This reminds me of so many stories whose explicit moral is “never give up.” The hero keeps trying after everyone told him to quit, and in the end he succeeds, and the audience comes out of the theater reaffirming the value of hope. But, in real life, what a terrible thing to teach people.
In conventional story structure, even though the hero never gives up, by the second turning point around 3⁄4 into the story, after having failed, he CHANGES STRATEGY, and succeeds. It’s not the stories’ fault if the audience doesn’t get the message.
This reminds me of so many stories whose explicit moral is “never give up.” The hero keeps trying after everyone told him to quit, and in the end he succeeds, and the audience comes out of the theater reaffirming the value of hope. But, in real life, what a terrible thing to teach people.
In conventional story structure, even though the hero never gives up, by the second turning point around 3⁄4 into the story, after having failed, he CHANGES STRATEGY, and succeeds. It’s not the stories’ fault if the audience doesn’t get the message.
Sometimes. More often the hero just tries AGAIN, BUT HARDER.