *forehead* kiss)

    • @ApequH
      @ApequH Před 3 lety +4

      I balled my eyes out the first time I read this. The deversity in deaths in Lotr is good, I liked what he did with Theoden, it wasn't grand, id stuff like that happens in battle

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 Před 3 lety +1

      And most deaths are like that unless they have an artery cut and bleeding out in a minute/minutes. If I remember correctly, unless it's an instant death, most war wounds if treated on site should be seen with in an hour, and they will have a good chance of surviving. Of course this depends on the wound and its severity. If it's a severe guy wound the person will problably die with in the next few hours or day from sepsis, or organ failure.

  • @zofiabochenska1240
    @zofiabochenska1240 Před 3 lety +93

    I recently cried on two funeral scenes. The death didn't get me, but the mourning during the funerals - so emotional!

    • @ender_voide9344
      @ender_voide9344 Před 3 lety +6

      That was me in endgame (Spoilers? does Endgame need spoilers?) I wasn't sad when Tony stark died, but I was in tears when I saw his daughter and wife, and the whole funeral I was just in tears lol, and I don't cry in movies much (sans Pixar... freaking Pixar)

    • @user-kt7kj8cj2q
      @user-kt7kj8cj2q Před 3 lety +2

      Yes!!! In (Spoiler) The Magicians it is handled so well in several Scenes.

  • @blazerocks9844
    @blazerocks9844 Před 3 lety +80

    I only like the resurrection trope of when the character comes back they are warped or completely different. Like the resurrected character is not able to feel emotion or seemingly a completely different character after being brought back and the main character has to feel that pain of realizing that who they brought back is not actually who they wanted.

    • @ransherman1611
      @ransherman1611 Před 3 lety +3

      that's really good! i believe i read a book with a plot like that, but can't recall.
      (i know song of ice and fire had something like that, but not with a main character, so it can't be what i'm thinking of)

    • @spaantz
      @spaantz Před 3 lety +6

      Pet Semetary?

    • @LoyaFrostwind
      @LoyaFrostwind Před 3 lety +3

      Buffy

    • @dogski2822
      @dogski2822 Před 3 lety +1

      The Magisterium series does that. I’m not going to spoil the details here, but I really like how it's done.

    • @runakovacs4759
      @runakovacs4759 Před 3 lety

      I only like the resurrection trope when it's genuine. Screw dying, we're exalted servants of the Seldarine. 10 diamonds is enough to bring someone back perfectly. I hate the grimderp takes.

  • @silvin_ink
    @silvin_ink Před 3 lety +67

    Ways to handle character deaths well?
    ...
    "I'm a leaf on the wind, watch how I -"

    • @liam1558
      @liam1558 Před 3 lety +1

      aaaaaaaa :'(

    • @MagusMarquillin
      @MagusMarquillin Před 3 lety +1

      "I don't care *what* you believe, _just believe"_
      Ohhhh, so sad. Well, at least we got the dramatic requisite casualty over with...

    • @frankbrooks1393
      @frankbrooks1393 Před 3 lety

      Firefly fan! Perfect example!

    • @ApequH
      @ApequH Před 3 lety +3

      I'm still in denial of that scene. It hasn't happened. Nope. Going back to watch Firefly, where everyone is fine (weird, but fine)

    • @michaelolsen7000
      @michaelolsen7000 Před 3 lety +2

      Too soon. It will always be too soon with this one.

  • @pikameer8325
    @pikameer8325 Před 3 lety +115

    Me, who primarily reads YA: You guys are getting character deaths?

    • @emc2119
      @emc2119 Před 3 lety +10

      I manly read YA and my books have quite a bit of character deaths.

    • @pikameer8325
      @pikameer8325 Před 3 lety

      @@emc2119 Any good recs?

    • @emc2119
      @emc2119 Před 3 lety +6

      @@pikameer8325 I have been reading stuff in the riordan verse (Percy Jackson,Heroes of Olympus, and later series) and there many characters that die that you have at least some attachment too, but that is in the later books and series. Also I do believe quite a few people die in the his dark materials series. Those are what I can think of off the top of my head sorry if this is long.
      P.S. I know both of those series are technically middle grade novels, but is middle grade novels have character deaths then YA should. Again sorry for how long this is.

    • @harleythegremlin8709
      @harleythegremlin8709 Před 3 lety +6

      @@pikameer8325 here, have some divergent

    • @alexmarkadonis7179
      @alexmarkadonis7179 Před 3 lety +6

      That should not count. Allegiant should not have been.

  • @ryanratchford2530
    @ryanratchford2530 Před 3 lety +122

    I strongly disagree with what you said about how movies vs books slow down time. I think novels have much more ability to play with the passage of time & stretching out a single second by emphasising descriptions & characters thoughts whereas films are limited to real time and can only do slow mo in very rare and risky opitunities.

    • @ApequH
      @ApequH Před 3 lety +19

      Yes! I completely agree! You can zoom in on the thoughts and feelings of a character without anytime passing. As long as you don't describe them doing stuff

    • @intergalacticalcommiteeofp9807
      @intergalacticalcommiteeofp9807 Před 3 lety +5

      Yes but I feel this particular situation just can't be done. If they have too much time to think, to analyse their feelings, to take in how the battlefield looks, all of which would slow down a scene, we're back at the problem of 'how aren't you dead yet?'.

    • @ApequH
      @ApequH Před 3 lety +4

      @@intergalacticalcommiteeofp9807 Analysing, or having whole strands of thought wouldn't work. But detailed snap observations, overwhelming feelings and a realisation of some sort can be done

    • @graysonbaker1744
      @graysonbaker1744 Před 3 lety +1

      Oh yeah. There are a lot of ways to dilate time in prose. Not a whole lot of 'em in film.

  • @michaelburke4048
    @michaelburke4048 Před 3 lety +13

    The whole "stopping the battle to mourn somebody" reminds me of when there's a conversation going in a moving car. I stress out so badly. WATCH THE FREAKIN' ROAD!

