New Poll - Middle of the Action 7234c

4 years ago
Posts: 10878
This week's poll was suggested by jacob66. You know that storytelling technique of dropping you off in the middle of the action and then doing a flashback of all the events that led up to that moment? Like in the movies where they go "Yup, that's me. You're probably wondering how I got into this situation". Do you like this technique? 73611e
You can submit poll ideas here
http://mangaupdates.sitesdebloques.biz/showtopic.php?tid=3903
Previous Poll Results:
Question: In reality, you're lying in a coma. Everything you've experienced in your life was a dream in your brain. Do you choose to wake up?
Choices:
No - votes: 882 (25.3%)
Yes - votes: 2610 (74.7%)
There were 3492 total votes.
The poll ended: May 22nd 2021
Reality wins
A just ruler amongst tyrants
4 years ago
Posts: 196
I quite like "In media res " starts, I think it's one of the most engaging ways to start a story. I I once accidentally bought the ninth book of a horror series thinking it was the first, it was a great experience, with no unnecessary flashbacks.
But the again doing an overly long flashback explaining EVEYTHING up to that point. Completely ruins this trope for me. I especially dislike it when it isn't done in a fluid or consistent way, and completely halts the current action. In manga, they usually don't want to spoil the action with the narrators insight. So we end up seeing a distorted vision of what the author wants us to see . Which usually is a good terrain for many ass pull plots too milk out a series.
They also use this trope when they stretch the story without telling us a key concurrence the all the characters are conscious of but purposely hide it from the reader over and over. This is even more annoying when it's a pivotal occurrence (ex.: in the Monogatari series we don't really know what happened in the golden week yet it's mentioned in almost every chapter without revealing everything...until later on ) . Nisekoi's whole plot is an example of this . CLAMP excessively abuses this trope.
Up to date I can't think of a manga that has done this well. Except maybe Berserk's golden ark. (Even then they hid some stuff to later throw it at our faces. Like the fairy he met as a child. )

4 years ago
Posts: 268
Depends on how it is done, so no opinion...
I am envoy from nowhere in nowhere. Nobody and nothing have sent me. And though it is impossible I exist. © Trimutius
No opinion. Foregone conclusions are often gimmicky but can work. Committing to nonlinearity is probably the better idea. Like in Memento.
I also read EU/US comics and am a librarian.
Manga-Masters, My ANN-Lists + Imdb

4 years ago
Posts: 374
It can be done well, but I usually don't like it.

4 years ago
Posts: 1143
Warn: Banned
Quote from RoxFlowz
It can be done well, but I usually don't like it.
No better way to phrase it.

4 years ago
Posts: 43
No opinion. Depends on the writer's execution if I like it or not.
True, I've given up on the real world, however I haven't given up on myself. The world doesn't get to decide whether my life is boring, fun, or ordinary coz that's my decision to make. As long as I have the will nothing is impossible!

4 years ago
Posts: 736
Am i too tired or this question makes no sense lol
a situation that i myself went through? or someone else's? and starting in the middle? of what? how do you know there is a "middle"...
it is all rhetorical at this point XD
** "It's so warm that, Before the snow has a chance to stick, He melts it for me." **

4 years ago
Posts: 636
Like anything else, it can be done poorly, but it often works pretty well. Gives you something to look forward while the story is in the introductory stages.
When done well, you can often feel how well the author has the story planned out in advance.
"It is those who know little, and not those who know much, who so positively assert that this or that problem will never be solved by science."

4 years ago
Posts: 662
No. It’s just a cheap hook to get the reader/viewer interested. Writers don’t start a story that way because they think it’s great writing.
4 years ago
Posts: 130
No opinion, as in "When done right..."
Berserk does it excellently, with the small arc (which I can barely, barely ) before the Golden Age (?). The "Fuck you, Griffith (?)!" creates a tenseness throughout the entire GA. How will he become a God Hand?
(Should probably reread Berserk since I can't anything, but I'm still waiting for word if we're gonna get answers to all the questions or not (i.e. a "bible" left behind by Miura). Questions without answers are bleh.)
There's also the added value of enticing a reader, and many great stories start off painfully "slow". It's a quick way of showing its colors quickly, e.g. making promises to the reader that it won't be "slow" forever.
4 years ago
Posts: 63
Hate it. There I go trying to avoid spoilers and what does the story? "Let's start with spoilers!" Grrr. 😠

4 years ago
Posts: 18
Depends in how it's done.
First time I read a story like this felt so surprised, though I forgot which book it was 😅
Chill but chaotic
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4 years ago
Posts: 58
Like a lot of comments, I have no opinion because it really depends on how it's handled. Personally as long as there are still twists after you catch up to the middle opening, I don't mind. But if you open right before the final climax, then it feels less compelling.

4 years ago
Posts: 15
I don't mind being dropped in, but I absolutely loathe flashbacks that last longer than one scene.
If I'm dropped in somewhere, I want to know the resolution, not what led up to it. After the resolution I'm open for flashbacks again. Or during the resolution, like a detective explaining events type of things.