Okay,
Joss Whedon is my hero. I’ve been
r-watching Buffy from the beginning
while I’m on the treadmill, and it’s a daily writing lesson on top of a
workout. Today Joss Whedon answered my
prayers. You know how sometimes there is
something nagging you about a manuscript, you know what it is, but you quietly
hope it will go away? Well, this isn’t
that. This is worse. This is more insidious. This is a bad habit I’ve carried with me
since I started taking writing seriously, a habit I didn’t even know I
had. Recently, I got some clues in the
form of agent feedback letters, and so I’ve been watching for it in my
peripheral vision.
Here’s
what I’ve been doing all this time.
Writers are observant and articulate –some of our greatest strengths. I see all the complexities of my characters’
relationships and all the subtleties of their issues. And it feels so good to be able to pin those
all down in words whether I’m having them hash things out in a big
confrontational dialogue scene or moodily brood, reflecting on all the
intricacies of their situation. Problem
is this isn’t very good storytelling.
Here’s
what is. Buffy, Season 3, Episode 7: Revelations. Angel has been spit back out of the demon
dimension, and Buffy is keeping him hidden in an abandoned mansion while he
recovers. Meanwhile, Mrs. Post, an
ex-watcher, has come to town under the guise of supervising Buffy’s slayer
friend, Faith –really she’s after the Glove of Myneghon, which will give her
evil powers.
The
whole time, I am talking to my laptop screen –which is something because
remember I’m on the treadmill. And I’m
gasping to Buffy, “Would you and Angel just talk to each other and work out how
things are going to be between you now?”
I can see all the things they have to hash out:
1) You can count on Angel, Buffy! He came back from the freaking demon
dimension for you!
2) How can you not mention the fact that you love each
other but if you sleep together again Angel will lose his soul!
3) Giles and the Scooby Gang are always researching your
way out of problems. I’m sure if you
looked into it, in the library, you could find a way to be together.
4) Plus, you should talk to your friends so they
understand Angel is good again.
5) Angel, you’ve got to tell Buffy how betrayed you felt
when she slayed you!
6) And Buffy, you’ve got to tell him why you had to do
it and how it tore you up!
7) On top of that, Buffy, if you really believe you
should move on to other less Hellmouthy guys, it’s only fair that you tell
Angel why!
8) And Angel, you’re not going to tell Buffy about what
the demon dimension was like and how you were compelled to get back for her?
9) I don’t think you can just skip over the question of
whether Angel should be responsible for his sins. I mean he wasn’t himself, he wasn’t in
control, but he did do those things!
10) And, uh, I
know it’s a little existential, but worth a cup of coffee to talk through
whether you can/should even really be together, right?
I
keep watching because I think Angel’s good now.
I want to figure out all of the above ten points so Angel and Buffy can
be together. But if Joss Whedon puts in
this talky scene I want, it kills all the suspense. And it kills all the suspense because it
kills all the interaction between me, the viewer, and the story. The talky scene resolves all the problems I am
waiting to find about if I’m right about.
Good for real life relationships, but not so much for storytelling.
Joss
Whedon, being the genius he is, does something else instead. He shows a brief scene of Angel doing a spell
in his brooding mansion. And again I
keep watching because, though I’m sure this indicates Angel is creating the
living fire that will destroy the Glove of Myneghon, there is the remote
possibility he could be preparing it for his own evil use. I want to find out if I am right and Buffy’s
friends are wrong about him!
When
Faith shows up at the mansion to kill Angel, I even want Buffy to tell her Mrs.
Post tried to kill Giles and is not to be trusted. But Joss Whedon sets up the scene so there's no time for this conversation. Buffy and Faith have to fight. Faith has to find out about Mrs. Post by
seeing her put on the glove with all the ensuing lightning and everything. A much better scene than if Buffy told on
Post, and Faith was like, “Okay,
cool.” They kill her, they shrug,
they go home, end of show. Besides, I
mean, if you have a glove someone has to put on the stinking glove, right?
Now,
I am a little suspicious about TV series because sometimes I don’t think the
writers know the answers to my list of questions. I think sometimes they just keeping
manipulating the character dynamics to keep me watching. In a novel, I think the writer has got to
have an idea what those answers are.
But,
it’s okay to let some of these questions go unanswered for a few chapters
because it keeps me, the reader, engaged, it keeps me interacting with the
story, it keeps me wondering, and talking out loud to the book in public
places, and it keeps me turning the pages!
And,
when these problems and questions are resolved, I, the writer, can’t have the
characters sit down and talk it out like psychologically healthy people you’d
like to be involved with in real life.
It’s got to happen through a scene the reader can interpret, through
action. It’s only fair. Just because I see all the intricacies of
what should be resolved, I can’t leave the reader out.
So,
ahhh. It all seems so obvious, but my
abilities as a writer, this acuteness of observation and articulation seduced
me to a place where I could pin everything neatly down on the page and forget
entirely about storytelling. Thank you
Joss Whedon for taking me to the next level!
One
big question I have about this is…does a first-person limited viewpoint make
this harder. It might. I’m going to think about this in the scenes I
write and read next.
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