  • @SpectrumDT
    @SpectrumDT Před 3 lety +5

    Regarding battlefield mourning: As far as I know in a large battle not everyone would be fighting all the time. You have formations several ranks deep and you have reserves. If a man in a formation falls, the formation can close ranks about him and pull him away from the front.
    And if you have a large battle where people are not fighting in formation, then you have a stupid battle. 😅

  • @theonlyslagathor
    @theonlyslagathor Před 3 lety +75

    Lowkey love manga/animes that have characters fighting even after losing like all their blood because then I just sit there and go "fam, you've been injured and bleeding for the past 20 chapters, you need to go see a doctor maybe or just drop dead now"
    But I also got a C in Human Anatomy so what do I know.

    • @archlectoryarvi2873
      @archlectoryarvi2873 Před 3 lety +15

      Don't forget the gallons of blood from every perveted nosebleed 😁

    • @booklover462
      @booklover462 Před 3 lety +3

      Seven deadly sins, is all I say...

    • @taylor_green_9
      @taylor_green_9 Před 3 lety +17

      I love Bleach. "Damnit, both my lungs are cut in half. This is gonna take a few days to heal from". To be fair, they aren't human, but it's still pretty funny

    • @MagillanicaLouM
      @MagillanicaLouM Před 3 lety +7

      @@taylor_green_9 Dying in death when it comes to Bleach lol

    • @BlackXSunlight
      @BlackXSunlight Před 3 lety +2

      @@taylor_green_9 remember when Gin struck down a guy by surprise because “those hero types always save up all their strength for one last big attack when you think they’re down for the count”

  • @Thommy2n
    @Thommy2n Před 3 lety +3

    "Remember the Avatar movie?"
    ...Oh gods! The memories are resurfacing!!!
    *Pulls out whisky*
    But not for long.

  • @giuliakenway6500
    @giuliakenway6500 Před 3 lety +13

    The reaction of a loved one being more heartbreaking than the actual death made me think of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (specifically the movie).
    Cedric dying - terrible and sad, but no time to mourn. Cedric's dad being in total agony on the sight of his dead son's body later - oof. Makes me cry every time.

  • @abrahamakucewich8645
    @abrahamakucewich8645 Před 3 lety +44

    Well regarding realistic deaths, I often prefer a poetic/dramatic final moment over what is realistic. Spoilers for the play of Julius Caesar (even though it's based on historic events), but I think Julius Caesar's death in the play is far more moving and touching than what probably happened in real life. In real life he probably didn't say 'et tu, brute?' since he had over 20 stab wounds at the time. Is the play realistic? No not at all, but it is far more moving and iconic than what really happened. I don't think realism is necessarily better, I really think it is all about how it is executed (pun intended).

    • @ScrollwormoftheFanWings
      @ScrollwormoftheFanWings Před 3 lety +6

      Actually, only five of Caesar’s 23 wounds were taken while he was still alive. A slash to the face, and stabs to the arm, torso (specifically the Aaorta), and finally, by Brutus, the groin. Historians report that he was silent during the entire affair until Brutus stepped forth, at which point he said “You too, my child?” As their relationship was more father-son than a friendship. Out of around sixty conspirators, he was wounded five times while alive, though only the second wound to the chest was fatal, and eighteen times when already dead. So, yes, he could have and did say something similar in reality. Additionally, if you have the entire story behind the assassination, I personally find it more interesting and moving than the play.

    • @abrahamakucewich8645
      @abrahamakucewich8645 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ScrollwormoftheFanWings Interesting. I had previously read that his famous last words were a fabrication and honestly didn't know that there was an original quote that was similar. However, after doing a bit of research, I see that the original quote comes from a historian (Suetonius) who was writing over 125 years after Caesar's death so those final words could also be a fabrication as well. Either way it's good to learn something new.

    • @LuluBeLulu
      @LuluBeLulu Před 3 lety

      I think there is a time and place for each. Each type of death sends a different type of message.

  • @anotherhappyday93
    @anotherhappyday93 Před 3 lety +4

    I do love a good flashback to a dead character. It's cool when an author gives us more information about a character without bringing them back to life.

  • @mermanhellville
    @mermanhellville Před 3 lety +41

    Apparently it can be suprisingly hard to kill someone (depends on what exactly is the injury, like the lungs you mentioned :p) so I wouldn't automatically go to "yo, that just doesn't check out!" but it is always weird if it's perfectly timed so they say their thing and then drop dead immediately

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 Před 3 lety +2

      Very true on the lungs. You really only need one lung to survive. The danger of the second lung is air building up in the chest cavity(and of course all the other problems like blood in the other lung, and infection ect...)
      My mom had a friend who's dad was a navy diver. One of his lungs was popped while replacing a propeller on a warship in rough seas. He survived. He couldn't do a ton of exercise, but he made by

  • @leviackerman1799
    @leviackerman1799 Před 3 lety +72

    The only thing that can't stretch the character deaths for a whole minute and takes the breath out of you and it works really well...
    Guess what it is?
    Avada Kedavra!!

  • @thecraziestcrayon
    @thecraziestcrayon Před 3 lety +9

    A favorite series of my with good death scenes is Percy Jackson. Riordan knows how to hit you in the feels. I cried throughout the series at the various deaths ( won't spoil, if you know you know). He showed the characters' reactions in the moment, and the lingering after effects. The characters he killed weren't side ones, they were main characters we fought alongside, we laughed with, we rooted for. Dude knows his death.

  • @robertdullnig3625
    @robertdullnig3625 Před 3 lety +13

    Character dies. Everyone mourns.
    DIO: One second has passed.

  • @moonblaze2713
    @moonblaze2713 Před 3 lety +4

    Counter to the first point, specifically "You can't slow down time in a book."
    One of my favorite story involves a character dying via beheading in the middle of a battle, which the main character witnesses. It takes a paragraph to describe the (fully helmeted so it's not overly disgusting) head falling through the air, emphasizing the feeling of unreality the main character was experiencing. Disbelieving I'm the moment of witnessing it.
    That was a moment that felt like what you described a movie doing. Because the main character felt like they experienced it in slow motion, the writer was able to make it work the way you described the movies do. So... yeah, books can do that, if they do it right.

