Yesterday was such a lovely day, so after working in the garden for a while, I decided to go for a walk around the country lanes where I live.
Clear sky crisp and cold. I wonder where they are off too! |
A typical lane around the village |
Part of a gateway to a lovely old house. What a view! |
Me taking a photo of me! |
When you look out of your window and see this... |
Public footpath to where? |
A Victorian post box, note the VR and the crown. |
Country pursuits. |
A roadside nature reserve! |
This one makes me look as if I'm on stilts! |
Steps over a fence. |
On the edge of the village. |
A resident? |
Enough said! |
A sign of spring |
Today the weather is damp, cold and nowhere near as nice as it was yesterday, so time to start writing the next chapter of The Photographer.
The word “gimmick” can be thrown around to describe a major element of a film that changes up the ordinary tropes we’d expect from a rather straightforward flick. There is 3D, timeline splicing, animation, found footage, you name it. Some films almost even fall into these places as a genre. When they do, you get the inkling that the people responsible for thinking up the movie likely have these elements in mind at the forefront with the story as an afterthought. > Reviews Searching Only when that occurs do I call those elements gimmicky. And it’s not that a gimmick is a bad thing, but if that is what you rely on to make your story compelling, it will often become a crutch for poor storytelling or one-and-done enjoyment. Sometimes it is done right, in which case the gimmick works… but most of the time it has that negative connotation for good reason.
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