Nance
avatar 17/02/2010 @ 04:40:51
Je viens de découvrir un site (en anglais y a plus de fiches, la version française est embryonaire) qui parle des thématiques, des schémas, des types de scénarios, des archétypes, dans la fiction, tous médias confondus (la littérature, les films, la musique, la mythologie...):
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/…

C'est un site avec beaucoup d'humour. J'ai ri jusqu'à en pleurer! Difficile de passer aux travers du site au complet! Tant mieux, des heures de plaisirèn perspective!

Knight Templar Parent
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/…
"While a normally protective parent would have a Very Special Episode about telling their kid not to buy illegal drugs, a Knight Templar Parent would track down and kill every drug dealer in town. Just to be sure."
"Played with in The Count Of Monte Cristo: Madame de Villefort will go to any lengths to ensure that her son inherits a large fortune; which includes poisoning nearly every member of her family, including her step-daughter"

Overprotective Dad
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/…
"Stay away from my little girl, you possible rapist!"
—Peter Griffin, Family Guy
"Done very darkly with Beverley Marsh's dad in Stephen King's It. He beats her up whenever she does something odd (commenting that he worries about her A LOT) and when he finds out that she's been spending time with the rest of the Loser's Club, he demands that she take off her pants so he can check her barrier. Thankfully she gets away, but wow."

I Did What I Had To Do
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/…
"The Well Intentioned Extremist creed. Rooted in "The ends justify the means," this is The Stoic defense for questionable actions."

Wrong Guy First
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/…
"Jane Austen Loves This Trope: Persuasion may be unique among stories for having a Wrong Guy First scenario where Suitor #1 and Suitor #2 are the same person, with eight years' growing-up in between.
In Sense And Sensibility, Mr. Willoughby dumps Marianne Dashwood for a rich woman. Marianne eventually marries Colonel Brandon. Elinor, for her part, is in many ways the right woman in Edward Ferrars' Wrong Woman First scenario; the two fall in love, but are prevented from acting on their feelings by Edward's rash earlier engagement to the opportunistic Miss Steele."

Designated Villain
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/…
"The Designated Villain is a character who is introduced with a score of petty acts in a very short period of time. This is a heavy-handed way to tell the audience this character is not to be liked. Any astute arguments and observations of this character (who is often an intellectual or authority figure) are to be dismissed by the audience, because they are Obviously Evil™, just as the Designated Hero is regarded as 'good' despite having no significant virtues. "
"Galbatorix from the Inheritance Cycle. A closer look at his reign usually shows that it's hard to see why he's supposedly such an evil tyrant. He is never shown doing anything other than sitting on his throne, so it's easy to blame all those evil actions committed by the empire on his rogue subordinates. He did kill off the original Dragonriders, but for all we are told they were a racist military junta."

Ermine Cape Effect
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/…
"In a nutshell, the Ermine Cape Effect refers the belief that people with royal or noble titles always wear the ultra fancy clothes that they just wear for ceremonies or for portraits. An ermine cape is optional, but it's so common, and such a clear sign of status, this trope is named for it. "

Nance
avatar 17/02/2010 @ 04:51:48
Luke I Am Your Father
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/…
"A specific variety of The Reveal. A parent-child relationship between two characters who were previously thought unrelated is revealed, usually with generous dollops of melodrama — blood is, after all, Thicker Than Water. Beloved of soap operas, made famous by the Star Wars films (from which the trope takes its name, though as you can see, it isn't an exact quote). For maximum melodrama, the parent giving the reveal is the villain, and the one who the reveal is given to is the hero. In cases like this, count on at least one scene where the hero worries that he or she will eventually end up like the parent."

Nance
avatar 21/04/2010 @ 20:50:52
En refeuilletant The Meaning of Liff de Douglas Adams et John Lloyd ( http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Meaning_of_Liff ), je me suis rappelée d'un vieux site "Page officielle de défense et illustration de la langue xyloglotte", trop drôle:
http://www.cledut.net/xylo.htm

coprolithe : merde fossilisée (jolie insulte...)
coprolupanar : bordel de merde
copromacidé : espèce de Mac de merde !
coprohélioïde : cf. précédent, mais en version Sun
coprorium : merdier

Début Précédente Page 2 de 2
 
Vous devez être connecté pour poster des messages : S'identifier ou Devenir membre

Vous devez être membre pour poster des messages Devenir membre ou S'identifier