  • @Lokster71
    @Lokster71 Před 3 lety +23

    I always think long death speeches are fine. It's such a trope in art. I mean in opera characters get a lot of singing to do whilst they die. In my old age, I've come to like it when things are more artificial than stone-cold realism. I also have a soft spot for characters trying to hold in their emotions in the style of British films of the 30s, 40s, and 50s. There's something heartbreaking about someone trying not to break more than all the tears. But both these things are personal taste I accept.

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 Před 3 lety +3

      There is also a sense of realism of people not dying instantly. It often takes hours, so if it's modern a gut wound isn't often fatal unless it's really bad.
      Heck in the 1400s king Richard V was hit in the face by an arrow that rested on the base of his skull by his brainstem. He survived, he just broke the arrow shift and continued fighting/commanding the army until the battle was over.
      I do like what you said that it is art, and a play. Its about the story behind it.

  • @danielmasters405
    @danielmasters405 Před 3 lety +12

    Can we talk about how iconic that sweater is

  • @alliew31
    @alliew31 Před 3 lety +47

    Murphy: Sometimes I don’t care about the character, but I feel bad seeing the characters I like broken up over it.
    *cough cough* One Piece

    • @ZamWeazle
      @ZamWeazle Před 3 lety +1

      I'm sick of hearing about One piece! Lol 😆

    • @ZielonaPastela
      @ZielonaPastela Před 3 lety

      A certain sibling's death had me broken for DAYS if not WEEKS. I couldn't even watch openings during that time beacuse of the imagery...

  • @julzbehr6696
    @julzbehr6696 Před 3 lety +4

    I’m fine with longer scenes after sword stabbing, because most knife wounds irl don’t kill fast. But I need internal consistency. The side-character gets to lie around coughing and whatnot as long as the main character gets to monologue, if that’s what the author wants.

  • @chadpoorman5055
    @chadpoorman5055 Před 3 lety +14

    When the Author stops in the middle of the battle to mourn it is an homage to the Illiad. They stop the battle of Troy and have a full on Olympic games.

    • @hotplotsandsynonyms
      @hotplotsandsynonyms Před 3 lety +6

      This only works if the actual battle stops at the death. If the battle keeps going, then the author might think they're doing a tribute but they're actually writing an opposing army who is like "Huh....that guy looks upset. We'll kill him later."

    • @chadpoorman5055
      @chadpoorman5055 Před 3 lety +4

      I wish more books did this. Admittedly the Trojan war functioned more like a civil war rather than 2 different cultures.

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 Před 3 lety +1

      I believe during ww2 when McArthur came to the island the us was taking the snipers stopped shooting that day to show their respects to the leader of the opposing army.

    • @KezanzatheGreat
      @KezanzatheGreat Před 3 lety +2

      This reminds me of the Christmas truce of WWI. Not only did they have a one-day truce (that started with a sing-off of "Silent Night" in German and in English and went on to include a game of ball), but the men also didn't want to fight each other anymore when the war resumed afterwards.
      Getting to know an enemy up close is powerful.

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 Před 3 lety

      @@KezanzatheGreat I heard that many of those men were done fighting and were pulled off the front. If more of the army had that, maybe the war would have ended then and there.

  • @ella_melchionna
    @ella_melchionna Před 3 lety +5

    “Stabby, Stabby” is my favorite title of this series by far.

  • @taylor_green_9
    @taylor_green_9 Před 3 lety +61

    This is only kind of related, but I hate when a character that's supposed to be a good person kills for the first time (in self-defence, of course) and has no reaction or feelings about it, or worse, celebrates their kill. Looking at you, Finn from Star Wars

    • @borb5663
      @borb5663 Před 3 lety +8

      Yes! I generally find it quite disturbing how less impact killing someone can have on a character. It’s especially strange when the „good guys“ look forward to battles etc. bEcAuSe Of ThE eXiTeMeNt.

    • @banderezztonylapore9493
      @banderezztonylapore9493 Před 3 lety +13

      You clearly haven’t been around a lot of military men... at least 50% of them are like this at least outwardly... as to what is going on in their head we will never know unless they open up. In my experience much of this is a front but some are that way through and through. Men of war feel they must look strong. Movies that don’t go into interior monologues are only showing you the visuals and not what is actually going on in their head. Books can express this if they are written from that point of view but if it’s not a viewpoint character then you really can’t judge the true emotional impact, motivation, or intent...

    • @taylor_green_9
      @taylor_green_9 Před 3 lety +7

      @@banderezztonylapore9493 A) A good story is supposed to show every major character's true feelings about important events. B) Most of these characters aren't even real soldiers; they're just normal people, often even kids, who are forced to fight by circumstances or destiny

    • @banderezztonylapore9493
      @banderezztonylapore9493 Před 3 lety +6

      @@taylor_green_9 really? I wasn’t aware that there was a rule book for good stories.

    • @melancholygirl7793
      @melancholygirl7793 Před 3 lety +9

      @@taylor_green_9 Inverted in Attack on Titan by Armin, he puked his guts out after he killed a woman in self defence, even though he had no hesitation to off her.

  • @MagillanicaLouM
    @MagillanicaLouM Před 3 lety +21

    *slowdown frame rate of the battle*
    Movies lag confirmed

  • @Yondi1000
    @Yondi1000 Před 3 lety +37

    Oooh this sounds like a good topic. I am bummed I missed the community tab post.

  • @patrickhf8298
    @patrickhf8298 Před 3 lety +2

    Something I want to bring in the table:
    Is important to show your characters grieving at the right moments, but is also important to remember not everybody is going to grief the same. A really good example, eventhoug is a Netflix show, is The Haunting of Hill House. Grief is basically the theme of the show.

