So many of these posts start out as discussions with my wife. We
were having lunch today, I was shooting a story idea at her, and we
ended up going back and forth about the stupid things that we see
fictional characters do. It happens in pretty much all the different
genre, but we see it in horror and thriller movies and stories
primarily. The worlds where bad things happen.
For my two cents, we all have various degrees of empathy for our
fellow human beings. We see them driving expensive cars, read about
how many of them have lost their jobs, and see them begging in the
streets. We can say to ourselves, 'That's life.' We move on. But
sometimes something horrendous happens. The kind of something that
shocks us out of our comfort zone.
Because newspapers and sleazy book publishers want to make money (and
I can empathize with that, at least), they write about these horrible
things, and they put a lot of energy into making us feel them. They
give the details that make us cringe and shudder, but it's our
reactions that I'll focus on here. I read Yahoo news a lot, and when
I read a story where something bad happened, I'll often also read the
comments that people post. A huge amount of them pick the story
apart, finding little things that the victim did that they imply
contributed to it. Some of them even post assumptions or guesses
that do the same. Victim blaming? Yes. But why?
Back to scary books and movies. Nine times out of ten, the innocent
people do something dumb. We see them go into the old, dark, house.
They pick up the spooky artifact or read from the ancient book that's
lying out. They split up. Again, why?
The characters in these horror stories may be dumb, but I don't think
the people writing or producing them are. They want you to buy their
product, so they put some thought into making it something that you
would want to buy. Similarly, we can complain about how dumb people
are in general, but most don't usually make dumb decisions that would
put them in harm's way, and we know that.
Remember when I described how people create their own worlds in their
heads? In order to be able to get up out of bed in the morning and
fall asleep at night, most people convince themselves of something:
that the world is basically a safe place, and that if they just play
by 'the rules,' they'll be safe. Nothing bad will happen to them.
They have to believe that.
Now maybe some writers do it on purpose, maybe some do it on instinct
without being consciously aware of it, and maybe some do it just
because that's what everyone else does. But the fact that so many
people do it, leads me to think I'm on the right track when I say
there is a reason for the stupid choices that victims in horror
stories make. That gives our audience something to grab hold of and
say, 'That person isn't me. I would never do something that dumb.
The horrible things that I'm seeing can't happen to me.'
I advocated for the dumb heroine in an earlier post, comparing the
mistakes we see that stereotype character make to what might happen
in real life. But, as I pointed out at the end, she doesn't exist in
real life. She's a part of something we read or watch for
entertainment, and when that entertainment is horror a lot of us need
a buffer between what happens to her (or him) and them. That way it
stays entertainment, and doesn't become something to worry about.
That way, it's something that we buy, and might remember later when
we see something else by the same writer.
So now, let me go write something like that.
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