Thursday, October 11, 2012

How to Show, Not Tell

Yesterday, the Anna Karenina movie people released eight new posters for the film and I immediately clicked over to check them out. And I was so, so bummed.

At first, I couldn't figure out why--the sumptuous costuming and overall aesthetic are right up my romantic alley and JUDE LAW. The posters are ostensibly "exploring love" in all its types but...something about it felt cheesy to me.



Then it hit me. On each poster, you've got a caption over top that's all "ADJECTIVE Love." The problem is that the images themselves say so much more than any single adjective ever could. If they'd just put LOVE on each one, it would have been so much more sophisticated.

Is there a lesson here for writers?


And here are a series of UNCAPTIONED pictures of the cast that I think say a lot more than these tell-y posters.

5 comments:

  1. I agree with you, except I'm not sure why the word Love is on there either, and in such large letters. Ugh!

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    Replies
    1. I sort of don't mind it! It's sort of like DRAMA!!

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  2. wonderful post and very helpful, thanks for all this information. You are including better information regarding this topic in an effective way.Thank you so much

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  4. The point about majoring in something that will support you so you can write what you love in your spare time really made me pause. It's that classic tension between paying the bills and chasing a dream. The key is finding a career that doesn't drain all your creative energy.

    I think the same applies to technical fields. A lot of people talk about wanting to become a data analyst, but the "doing" part is harder. For those in Electronic City who have decided to stop talking and start doing, I found a program offering data analytics training with placement electronic city. Getting that job-ready support might be the structure that helps people turn "easier said than done" into "I finally did it."

    ReplyDelete