movies are movies and documentations are documentations........ if movies made sense in real life they would be boring (or good documentations...) u watch a movie to get entertained not to see realistic boring things u already know from the real life....
If movies were entirely realistic then people wouldn't be watching them. They would just have their own lives.
Then you see someone do or use something in a movie you get to see an idealized representation of that something. God tier Breakfast scene represents something like care for the other, competence, discipline to wake up on time and ahead others etc.
If you see an apartment it is an idealized representation of an apartment, or house or summer home etc. Unless you need it to convey a plot point/settings but that is usually rare and/or has to be incredibly important to the movie.
This is why your MC has 1M $ house/apartment and stunning wife/gf out of his league. Unless your movie is about how cramped the living conditions are and/or how poor he is.
Orphelia, unrealistic details are distracting. Not only do they take you out of the story, they make it harder to relate to the characters, which goes against the whole point of any story. Viewers (and readers) appreciate attention to detail.
#27 The third cop enters the room not having heard any of the conversation up to that point but joins in and adds information that's relevant right at that time.
Used to see it all the time on NCIS when Abby walks into the room and says "I can answer that".
"On the phone making plans: “ok, meet me at 5?” “sure.” And that’s the whole plan. Where are you meeting? Planning to meet someone in a public place never goes this smoothly"
movies are movies and documentations are documentations........ if movies made sense in real life they would be boring (or good documentations...) u watch a movie to get entertained not to see realistic boring things u already know from the real life....
If movies were entirely realistic then people wouldn't be watching them. They would just have their own lives.
Then you see someone do or use something in a movie you get to see an idealized representation of that something. God tier Breakfast scene represents something like care for the other, competence, discipline to wake up on time and ahead others etc.
If you see an apartment it is an idealized representation of an apartment, or house or summer home etc. Unless you need it to convey a plot point/settings but that is usually rare and/or has to be incredibly important to the movie.
This is why your MC has 1M $ house/apartment and stunning wife/gf out of his league. Unless your movie is about how cramped the living conditions are and/or how poor he is.
Orphelia, unrealistic details are distracting. Not only do they take you out of the story, they make it harder to relate to the characters, which goes against the whole point of any story. Viewers (and readers) appreciate attention to detail.
#27 The third cop enters the room not having heard any of the conversation up to that point but joins in and adds information that's relevant right at that time.
Used to see it all the time on NCIS when Abby walks into the room and says "I can answer that".
Then you see someone do or use something in a movie you get to see an idealized representation of that something.
God tier Breakfast scene represents something like care for the other, competence, discipline to wake up on time and ahead others etc.
If you see an apartment it is an idealized representation of an apartment, or house or summer home etc. Unless you need it to convey a plot point/settings but that is usually rare and/or has to be incredibly important to the movie.
This is why your MC has 1M $ house/apartment and stunning wife/gf out of his league. Unless your movie is about how cramped the living conditions are and/or how poor he is.
Used to see it all the time on NCIS when Abby walks into the room and says "I can answer that".
Home owner: Hey, want a beer?
Guest: Sure
Guest takes a sip and talks to the home owner for like two seconds and then leave.
But what about that beer? Who drank the rest of it? Did they just pour it in the sink?