In Which I Post A Meme - DVD Commentary
Aug. 11th, 2012 11:08 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Yoinked from gehayi!
Pick any passage of 500 words or less from any story I've written, and comment to this post with that selection. I will then give you the equivalent of a DVD commentary on that snippet: what I was thinking when I wrote it, why I wrote it in the first place, what's going on in the character's heads, why I chose certain words, what this moment means in the context of the rest of the fic, lots of awful puns, and anything else that you’d expect to find on a DVD commentary track.
Return to the Sporking Chamber
Pick any passage of 500 words or less from any story I've written, and comment to this post with that selection. I will then give you the equivalent of a DVD commentary on that snippet: what I was thinking when I wrote it, why I wrote it in the first place, what's going on in the character's heads, why I chose certain words, what this moment means in the context of the rest of the fic, lots of awful puns, and anything else that you’d expect to find on a DVD commentary track.
Return to the Sporking Chamber
Part 2
Date: 2012-08-13 02:49 am (UTC)While I do love a good action girl, I must admit that I'm a sucker for people who fight like Zelda of the Moon. There's something awesome about carefully stacking the cards in one's favor, to ensure a quick and easy win. I actually think I enjoyed writing Zelda of the Moon's fight best of all.
When writing about Zelda of the Moon arranging for the fancy dinner, I drew inspiration from how fairy tale heroines would prepare for a fight by asking for noodle implements and, almost always, actually getting them (for example, in the tale of the Linderworm, the heroine faces her wedding night with a dragon by bringing a wash tub, seven dresses, and seven brushes coated in lye, all of which kept her from being killed). Those scenarios were like the fairy tale equivalents of Rube Goldberg contraptions. You just keep reading to find out how all of those things would save the day.
I think Zant's huge appetite came from how power-hungry he was in the game. Or the image of an animal eating huge amounts and then sleeping it off. Whichever. ^^
I felt rather guilty about putting in milk making snakes drowsy, because I did look it up and saw that snakes didn't drink milk. I was tempted to make a change of some sort, but I couldn't think of a good alternative.
I nearly had Zelda of the Moon use a full-sized sword to decapitate Zant, mainly because she was based off of the Princess Zelda of Twilight Princess, who was seen fighting with a big sword. I began to think this was a bad idea when I tried to visualize her hiding a sword in a banquet hall and found it rather silly. I nearly went with the idea of the armor being made to hold swords and her stealing one of those, but that still felt off. I told parrinoyd (my beta) about this issue, and she linked me to an article about how swords were overused in literature, and what some good alternatives were. That gave me the idea to have Zelda of the Moon use a dagger.
I did realize that it would take multiple cuts to decapitate someone with a dagger, as opposed to one or two sword strokes, but I figured that Zelda of the Moon would have the strength (physically and emotionally) to do it, so I made the swap.
On a semi-related note, the swap to a dagger made a later scene work a lot better. The scene was the one where Vaati tries to kill Zelda of the Moon at night, and she uses the dagger to stab him. If I had kept it with a sword, it would have been VERY hard to picture her hiding it under her bed, pulling it out, and swigging it accurately while being strangled. The dagger, being smaller and easier to handle, worked much better there.
I would like to state for the record that I actually have no idea what the effect of pouring milk into wine would have. I'm pretty sure it would affect the taste beyond making it creamier, but I've never had wine period (let alone wine with milk), so I can't say. If I got it really wrong, I do apologize. ^^;
Re: Part 2
Date: 2012-08-13 02:57 am (UTC)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posset
And I remember that fairy tale! I always loved the Egyptian princess and I love Zelda of the Moon being just as cunning and subtle as she was.
Re: Part 2
Date: 2012-08-14 04:27 am (UTC)And thanks! I remember you said you liked that one. :) It always was one of my favorites, because it was one of the few "different" ones (not the standard stories like Cinderella or Snow White) that I was read as a kid. That, Tatterhood, and the story about the Phoenix, the Golden Horse, and the Porcelain Maiden.
Re: Part 2
Date: 2012-08-14 05:35 am (UTC)Favorite stories of mine:
The Prince and His Three Fates (Egypt)
The Bad Wishers (Paraguay) (The first link shows the frontpiece of the book that contains the story)
The Tale of the Name of the Tree (Bantu)
Master of All Masters (Scotland)
Tikki Tikki Tembo (China)
Katie Crackernuts (England) (notable in that the two stepsisters love each other)
The Death of Koshchei the Deathless (Russia)
The Bremen Town Musicians (Germany)
The Ugly Duckling (Denmark)
Baba Yaga (Russia)
Bluejay Visits the Ghosts (Chinook)
The Water of Life (Catalan--and features a very resourceful sister)
The Princess in the Chest (Denmark--kind of a cross between a fairy tale and a ghost story)
Prince Darling (I'm not sure of the origin, but I think it's French)
The Groac'h of the Isle of Lok (Brittany--and features a resourceful heroine)
I had a real thing for sad stories from Japan:
Oshidori
Yuki-Onna (The Lady of the Snows
The Story of Aoyagi
And--though Kipling's not popular these days--I grew up hearing Sterling Holloway reading the Just So Stories on LPs. These stories taught me so much about the sound of language. My favorites:
The Elephant's Child ('Satiable curiosity. And "the great, grey-green, greasy Limpopo River, all set about with fever-trees.")
The Cat Who Walks By Himself ("...and all places are alike to him.")
How the Rhinoceros Got His Skin
Also, this isn't counting in the various mythologies I grew up reading.
So one Grimm, one Andersen...and non-traditional everything else.