The defensiveness might be coming from your obscenely elitist manner of making your point. Calling one medium superior over others because it has, to date, produced more positive results, is not only an assumption, but also a matter of taste, and, moreover, very much owed to the fact that it is simply older. That does not make the medium itself superior.Charcharo said:I do not get the defensiveness though... do you people not get taught these things at school? I always see this absurd level of defense always for the younger and still inferior Cinema/Gaming.
There are things that cinema has achieved that written literature could never dream about. I would like to ask you to imagine, if you will, a written version of Gaspar Noe's Enter the Void or, if that is more to your liking, an actual literary version of 2001 (not the short story on which it is based, an actual adaptation). Similarly, every Hitchcock film is based on an inferior book.
Again, the way you make your case is, frankly, infuriating. You're writing in an overly patronizing voice, stating questions of taste as facts, and don't give proper argumentation; instead, you replace this (very necessary) step with the repeated emphasis that what you're stating should be considered factual truth and sign off with (seemingly?) feigned surprise about how people can even consider another opinion.
Finally, the notion that film was not able to show internal thoughts and struggles, and that character development is generally an issue for the medium is, sorry, laughable. Internal thoughts and struggles have been depicted in film for decades, and not just in inner monologue, and characters develop from A to B to X,Y,Z all the time.