  • @everestcanyon5647
    @everestcanyon5647 Před 3 lety +40

    What if a character looses somebody they are so close to, they literally cannot cope, so the other, slightly less attached characters, shield them off to give them time to mourn?

    • @hopefulmayhem5744
      @hopefulmayhem5744 Před 3 lety +1

      @Nina Brandon Sanderson does exactly this with Kaladin in palace. He is aware of his side pushing past him to take that hall.

    • @z-beeblebrox
      @z-beeblebrox Před 3 lety +7

      There's nothing wrong with that, as long as you remain aware of how this decision impacts the characters, later. Don't just let everyone brush it off as part of the job - that was them going above and beyond for someone.

    • @GnarledStaff
      @GnarledStaff Před 3 lety +4

      That can work really well. Another thing that works is having the main character scream out their grief and get injured because of it. Suddenly they are on the defensive, at a disadvantage because they are bleeding and have fewer friends to come to their aid.
      Let the main character lose an advantage they had. Maybe the enemy lines broke and the enemy is fleeing but the MC is not pursuing because their is griefe. Maybe a wounded enemy gets away because the MC rishes to their friends side (dealing with the enemy if they are still there though)
      As long as the loss of time has consequences you can do a lot with grief reactions.
      Hell, your MC could charge blindly into the enemy lines. This could route them, but if could also cause more friendly casualties.
      - I have definitely seen a death causing berserk reaction that was poorly executed lead to an unsatisfying end of a battle. (Mercedes Lackey). Don't treat anger as a magickal battle ender. It still needs to make sense that the battle would end.

    • @Beto_Serrano
      @Beto_Serrano Před 3 lety +1

      I was actually thinking on doing that for my novel.
      Like, a character dies and MC just drops there, in total shock in the middle of the battle and the other characters rush to defend him because he literally stopped fighting and many soldiers are trying to kill him.

    • @LuluBeLulu
      @LuluBeLulu Před 3 lety

      @@Beto_Serrano for a moment it would be ok, but they would need to get up eventually. They wouldnt be able to be defended forever unless it is near the very end of the battle and close to victory or surrender

  • @morrigang5095
    @morrigang5095 Před 3 lety +43

    To elaborate:
    - One thing I always appreciate is when the writer will kill characters with no warning, no last eye-contact moments, and no heartfelt goodbyes. Life is unfair, death is no different. It won't wait on you. Sometimes characters just die and that's it. (I realize this is not a book, but The Departed does this VERY well)
    - I hate when the writer spends time trying to make you cry over a death that we know is only temporary. Like Superman in Bat vs Supes. Like, come on. It's Superman, he won't stay dead. It's as though they think we aren't intelligent enough to reason they will be back. I don't mind seeing genuine reactions by other characters, but don't try to make us cry. It's insulting and cheap.
    - Stupid incidents or freak accidents as a cause of death are, done well, appreciated. As in they should be used to illustrate the theme or something. The majority of people don't go down in flames of glory. Sometimes they trip on a hose. Other times they choke on a hot dog. As I said earlier, life is unfair. We shouldn't show it any differently.
    - One last thing- this sort of relates to the freak accident area, but I'll zone into something a little more specific. I would like to see the main character or even a side character accidentally kill their best friend/father figure/child figure person/etc. after building up a meaningful relationship with them. Whether they kill a side character or the side character kills the protagonist. That would be interesting!
    Just some thoughts

    • @saram9434
      @saram9434 Před 3 lety +1

      You should watch attack on titan, every death has meaning, and the writing is so dark and good ~☹❤

    • @morrigang5095
      @morrigang5095 Před 3 lety +2

      @@saram9434 Thanks! I'll look into that!

    • @ZookieFyre
      @ZookieFyre Před 3 lety +5

      How to Train Your Dragon 2 does this surprisingly well, especially related to that last point

    • @VenathTehN3RD
      @VenathTehN3RD Před 3 lety

      Honestly, the DCEU *could* have been a good opportunity to have a very genuine and touching Superman death if they'd actually taken their time to work their way up to that story arc. The actors aren't going to be able to play the characters forever, after all. Instead of trying to cram it into the second movie of the franchise (along with half a dozen other famous story arcs), save that for decade down the line when the actor is ready to leave the character behind and give them a legit heartfelt sendoff. But as you said, "killing" them in the second movie and acting like "Oh it's totally, seriously for realsies guys" feels more insulting than dramatic.

    • @graysonbaker1744
      @graysonbaker1744 Před 3 lety +2

      The problem with all that is it's unsatisfying. Writing fiction doesn't mean it necessarily has to deal with realism. That's why it's called fiction. When you're a writer, you use whatever's the best tool in your box to get your point across, and usually the point is catharsis. It's satisfying to get those moments, and it does justice to the character. Killing off characters in such an inglorious manner is just kind of sadistic and cruel.

  • @UdyKumra
    @UdyKumra Před 3 lety +6

    Dumbledore's death is one of the best deaths I've seen in fantasy. The immediate impact of his death was tragic because it felt pointless when they realized that the thing that he and Harry had gone after wasn't even real, and then in the long term things were so clever that the impact transformed from tragic to inspirational.

    • @Vaelios3292
      @Vaelios3292 Před 3 lety +2

      And it was well written. No one was mourning at the moment of the death. It was brutal, not really expected. and THEN there is the funeral when everyone is mourning. I've cried a lot on this chapter tbh. The pacing was great.

    • @user-yq2oq1qh3g
      @user-yq2oq1qh3g Před 3 lety +2

      Wen I was completing the half blood prince, the book felt incomplete....coz for the five books it all ended with Dumbledore explaining everything...

  • @eandnshowidkimsomethingels7581

    "A death for a lost cause - like a death in a battle that was pointless or a sacrifice that meant nothing at all - are the most heart breaking."
    so you mean every game of thrones death after Robert's boar incident

  • @kevynlevi9894
    @kevynlevi9894 Před 3 lety +7

    Ressurection trope doing well would be an excelent "dear authors" too

  • @bloodspatteredguitar
    @bloodspatteredguitar Před 3 lety +2

    In a book which clearly aims for realism, a dying character giving a speech is not likely to work. But in the epic genre a dying character's words are a narrative device. The words at the point of death carry more weight, are more poetic. I love a good death speech!

  • @jaithunbi2359
    @jaithunbi2359 Před 3 lety +9

    Most loved series ever....Dear Authors❤️ ... It's the sweetest way to tell the authors what you hate about their writing and ofcourse you also tell what you like about their writing ❤️ YOU ARE A GENIUS MERPH 🦋

  • @Syrilian
    @Syrilian Před 3 lety +2

    Not only is a monologue while someone dying unrealistic and can ruin the moment but moving that monologue to before a climatic battle can actually increase the tension of what's to come. I feel the trope of a character, for instance, professing their love before a character then dying is a trope that happens often enough that it plants the seed that the character will die but it doesn't happen enough that is a cliche. It can be effective in planting doubt of what will happen next in the reader's mind.
    A long winded way of saying moving a monologue in the middle of battle to before the battle can be much more effective.

  • @tarih7683
    @tarih7683 Před 3 lety +20

    Most aggressive title Merph's ever made 😂

  • @myleemartin4297
    @myleemartin4297 Před 2 lety +1

    Killing off characters isn’t always the thing that will devastate me the most. Seeing a character suffer often is. If you want an emotional reaction from your readers, then tearing a character’s life apart and making them at their lowest point in life will make me care A LOT more than if that character is stabbed in the fifth chapter. Sometimes life is worse than death; use that to your advantage when writing!

  • @sairaattique6808
    @sairaattique6808 Před 3 lety +15

    Your dear author series should be extremely helpful for authors so they will have an idea of what people like to read and what is more realistic.

  • @mattpfarr6129
    @mattpfarr6129 Před 3 lety +4

    Merphy: Talks about character deaths with Jurassic Park in the background.
    Makes sense.

  • @writingoncactusjuice3421
    @writingoncactusjuice3421 Před 3 lety +6

    "Readers chatting with other readers..."
    *Sweats in writer*

  • @JohnBradford14
    @JohnBradford14 Před 3 lety +1

    I hate it when the death occurs in a strange and difficult to understand way and the story just expects you to be sad the death happened as if it's obvious that it did. For example:
    I went through the entire Harry Potter series thinking that Sirius was somehow going to come back because I didn't understand how the curtain thingy worked or what it's purpose was or how it killed people. I felt like the mom from A Christmas Story when she first saw the lamp, "But what IS it?"

  • @Athkore
    @Athkore Před 3 lety +3

    To me, the most heartbreaking deaths are when a character who could have changed the entire story dies right before they have the opportunity to do so, such as them learning something of importance, like the villain's name, or they decided to change their ways but died before doing so. It's something you can feel the entire time throughout the rest of the story.

  • @smarthydra061
    @smarthydra061 Před 3 lety +17

    I was literally in the middle of rewatching your other Dear Authors videos and clicked this one so fast!!!!
    Also, I love how you put the Stiles meme at the end! I love Dylan O'Brien, Teen Wolf, and Stiles so much! Ahhh!

  • @alexbrooksbank3534
    @alexbrooksbank3534 Před 3 lety +25

    Broke: long death scenes for characters we love with a long pause in the action.
    Woke: sudden deaths for characters we love giving us no opportunity to grasp what just happened or break until the end of the battle.
    They're there exchanging banter....
    .
    .
    .
    Then they're gone.

  • @jackiesliterarycorner
    @jackiesliterarycorner Před 3 lety +5

    In Shrek 3, they make fun of the idea of a character on his deathbed still talking. My first thought when you talk about emotional breakdowns by characters and searching for the bodies of loved ones is Return of the King of the movie. I love character moments where they try to hold back on their emotions but suddenly break down.

  • @sairaattique6808
    @sairaattique6808 Před 3 lety +10

    9:58
    To be honest if seen logically reactions are always realistic no matter how much you are thinking it's not realistic because when you think that you are actually putting yourself in the place, so it's actually only you who thinks it unrealistic because there are all types of people, and everyone reacts differently, for them it's natural. But if you're gonna make a character that reacts in a_way_then you'll have to craft his whole character in symmetry to that as well.

  • @ransombaggins9301
    @ransombaggins9301 Před 3 lety +1

    Speaking of giving readers time to process death, I think Tolkien did an amazing job of balancing the need to mourn and the deep sorrow of loss with the urgency of the threat at hand and the need to find safety before finally coming back to the grief in his handling of the Fellowship coming out of Moria.

  • @saadamansayyed
    @saadamansayyed Před 3 lety +16

    What? Stabby stabby?
    *The writer in me has activated*
    #writers-writing

  • @zenebean
    @zenebean Před 3 lety +2

    It's a meme with character's dying in ASOIAF, but Martin usually does it right. Characters can go a while focused on their goals, but then they'll find something that reminds them of their loss.

  • @AlexJReil
    @AlexJReil Před 3 lety +4

    The character: "I know I'm mortally wounded, but . . . I must keep fighting! I need to protect my friends . . . and tell my love interest that I love her! . . . I must pass on my quest to the hero of the story so she can finish this great fight. . . just a little longer!"
    Merphy: "UUGGGG! just die already!"

  • @colecates5554
    @colecates5554 Před 3 lety +12

    My worst trope is memory loss.. then love triangle.. but resurrection is close.

    • @smarthydra061
      @smarthydra061 Před 3 lety +1

      I don't like memory loss and insta love that much, and I dont know how to feel about the resurrection trope, but I do like love triangles.

    • @colecates5554
      @colecates5554 Před 3 lety

      @@smarthydra061 what do you love about the triangles, curious. Do you have examples of when there done the best?

    • @GnarledStaff
      @GnarledStaff Před 3 lety

      @@colecates5554
      A love triangle is an unstable relationship between 3 people.
      It causes an uncomfortable situation that people want to see resolved. It also causes drama, which is interesting, and that is why it is overused by bad writers who want cheap conflict.
      A good love triangle will create drama, force a character to make decisions and drive other characters to react to those decisions.
      The trick is allowing it to end and having the characters live with those decisions.
      I love 2 people? Well, I picked one. Now we find out if I can still be friends with the one I didnt pick. Maybe they leave and I've lost someone I rely on. Maybe because I was with the 2nd person I wasnt there to provide first aid when the 1st was stabbed. These are interesting consequences.
      Alternatively, it could settle into a stable 3 way relationship.
      Either way, A good love triangle has to end, which is why most of the ones you see suck.
      One of my favorite authors used a love triangle in the first book of her main series. I'm not going to say I loved the love triangle, but the author used to to move the plot and character arc forward.
      Patricia Briggs Mercy Thompson series. (Content advisory)

    • @michaeljenner2325
      @michaeljenner2325 Před 3 lety

      Resurrection can work but only if there is still some comeback from it or a you give a reason why this character and not others can come back.

  • @janhavi1977
    @janhavi1977 Před 3 lety +6

    I don’t think any fictional deaths affected me, the way the Harry Potter deaths did. They were so well-written, devastating yet poignant. Also, a certain LoTR death was also extremely sad.

    • @jakehopkins6989
      @jakehopkins6989 Před 3 lety

      What about the Red Wedding?

    • @mariamann8292
      @mariamann8292 Před 3 lety +1

      For me the Harry Potter deaths in the last book didn't really affect me anymore, because there were so many one after another and they didn't really impact the other characters. For example (Spoiler) Freds death. In the end all of the Weasleys were find and George still makes jokes, so you can't really feel that Fred misses, because they were one character anyway.

    • @janhavi1977
      @janhavi1977 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jakehopkins6989 yeah, the Red Wedding was definitely shocking. I think I was too shocked to cry at that moment. It made me feel angry at the Lannisters more than anything else.

    • @ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108
      @ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mariamann8292 the moment of his death was horrible. Right after with his family crowded around the body was heartbreaking. Then... nothing. No one seemed to care

  • @SunriseFireberry
    @SunriseFireberry Před 3 lety +23

    GRR Martin is king of killing off characters. Tolkien & Shakespeare ain't too shabby either.

    • @janhavi1977
      @janhavi1977 Před 3 lety +4

      True. Good way to kill of characters - GoT Season 1 - 4. Bad way to kill off characters - GoT 6 - 8. Still not over what a terrible death the Night King got 🙄

    • @jakehopkins6989
      @jakehopkins6989 Před 3 lety +1

      @@janhavi1977 Did you forget about season 5?

    • @janhavi1977
      @janhavi1977 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jakehopkins6989 oops yes I did. Season 5 was pretty bad too. Shireen’s death made no sense and was solely for shock value. I hate that they ruined Stannis the Mannis.

    • @chinuaalibatya7345
      @chinuaalibatya7345 Před 3 lety

      You mean they're not too stabby 😉

    • @SunriseFireberry
      @SunriseFireberry Před 3 lety

      @@chinuaalibatya7345 not too stabby shabby

  • @komalraina2845
    @komalraina2845 Před 3 lety +4

    Everytime you were mentioning or rather trying to mention reds seas under red skies I was like YEAH I feel you 😂

  • @Okapeep
    @Okapeep Před 3 lety +21

    Hot take: I think resurrection CAN work if the character in question comes back as a different person, having lost something. The character they were is still dead and we can mourn who they used to be.

    • @jakehopkins6989
      @jakehopkins6989 Před 3 lety +2

      Like Lady Stoneheart?

    • @Okapeep
      @Okapeep Před 3 lety +5

      @@jakehopkins6989 Exactly! GRRM does this really well

    • @omnianimator8468
      @omnianimator8468 Před 3 lety +10

      Or you could just have it cost another main character's life. I think a life for a life revival is one of the best remedies because the totally people who are dead is still the same.

    • @ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108
      @ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108 Před 3 lety +2

      @@omnianimator8468 I just wrote a comment and I can’t be bothered to write it out again so here it is copied and pasted:
      I’m now imagining a book where resurrection is possible, but at the cost of someone else’s life and other difficult things but the main part is the sacrifice, and the main characters decide to move on because they’re the good guys and don’t want to kill someone unnecessarily, except one person, maybe they’re struggling with their mental health or they were really close to the person who died, decides that they should die because they think no one will care but they don’t tell anyone, they just do whatever it is that is necessary to bring the person back to life and they die and no one can stop them, and maybe no one notices they’re gone until the person that originally died shows up and I would cry if that was written well and I want to use this in a story now; I can think of one that I could adapt to work with this, wow that sentence was long. gasp

    • @VenathTehN3RD
      @VenathTehN3RD Před 3 lety

      Not a book, but one of the better examples of resurrection I can think of in film/television is probably from "Buffy the Vampire Slayer."
      While the sixth season definitely isn't my favorite overall, I did like how they didn't gloss over what it means to bring someone back to life, and most of the titular character's development in that season revolves around her trying to cope with being dragged back into a violent and chaotic world after months of experiencing nothing but the pure and absolute peace she found in death. She's trying to hide the truth from her friends because they're so ecstatic to have her back, fighting with the guilt of *not* being happy to be back, struggling with mundane issues like being behind on house payments (due to her...you know...death) and holding down a job, etc. Basically, it treated her resurrection in a somewhat realistic way and as the genuinely big deal that it was, rather than everyone just going about their happy everyday lives. And her story arc in the season ends not with her just getting over it and being better, but realizing that she still has something worth living for, no matter how much of a struggle continuing to live might be.
      It's so much more relatable and engaging than the character just popping back up like "Well, that was a thing. Now back to adventuring!" like absolutely nothing has changed after they literally died and came back to life.

