BullMcGiveny
Probably Disagree
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- Jun 13, 2012
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As I said, if you don't want to see a point, you will never see it. You will just blah-blah your way out of this.
Funny, I was often think this about you, both in this latest argument and every time you troll the thread of a character you admit to hating.
Apparently in this thread Sharon's fans want to see Peggy's death as just a plot device to get Steve with Sharon. So one last time.
Because the rule is "Show, don't tell". Because Peggy wasn't just some minor figure in Steve's life during many years and 4 films (and the last one, AoU, even showed that he still thinks about her). It's the last Cap's film, so her funeral will be a beautiful conclusion for all this. Audience will care about her death and its effect on Steve much more, than about some barely known girl, happened to be relative to her. You can't just say: "Oh, by the way, she's dead. Lets go on." Audience needs to see Steve's emotions, his grief in order to feel the rising of stakes and his motivation. And what is the better place to emphasize it all, if not at her funeral?
There's another rule; viewers aren't babies.
You don't need to spell out every last thing for them. You don't need Steve weeping and beating his chest in anguish. something like that can be conveyed in acting (Evans is certainly capable), and dialogue, say, like Sam saying, "Listen Steve, ever since Peggy passed away, you were
Either that, or Russos just really don't like her at all, and were forced by Marvel to make her important, because they don't want to talk about her.
Possibly.
If they could make Peggy's death happen off screen only for the sake of someone, it would be Sharon. They could just show that Steve is really interested in her, so made a flashback about Steve calling her after TWS and discovering about "Carter", because it's not that kind of revelation at all to require an entire funeral scene.
Might it be that flashbacks to convey story elements that could be easily set in the present is sloppy storytelling?
It's no good to show the audience, that Steve get to know her only because of Peggy.
He'll get to know her because they'll be working together. Them meeting would serve as a proper introduction, both for the audience and for Steve.

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