JewyB wrote: Tue Oct 20, 2020 6:44 pm
ABED wrote: Tue Oct 20, 2020 6:07 pm
JewyB wrote: Tue Oct 20, 2020 6:01 pm
Superior Spiderman is a shining example of this, its rare but my god Spiderman was interesting again for the first time in years.
Is that the one with Miles Morales? If that's the case, you'd be incorrect because Miles is BORING.
No thats Ultimate Spiderman part 2(I guess?), Superior is when Doc Ock becomes a vastly more fascinating spiderman.
Even if Dan Slott weren't a god awful writer, a temporary change in the status quo can be refreshing but that's not the same as someone permanently taking over the lead.
That depends entirely on how you define the two terms. I've always used them interchangeably
They are but they are different. Plot are the stuff that happens, but story is about character and what the narrative is actually about. Take Lethal Weapon for instance
Plot - Straightlaced cop and family man Roger Murtaugh teams with an on the edge detective Martin Riggs on a case after a war buddy's daughter dies under suspicious circumstances.
Story - Riggs and Murtaugh form a bond at an important part of their lives and give each other the thing they needed - Murtaugh, a sense of vitality, and Riggs, a family.
In the Freeza arc, the plot was to find the DB's but the story was ultimately about Goku's fight against the biggest bad guy in the universe who also happened to be the one responsible for the destruction of his planet of birth.
I don't argue that Goku isn't the main character of Dragon Ball overall, that much is obvious, but in any case, the Z era undeniably sidelines him a lot, more so than you'd expect for the central protagonist. I do consider the Namek and Android arcs to be more ensemble pieces because they focus on many different characters divorced from Goku, and they all have their own goals and crucial developments. The Saiyan arc gives Goku more to do but still spends a large amount of focus on the rest of the cast, with Gohan and Krillin proving crucial to Vegeta's defeat.
Let's put it this way, you have a story where Character A is usually the main protagonist but spends 90% of it in a hospital bed or a bacta tank, doing absolutely nothing, while other characters actually go on the adventures, collect all the MacGuffins and do most of the fighting and interacting. Sure, everyone talks about Character A and wishes for him to arrive so he can kill the bad guys and solve their problems, but Character A is basically a Call of Duty tactical nuke at that point, which is how I've often compared Goku's role in those particular arcs.
And yet almost nothing gets done until Goku shows up. There's a lot of treading water in DBZ until Goku arrives.
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