  • @Ninaofthe90s
    @Ninaofthe90s Před 3 lety +7

    "Remember the Avatar movie?"
    NO. I don't want to.

  • @RKStumblingbear
    @RKStumblingbear Před 3 lety +27

    I still see a lot of reactions of death is handled in one way: Grief and mourning. And yes, that is a very human experience. But authors tend to show the extreme versions of this. Not everyone is going to mourn in the same way. Not everyone has the same beliefs regarding death. Not every funeral is a solemn event. And I as a reader feel cheated when every character grieves and mourns with tears and vengeance. In fact, I skip those processing scenes because I've already read the like over and over and over.

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 Před 3 lety +2

      I feel like a lot of character realisticly would process the grief later in a life or death scenario. In ww2 soldires were trained to let the medic deal with the injured, and then help after the fighting was over. I remember a part of a book on d-day, this paratrooper group was pushing onto the bridge, they saw their captian get hit, but didn't know how bad. They pushed over the bridge and took it. Only after did they realize that he had been shot in the neck and bled out. They were taking rifle fire from a German force defending the bridge so their focus was on their enemy. It

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 Před 3 lety +1

      Sorry I just realized my comment was kind of off topic to yours lol

    • @RKStumblingbear
      @RKStumblingbear Před 3 lety

      @@kyle18934 It works in conjunction. I really liked the example you gave of the soldiers continuing to fight and only later finding out about the death.

  • @unsweetsweets
    @unsweetsweets Před 3 lety +3

    12:00 *This.* It’s not a book, but there’s a show I love that has a death of a character that I didn’t really care about and even kinda hated, but because they meant so much to the main character, it hit me so hard.

  • @korgaupisc129
    @korgaupisc129 Před 3 lety +42

    I really hate ressurection. Just read a book where two of the important, likeable characters were apparently dead but then in the end BOTH came back to life. It freaked me out.

    • @arjundesai4476
      @arjundesai4476 Před 3 lety +2

      which book?

    • @korgaupisc129
      @korgaupisc129 Před 3 lety +3

      @@arjundesai4476 Furies of Calderon by Jim Butcher

    • @marocat4749
      @marocat4749 Před 3 lety +6

      It can work with rare examples, and a high cost.

    • @ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108
      @ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108 Před 3 lety +4

      @@marocat4749 I’m now imagining a book where resurrection is possible, but at the cost of someone else’s life and other difficult things but the main part is the sacrifice, and the main characters decide to move on because they’re the good guys and don’t want to kill someone unnecessarily, except one person, maybe they’re struggling with their mental health or they were really close to the person who died, decides that they should die because they think no one will care but they don’t tell anyone, they just do whatever it is that is necessary to bring the person back to life and they die and no one can stop them, and maybe no one notices they’re gone until the person that originally died shows up and I would cry if that was written well and I want to use this in a story now; I can think of one that I could adapt to work with this, wow that sentence was long. *gasp*

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ihopeicanchangethisnamelat7108 there is an anime that sort of covers that named full metal alchemist. The two main characters tried to resurect their mother and it didn't work, instead it took one of the brothers body and the other brother had to give up his arm and leg to save his brother. In the end they discover the one thing they have been hunting that could resurect their mother and get the body less siblings body back is made of hundreds or even thousands of peoples souls. It starts like a light hearted kids show and slowly gets darker as they realize what they are chasing and what people they looked up to were creating. It's a great show if you don't mind a cartoon

  • @ptrexy
    @ptrexy Před 3 lety +30

    Yesterday I watched all dear authors again, and I don't really like to read, but I love your channel and your commentaries!
    Have you thought on doing a dear authors about conversations?

  • @_gamma.
    @_gamma. Před 3 lety +2

    One of my favorite deaths is Dumbledore. Not because his death was dramatic (though it was), but because the aftermath of his death felt impactful.
    Characters were confused and lost for most of the book without his guidance. It wasn’t used as just a beat and had lasting implications.

  • @youtubeviolatedme7123
    @youtubeviolatedme7123 Před 3 lety +10

    Before watching I already knew that revivals were going to be touched upon

  • @katsucurry8357
    @katsucurry8357 Před 3 lety +1

    “Don’t introduce an obvious love interest just so you can kill them off.”
    *Chiaki Nanami has left the chat*

  • @THX0785
    @THX0785 Před 3 lety +4

    I think the resurrection thing can be done well if when they come back they are different in some way. Not necessarily evil or a zombie or something, but some significant change that changes the dynamic of the story.

  • @simonhirst3021
    @simonhirst3021 Před 3 lety +5

    You know what was fun, back in the days? Jeoffrey. Such happy D&D-less memories.

  • @zorro2441
    @zorro2441 Před 3 lety +4

    I feel like most people in this video don't actually know what death and dying are actually like. Yes, it can take a long time to die from multiple stab wounds. It would be slow and painful. A punctured long doesn't stop you from talking (you have two). It hurts, yeah, you will die, yes, but you'd still be able to talk for quite a bit.
    And back to being stabbed, yay! Even a serious wound, like a split artery, can and will take around and more than five minutes. Even if it's from multiple sources. So yes, I can and will give my thirty-second monologue through gritted teeth. Come on guys, movies aren't reality.

  • @ThatOneLadyOverHere
    @ThatOneLadyOverHere Před 3 lety +1

    Lord of the Rings has great examples of post battle mourning.

  • @JesusMejia-hf6li
    @JesusMejia-hf6li Před 3 lety +3

    The enemy army everytime a party member dies:
    "Give them a moment, for pity's sake!"

