WE ARE THE MORON BROTHERS

Bad Writing in Movies

LEST we forget, movies and TV shows get written too. And plays. And advertising jingles—the term writing covers a lot of ground, some of it sad and strewn with rotting carcasses, some of it merry and lined with beautiful gardens. This wide field means there’s also a lot of room for bad writing, about which Your Humble Correspondent here knows entirely too much.

When you do something on a professional level, you tend to lose some of your wonder for it. It’s an unfortunate consequence: Magicians don’t get wide-eyed when cards are made to disappear, computer programmers don’t get excited when email pops up on their screens, and writers wince and groan a lot when terrible dialog afflicts our television shows, books, or movies. We see the connective tissue, and we know all the tricks.

Normally, I can keep my mouth shut. Normally, I can manage to swallow clunky lines that fall to the ground with an ear-popping thud. Normally, I can handle a surfeit of cliche and a heavy hand with the purple—this because I am a firm believer in the Rules of Polite Society, that web of semi-transparent rules that keeps our world functioning, and one of those rules is that you don’t bother other folks with endless snobbish assessments of the quality of your entertainments. We’re writers, after all; for a lot of us, the reason we started writing in the first place was dissatsifaction with the stuff on TV and in the theaters, leading us to try and do it right.

Recently, though, I’m losing control of my temper when it comes to one time-honored tradition of Bad Writing: The Moron Line.

<tiny fists of rage>

The Moron Line is, quite simply, a line of dialog that is spoken only to help those in the audience who either haven’t been paying close attention or are mentally incapable of understanding anything even remotely complex or fanciful. Here’s a totally made up example:

<In the sewers beneath Los Angeles, The Villain is seen placing a large bomb against one slimy wall. A few scenes later, the Hero and his Sidekick stumble upon the bomb.>
HERO: Look!
SIDEKICK: Jeepers! A BOMB!
HERO: It must have been left here by the villain, earlier, when we weren’t here.

Most of that dialog is not only unnecessary if you have a heartbeat and an attention span of any length, it’s actually annoying, because it’s like that guy at a party who keeps telling you things you already know in a tone of voice that strongly implies he doubts you have the brainpower to know such things. It’s like an echo.

One of the popular uses for Moron Lines is to remind the audience of subtle plot points; having a character regurgitate a little exposition in the guise of summing up or arguing a point. Another is the time-honored Salazar Gambit, where a character—usually the villain—appears onscreen and, just in case you just wandered in from another movie—someone hisses their name:

<The Hero enters SALAZAR’s OFFICE. Cut to SALAZAR, grinning behind his desk.>
HERO: Salazar!

Again, the only people in the room who would be confused as to Salazar’s identity (assuming, of course, that he was in the story previously and this is not some complicated switch of identity or some other potentially confusing plot gymnastic) are folks who fell asleep shortly after the lights went down. Yet the Moron Line survives, because a) it often sounds dramatic to untrained ears and b) a lot of people creating entertainments for the rest of us have nothing but contempt for us, believe me.

Once you notice the Moron Line, you can’t unnotice it, and it starts popping up everywhere: Characters describing the clearly visible actions of other characters, characters repeating names and facts for no other reason than to make sure you remember something that happened, oh, fifteen minutes before in the narrative. Often these examples will be paired with quick-cut flashbacks, just to make sure you really notice what you’re being hit over the head with. This last technique could be called The Sixth Sense Are You Paying Attention Technique.
Are there people who need the Moron Line? Probably. I’ve been out to movies where future Nobel Laureates sit and have lengthy conversations about other movies while a movie is playing, and no doubt the Moron Line helps them keep track of at least the Bullet Points of the plot. And sure, there are probably a few functioning morons out there who need the Moron Line. Should these fine folks be abandoned? Of course not. What we need are a sort of reverse Director’s Cuts, where all the Moron Lines and redundant flashbacks are edited in, with a normal cut released for the rest of us with functioning brains.

4 Comments

  1. Nemesis0

    Interesting, i do see your point many times when watching movies.

    BTW, what the hell they been feeding you lately…you’re posting stuff almost every day/every other day. Usually we’re lucky for two a month.

  2. jsomers (Post author)

    Nem,

    Thanks! I think it’s just a fact of life: Entertainments are designed to have wide appeal and thus sell as many tickets/viewings as possible, so soemtimes the bar gets set low.

    Blogging: For a long time, to be honest, I’ve felt that I should be posting more. A Blog needs to eb churned constantly or it isn’t really a Blog, it’s just a web page with occasional news. So I made a pre-New Year’s Resolution to start posting more regularly.

    Thanks for using the word “lucky” in reference to my blogging!

    J

  3. akabrady

    I hate these lines! I complain about them all the time. And they are getting worse!
    For example: CSI Miami
    Crime scene. Dead body. Coroner scraping gunk from under fingernails of corpse.
    CSI Dude:
    “Did you find something under the fingernails?”
    Coroner:
    “Yes, get it to the lab to check for DNA.”
    Cut to next scene. (Yes the next bloody scene! Not even ten minutes later!)
    DNA lab girl pulling “result sheet” from printer. (Because that’s how DNA is done in TV land.)
    CSI Dude:
    “Is that the DNA from under the fingernails of the dead body?”

    ARRRRRRGGGG! We just saw it you Morons! Gerbils have longer attention spans!

    Okay, maybe that was too much. Going back to hide in my customized Hermit cave.

    P.S. I read your blog to live out drunken fantasies at work. So, yes we are lucky!

  4. jsomers (Post author)

    Aka,

    That’s a particularly egregious example, and I am glad I did not witness it, as a very nice television would likely be in a landfill right now, busted.

    L
    J

Comments are closed.