Falling Action: Eowyn recovers from her injuries, but not her continued feelings of frustration and oppression until she meets Faramir and realises she can be happy with peace too.Climax: Eowyn fights at the Battle of the Pelennor and, with Merry’s help, slays the Witch-king.She decides to disguise herself as a man and ride with Theoden. She asks to accompany Aragorn on the Paths of the Dead and he refuses, telling her again that her place is in the house. Rising Action: Eowyn continues to be left behind to mind the women and children, despite wanting to go out and win renown alongside the men as she feels she is entitled to do now she no longer has to mind Theoden.Inciting Incident: Gandalf arrives and heals her uncle, frees her brother from prison, and generally sets things right again.Background: Eowyn is a Rohirric princess and shieldmaiden, frustrated by her role as nurse to her ailing uncle.It’s set into motion by the main plot and firmly tied to it, but within itself it actually has a complete plot arc that could be told independently. Take a favourite of mine: Eowyn’s subplot in Lord of the Rings. It should be dependent on the main plot, but still complete within itself. What’s more, it’s also a crappy plotline within itself. It didn’t actually contribute anything to the main story, and in fact due to the dilution of the villains due to the introduction of Sauron, it actually hurt the main story. Well, it provided an explanation for why Gandalf didn’t spend the whole trilogy picking up after Thorin… and we got assured that what Thorin was doing was the most important thing that would ever happen in Middle-earth… and it reminded us all that Lord of the Rings existed and was a much better movie trilogy… and it provided an excuse for why this had to be a trilogy and not a single movie. Seriously, what was the point of this subplot? At the end of the day, when the trilogy was finished, what had its inclusion actually achieved? Spoilers for Lord of the Rings (book and movies), The Hobbit, and the Hobbit movies. That’s what this subplot was.īut of course I wouldn’t be me unless I expanded on that, would I? So here we go. That’s because I can sum up many of those things in one word: pointless. There are many things I can say about the White Council subplot, despite the fact that I’ve almost ignored it so far. By using subplots it creates a forward movement since it highlights and tenses the main plot to build to the end.12 notes SeptemHobbit Movies: The White Council Subplot How did the subplots move the story along? The subplots make the movie move along faster and more entertaining. What were the subplots? The subplot of the film is David trying to secure the 1 million donations to the museum, David and Susan looking for the lost intercostal clavicle bone, hunting for the baby and the wild leopard, singing outside of a stranger, almost everyone getting arrested, and David “fighting” the wild leapord. Susan convinced that David is the love of her life tricks him into accompanying her to Connecticut one day before David’s wedding to bring a leopard to her aunt’s house but they end up losing the leopard, and they have to find the leopard but run into some complications. What was the main plot of the film? The main of the film is David trying to secure a 1 million dollars donation for the museum, he runs into Susan.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |