On Queen's Thief vs Tangled
Jun. 13th, 2011 12:42 am On the recent post regarding the similarities between the Queen's Thief series and the movie Tangled:
How do these similarities make you feel about the movie? Do you resent them/the movie? Do you find it suspiciously or annoyingly interesting? Or do the coincidences make you like the movie all that much more?
I'm on the fence myself. On the one hand, I sort of sniff at the movie for being blatantly unoriginal and because Gen the Thief is totally superior to Eugene the thief. But on the other hand, ahh, it's coolly uncanny how many similarities there are!
How do these similarities make you feel about the movie? Do you resent them/the movie? Do you find it suspiciously or annoyingly interesting? Or do the coincidences make you like the movie all that much more?
I'm on the fence myself. On the one hand, I sort of sniff at the movie for being blatantly unoriginal and because Gen the Thief is totally superior to Eugene the thief. But on the other hand, ahh, it's coolly uncanny how many similarities there are!
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Date: 6/13/11 05:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 6/13/11 06:20 am (UTC)Hmm, I'd find it odd to be annoyed by their similarities, as it's not as if Tangled is a blatant knock-off of QT. QT is mostly a court drama with dark tones, while Tangled is a charming fairy tale/adventure story. Calling the movie unoriginal is a bit much as well, as the idea of a devilish, charming thief is not exactly a new one. You might say the same about Gen and his similarities to Howl Jenkins.
I'm quite fond of Flinn, partly because he reminds me of Gen a bit and also because he's his own fun character. Is he based on Gen? Maybe... It's really hard to tell, but overall, I find it highly unlikely that all the writers and artists that would be involved in an animated movie production to have read Megan's books. Was one or two of them? It's possible, but it's still just an idea they were influenced by. There's a reason one can't copyright ideas. Hmm... I think we'd soon run out of possible plots!
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Date: 6/13/11 08:11 am (UTC)Of course, that reasoning doesn't make that much sense, but that's how my mind works.
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Date: 6/13/11 03:58 pm (UTC)Hm...I can only say that they're both duplicitous and know more than the reader/other characters do and are pretty much always in control. But...that's it. Oh, and both avoid positions of power...but the circumstances are rather different. Oh, and,--ah, this should've been obvious from the start, but it's true for so many other characters, like Chrestomanci for instance--they're both fops. But I swear that's all I see! What have I missed?
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Date: 6/13/11 04:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 6/13/11 05:05 pm (UTC)I think the common names, while fun, are trying to do very different things with the name Eugene/ides. Eugenides is a noble name with a history and a direct connection to the god that Gen is most tied to. Gen's name is a huge part of what he is and what he values in himself. Eugene from Tangled changed his name precisely because it didn't seem to reflect what he wanted to be (dashing, powerful, and in command). So my take is that probably the names are one of those happy coincidences that happen and don't really mean anything. Which, again, is me trying to say that I completely agree there is very little intentional connection between QT and Tangled, but that I really loved and enjoyed both!
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Date: 6/13/11 05:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 6/13/11 07:22 pm (UTC)A quite a few of them are the ones you mentioned.
(1) Fops/Dandies
(2) They whine about everything.
(3) They both hate to kill or harm others.
(4) They lie.
(5) They're not too comfortable with power, as they both doubt themselves.
(6) They both say, "What a lie that was!"
(7) They're both very protective of those they love.
(8) They're both clever and prefer the none direct route.
(9) They both think they're cowards.
(10) They both go out of their way to make people fear and dislike them.
That's my top ten, though I could go on for quite awhile. I will also say that many of their behaviors have different motivations, and I see them as very different people despite how similar they are.
I think they're also similar because I believe Megan used Howl as a character base when forming Gen, being that she is a big fan of DWJ and Gen uses one of Howl's lines. I don't mean that in a bad way, as if you are writer, you understand one tends to think of another character who is similar to the one that you want to create and use what they say and do as a way to jump start you creative process. Perfectly acceptable if she did, and I do it too in my original stories.
Flinn, Gen, and Howl are all awesome characters, and I love them all for different reasons!
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Date: 6/13/11 07:31 pm (UTC)My sentiments exactly. I adore Tangled, and think it a lovely fairy tale that is sweet and charming in all the best ways. And it has frying pans! It also has a cute romance with lovely characters, in particular a strong female character whom I admire (a little rare in Disney). Plus, It's FUNNY!
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Date: 6/13/11 07:40 pm (UTC)So, so, so...
Both Gen and Howl are aware that clothes effect the perception of others, and use this to their advantage. Different motivations? Yes, but still similar in the means.
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Date: 6/13/11 07:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 6/13/11 10:12 pm (UTC)When I started reading, this turned me off because I was way over protective of Gen (and his position as pre-eminent whiner in my head/reading). But I soon got hooked on FMA and now I love it in its own right.
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Date: 6/14/11 12:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 6/14/11 12:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 6/14/11 12:45 am (UTC)One note, though--by "blatantly unoriginal" I didn't mean that I thought Disney had intentionally copied Gen. Hm...how to say this? I just meant that they came up these things second, too late--and so inferior and not original, because a precedent existed. This is actually one of my worries when writing. I feel like I'm constantly in a race to think up something before someone else does.
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Date: 6/14/11 12:48 am (UTC)The two of them are especially similar in that way, because they don't quite know what they'll do when those they hold dear are threatened. Part of the reason they hate violence is because they know they are not entirely in control of the extremes of their actions. Gen's methods tend to be particularly self-multilating. Poor guy...
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Date: 6/14/11 12:54 am (UTC)Ow, that's true, but sensations in the market actually cause people to look for books that are similar. Some people like to read the same basic plot interpreted by different authors (I may or may not be one of them). And there is also a risk in being entirely original, because then you're likely to create a story that only appeals to a particular group of people. Not a bad thing of course, but not always a money-maker for publishers.
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Date: 6/14/11 01:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 6/14/11 01:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 6/14/11 01:34 am (UTC)Although I don't know if I'd say Tangled falls into this category, there are good examples out there of stories who might not do something "first" but take the idea and make a better story out of it. Completely subjective, of course. For instance, Dracula is widely considered the "first" vampire novel, but that doesn't make it the best story with vampires in it. Which one actually does take home that award depends on the merits that particular readers assign to stories based on the qualities that they find most necessary, striking, valuable, or communicative.
Precedents are often lauded because they're "first," but sometimes that correlates to inferiority along other lines, such as character development, or plot cohesion, or thematic depth, or just the sheer ability to make an audience sit back and say "Wow! That was fun!" simply because the ideas that seemed so original in the precedent had yet to be fully formed in either the creator's mind or the collective culture. This leaves room for the ideas to be explored in more depth or developed more thoroughly in future works that consider them. And either way, whether a story is superior or inferior to another is again entirely subjective.
(The reason "first" has quotes is that everything to one degree or another has precedence: in oral storytelling or science or art or religion. It's just that we think of the first vampire novel as unique because it's the first time vampires have made an appearance in that genre of culture.)
I don't know if you find yourself reading in one genre more than another, but because the stories we're comparing (Tangled and The Thief) are both fantasies, I think it's worth mentioning that certain cultures of readers tend to assign different values to the merit of originality. I rarely read fantasy (outside certain exceptions), and I'm often surprised by how often the idea of originality or uniqueness appears in readers' reviews as a standalone merit. Most of what I read is science fiction, and it feels to me that in that genre, originality doesn't automatically come with extra bonus points for the author attached to it. Original things often fall completely flat in science fiction, and this may very well be because science fiction does value realism very highly; as science progresses in the real world, it's increasingly difficult to come up with new ways of writing about it while maintaining realism. So I think the merit of originality, of setting the precedent, is culture-specific, and can differ wildly from person to person and even based on medium and genre.
Just some thoughts. I did see Tangled and liked it; it was fun. I had already seen the first post on this site, though, so I was looking for the connections to QT. I'm not sure if I would have thought Flynn Rider was anything like Gen if I hadn't. He's much too cheerful and dashing. Gen isn't dashing in my head, and he's certainly not cheerful. He's snarky and a bit mean, and much, much more ruthless than Flynn. But I liked Flynn's rivalry with the horse :)
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Date: 6/14/11 05:57 am (UTC)This is exactly what I was thinking, but Drash... You've said it far more brilliantly then I could ever hope to. Kudos to you!
Cliche can still be enjoyable if done well, and fantasy culture, especially, thrives on cliche redoes and remakes of familiar stories. Creativity does not always correspond with complete and utter newness. And you're right... I get irritated with the term "original," because most people don't truly want "original". They want a sort of story they are familiar with made into something new. Give a person something completely new and inventive like Hugo Cabret, and we have no idea what to do with it or even what to call it.
And good point on making improvement. Does Jane Austen being one of the first to write "comedy of manners" preclude that no author could ever write anything just as good or better? Certainly not! In fact, I give kudos to Tangled for taking an over-used fairytale and turning it into a very different story with new creative elements. And Flynn? Actually more typical of the usual devilish thief from fairytales than Gen.
Also, I noticed that often times people will complain about not liking a story, because it's been done before. But is this simply because it wasn't done well, or they've seen it done better?
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Date: 6/15/11 12:16 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 6/15/11 12:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 6/15/11 05:26 am (UTC)I think, for your last point, that it's probably a combination of both. There might also be a secondary originality effect: sometimes, the first book of a particular type that a reader reads becomes the paragon of that type of story in their head, and no other story ever quite compares with it, because it came first, and was the most fresh and new seeming at the time. I know I've had it happen to me with a few stories. I can appreciate other books that do the same thing, but there's just a sort of... "loyalty" factor. I can't ever bring myself to like the later books as much as the first one, because it was, for me, my first exposure to that particular twist/trope/stereotype.
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Date: 6/15/11 02:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 7/2/11 04:59 pm (UTC)Now I'm making analogies... in QT world I think Sophos most closely resembles Alphonse. They're both kind-hearted, and their exterior (since CoK) is frightening and doesn't match who they are inside. Also if anyone is like a younger brother to Gen, it would have to be Sophos.
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Date: 7/7/11 09:04 pm (UTC)