Excuse me? I've been pointing out how Dan Abnett not only uses the 40K formula, but how he also improves on it.Ieyke said:The number of people in this thread who don't actually understand what goes on in 40k makes me sad.
Most fitting Captcha ever: "gothic church"
endtherapture said:Recently I've been noticing a trend of things to becoming dark.
You can see this in a lot of recent media - the last of the Star Wars prequels, the later Harry Potter films, and of course the ending of Mass Effect 3. You can often converse with someone and ask about how good something is, and they'll be like "Well it was the darkest of the films." Is Dark equated with good though?
The later Harry Potter films were darker, but I definitely preferred the older ones with their childlike charm. Give me A New Hope over Revenge of the Sith anyday!
You can see this in videogames too - Dragon Age: Origins was a fairly standard save-the-world fantasy game which was great (and not particularly dark, had difficult decisions though), and then Dragon Age 2 went all dark with torture and slavery and necrophilia and stuff, but it was definitely not the better game. Same with Mass Effect, the first two games were standard space opera, but then the third shoves out an out-of-place "dark" ending down our throats.
Lord of the Rings wasn't dark but its a timeless classic and the films are great - I doubt it would have improved by an ending where Sauron wins and murders everyone, and the last film consisted of rape of Elven women by Orcs and a brooding suicidal Legolas.
Not saying "dark" isn't bad, The Witcher 2 was a great game but it was handled in a mature fashion, as opposed to just shoving in blood and darkness and sex and stuff - it was mature which meant it could handle the "dark" subject matter easily. This runs parallel to 40k which is so grimdark that it's pretty much a self parody of itself, the lack of seriousness in 40k makes the grimdark better.
So yeah, do you think there's a tendency in media to equate dark with good, and therefore make everything dark? Do you even think dark is good?Do you enjoy dark stories or less dark ones?
The point I was trying to make is that Jak 3 manages to temper both humor and drama pretty damn well, and overall comes off as a more tonally balanced game than Renegade.Buretsu said:Soviet Heavy said:It gets better, trust me. While Jak does turn into a misanthropic jakass (c wat I did thar lol), he does become more compelling as a character. And if Jak 2 gets you down, Jak 3 and Jak X Combat Racing are more lighthearted. They balance out the moody prick with more humor, and 3 in particular gives Jak something to fight for.Soxafloppin said:I call it the Dark Knight effect, now even Micky Mouse can't be dark and moody enough!
Strangly enough I'm playing through the Jak and Daxter Trilogy at the moment and theres a pretty big change in tone from the first and second game, I'm not sure I like it.Jak finds out who his father is, right as he's dying in Jak's arms...
Although I forgive the game for the absolutely HILARIOUS ending.
Yeah, what he said. It's all about being consistent.Kahunaburger said:Like any tone, it can be good or bad. I do agree that tonal shifts in the middle of a series frequently don't work very well.
A bit of serious fucking language really ups the fucking quality of the shit, in my bastard opinion. If it offends the fucking ears of childish little shits, it must be fucking mature, shit?Buretsu said:Dark is fucking good, because it's fucking mature. There's too much fucking shit that's fucking light out there, and it fucking needs to stop with that shit. I mean, fuck.
The original black and white Straw Dogs [http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/straw-dogs-2011/comments.php?reviewid=2046774] (1971, not the new one) did a great job of portraying something resembling sexual assault, rape and infidelity with an ex-boyfriend all entangled into one. Well worth a look. But the main point of that slow and boring movie -- that a 98 pound weakling fights back -- was extremely lame.Atmos Duality said:...this is why "rape" so rarely works in storytelling. Shock value in itself does not make a point. Context is needed, yet the context provided, if any, is usually secondary to the act itself in fiction.
Let's not forget about Empire Strikes Back, often considered the BEST out of the original trilogy (and by extension out of all 6 Star Wars films) is also the darkest of the three, but that might also have something to do with the fact that George Lucas didn't direct it. My personal favorite has always been Return of the Jedi though (where weirdly enough Luke becomes grim dark but then in come the Ewoks).endtherapture said:You can see this in a lot of recent media - the last of the Star Wars prequels, the later Harry Potter films, and of course the ending of Mass Effect 3. You can often converse with someone and ask about how good something is, and they'll be like "Well it was the darkest of the films." Is Dark equated with good though?
*chuckles*ThreeWords said:A bit of serious fucking language really ups the fucking quality of the shit, in my bastard opinion. If it offends the fucking ears of childish little shits, it must be fucking mature, shit?Buretsu said:Dark is fucking good, because it's fucking mature. There's too much fucking shit that's fucking light out there, and it fucking needs to stop with that shit. I mean, fuck.
I've had Straw Dogs recommended to me before. Then again, the one doing the recommendation has a penchant for movies on the "sadistic" side; and not the kind of "sadistic" that lands films on Mystery Science Theater.AngleWyrm said:The original black and white Straw Dogs [http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/straw-dogs-2011/comments.php?reviewid=2046774] (1971, not the new one) did a great job of portraying something resembling sexual assault, rape and infidelity with an ex-boyfriend all entangled into one. Well worth a look. But the main point of that slow and boring movie -- that a 98 pound weakling fights back -- was extremely lame.
The recent version of Girl with the Dragon Tattoo [http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_girl_with_the_dragon_tattoo/] also created a credible scene of sexual abuse by a hideous bully. Very creepy. But again, it was used as the principle McGuffin for a vengeance flick.
It's a trend in all art.endtherapture said:Recently I've been noticing a trend of things to becoming dark.