  • @leonardocucchiara4782
    @leonardocucchiara4782 Před 3 lety +1

    The "pause fighting to talk/mourn" thing can be done good in books too if the author knows what he does. Premiere example is the Battle of Helm's Deep in lotr. There are several instances where the characters discuss something but everytime they do so the battle is paused plot wise. One time they fall back into the castle, close the doors and then they talk. One time they do a sortie and the enemy falls back for a short while and they would talk. So basically you'd need to set up a pause in battle first and the characters then use it to have their interaction and not let the interaction pause the fighting

    • @leonardocucchiara4782
      @leonardocucchiara4782 Před 3 lety

      There are even more examples of that in lotr now that I think about it. Boromir actually dies when the fight is already over and the Uruk Hai are gone.
      In Moria Gandalf uses a spell to lock the door of the chamber of Mazarbul so that the orcs and the Balrog can't follow them directly. So there is a brief pause in the hunting and fighting which Gandalf uses to explain to the others what happened in the chamber.
      When Theoden dies it's actually revealed after the battle. It's just said that his horse falls. We don't really know what has happened until the battle is over. That makes the fight between Eowyn and the Nazgul so much more intense and emotional. Because she tries to protect Theoden without knowing weather he's already dead. Then when his death is revealed the impact actually comes from the emotions of the other characters. Especially Eowyn who, when she awakes from black breath, she immediately asks Eomer weather Theoden is dead.
      Everytime I think about Tolkien's writing I appreciate him more and more as an author. That is such a strong, smart and touching writing style

  • @sairaattique6808
    @sairaattique6808 Před 3 lety +12

    I think the best way to write realistically is to replace the character you're writing about with yourself, like what you would do in a situation like that i know it can make similarities in characters if you do that with every character but that is a good way

  • @ladyicondraco
    @ladyicondraco Před 3 lety +2

    I am definitely one of those readers who would rather the main characters make it out unscathed! I did really appreciate this discussion. I'll have to go check out the others in the series.

  • @jamesduggan7200
    @jamesduggan7200 Před 3 lety +4

    You might enjoy True Grit, the Academy Award winning western starring John Wayne and Glen Campbell. In a crucial scene, the hero is trapped under his horse as the villain approaches. It looks bad for him but he's John Wayne so the audience kind of assumes he's immune, although he did do a death scene in The Alamo. Watch it, when you get a chance.

  • @AikiraBeats
    @AikiraBeats Před 3 lety +2

    I don't even believe when a character is dead cause I know somehow they're coming back to life

  • @Vaelios3292
    @Vaelios3292 Před 3 lety +3

    One of the only ressurection I'm ok with (to be exact it's a fake death) is on a 5 five books series. The "death" happens at the beginning of book 3 and we learn this character have faked his death at the end of book 5. It works because it's a side character, it's the only death to be fake and there were 3 entires books with subtle clue he might have faked his death.
    But most of the time, I agree : leave your characters dead.

  • @williamzinedineh
    @williamzinedineh Před 3 lety +1

    It's rare, but I think it's absolutley beautiful when a character does react by simply giving up, falling to their knees over a body and then ACTUALLY DIE. It's heartbreaking AND realistic depending on the characters

  • @nightbreed9305
    @nightbreed9305 Před 3 lety +6

    I actually think the first one could be utilized well. It just depends on context. In fact, the book I'm writing now has this same thing happening where they mourn someone in battle. Except it's a based on the year 1872 and it's a gunfight, and the character is crouched behind a wall as he mourns. On deaths, context matters. If you want them to have final words, make the thing that happens to them slow enough for that to happen. Though sometimes a fast death is just as effective. Just write it well and it will work.

  • @LunarKnight22
    @LunarKnight22 Před 3 lety

    So one of my favorite book trilogies of all time is the Elenium by David Eddings. During one of the big final fight scenes one of the main characters is killed by a villain that is a little more than an animal.
    His death rips your heart out, because it doesn’t feel like he should be somebody who dies. to give both the readers and the characters a small chance to mourn, the others are able to repel the attack long enough to bar some doors for a small respite. And I appreciate that, because they don’t take away the danger and you’re not ignoring it in the middle of the fight. It’s that you’ve pushed it away momentarily to give you that moment. But it also gives our heroes a much-needed moment to breathe because they’re all wearing suits of armor fighting with ginormous swords are axes and breathing every so often is kind of helpful.
    You then go through the whole big final confrontation thing and all of that, and you've almost forgotten about the death. Not entirely, but right now all we have is a body were carrying home to his family. Then our main character does the most natural thing to him in the world, he attempts to ask what time his friend thinks it is.
    and I always remember that part, because even though it’s still very fresh, there’s that "oh, right. He’s not alive with us anymore." moment and it hurts.
    I’m not gonna tell you that the book series is amazing wonderful and stupendous, in fact when I went back and reread the scene that caused me to fall in love with the series I realized it needs a new editor. But the author is able to capture those emotions, and deliver them in a way that I think is poignant.

  • @jessicastrike5640
    @jessicastrike5640 Před 3 lety +3

    I love killing characters before they finish their arcs! Really wish this was something I saw more often when reading because it can really have more impact if you have a character with a really clear motivation or goal and they die before it can be achieved, feels way more like real life to me where not everyone gets the long happy life where they accomplish what they set out to do

  • @marymohr2799
    @marymohr2799 Před 3 lety +1

    If you want to add something extra special to make a death sad, have other characters mistake someone else for the dead person for a second. When my cousin died, I kept thinking I was seeing him, but it was people who looked vaguely like him. A few times while shopping, once in a car, and so on.

  • @katherynhope5599
    @katherynhope5599 Před 3 lety +7

    Ooh! I really needed this one, cause i know I want to kill off charecters in my book, but want to do it well of course. Thanks Merphy!

  • @katepetit13
    @katepetit13 Před 3 lety +1

    My experience working in a hospital is that people on their death beds don't want to die in front of their family. Even if they are really out of it, the family will be by their side for almost every second, and when they all decide to got eat, that's when the person goes.

  • @Schrantism
    @Schrantism Před 3 lety +13

    YES! When someone dies, they need to stay dead. No coming back. Ruins the point of them dying in the first place. This is something I've preached in all entertainment genres. I like deaths in stories, they add impact.

  • @katruth
    @katruth Před 3 lety +2

    i've honestly watched the 'dear authors' series so many times.
    urgh, I love it.