Search This Blog

The Quiet Place Day One: An Analysis


SPOILER ALERT

If you haven't watched it, and want to, do not proceed.


I enjoyed A Quiet Place one and two. I love Emily Blunt and John Krasinski. More than that, they had a solid suspense plot. From the opening moments to the satisfying end, they kept me riveted. Why? Because I cared about this family and their survival. While motive behind the alien attack wasn't really addressed, it was an acceptable monster movie. There were goals and stakes, obstacles and solutions. Not the most terrifying movie I have ever watched, but better than 2008's flop The Happening where the danger was the wind.

When I saw that A Quiet Place Day One was a prequel, I thought, "Oh goody, we finally get the origin story about the aliens." Nope. What we got was a sad literary vignette. Let's talk about where it failed from a story structure perspective.

1. The protagonist. Though Lupito Nyong'o, Samira, did her best with what she was given, the short-termer cancer patient lacks goals except to get pizza. Quite frankly I rooted more for her cat, but even the cat was problematic. More on that later. So she had no real goal. The obstacles/antagonists were the aliens. Since she had no expectation of surviving, it was extremely weak motivation. A complication came in the form of a stranger, Eric, played by Joseph Quinn. We learn almost nothing about him except he is from England and was going to law school. It wasn't a potential romance layer.

2. The goal and stakes. There aren't any except surviving each scene until the end and her wanting a specific pizza, which was kind of ridiculous given the circumstance. It would have been old abandoned pizza picked at by insects and flies at best. She is dying, so she isn't even interested in being saved. At least the stranger has some sense of self-preservation. Which is why the cat is my hero. Frodo manages to outmaneuver the aliens.

3. The purse pet. Frodo, played by cats Schnitzel and Nico, stole every scene  This is something that annoys me about a lot of film and television which features pets (and often children). They magically appear when needed and there is no continuity between appearances. One moment the cat is on a leash, the next free-roaming. Samira is holding him at times. As an owner of many cats, at the first sign of trouble they scatter and hunker down, resisting your calls. If they are startled when you are holding them, you will end up scarred. The idea that this cat would keep returning to her on cue is absurd. It isn't like they have a long term history. He wasn't her cat. She would never have seen it again after it left the first time. He would have run from Eric, not taken him to Samira. Cats are stealthy and the aliens might not have heard Frodo as long as he didn't meow, but there is a good chance he would have hissed. She should have handed the cat off to the other survivors heading for the boat. By not doing so, at that moment, she was consigning Frodo to her fate. If not for Eric, the cat would not have made it. So there was a lot of "the plot called for it."

3. The mythology. I was no closer to understanding what the aliens were, where they came from, why they came, and what they wanted by the end of this prequel. I thought surely it would have explained all. I expected to see the origin story of how people were made aware of them and what was done in an attempt to fight them. We got zero insight, except they don't like water. But much like cats, they can tolerate it when needed. The rules of magic didn't state that water melted them like acid. If so, rain would too but they navigate wet surfaces just fine.

4. The escape. Let's talk about the logic of the boat. The aliens are seen jumping long distances. That boat would not have made it out of the harbor without making noise and being swarmed. Period. End of. So total logic fail. Maybe they should have summoned a submarine and entered it from a subterranean port. Instead it was just a setup for Eric to save the cat.

5.  The outcome. Samira gives the cat to Eric and they make it to the boat, leaving Samira behind to be eaten. The end. So unsatisfying. Yes, I prefer a happy ending. Samira was never going to get one. At least Eric saved the cat, though it nearly drowned on the way to the boat, another plot called for it moment.

Thus proving that just because it is in the same universe does not guarantee that a movie will be a satisfying story. That is an hour and thirty-nine minutes I will never get back. If it were a book, it would go on my "to be burned" pile and I would never read the author again.

I would love to see more truly scary horror books and movies and series. So many have been a huge disappointment. I don't want dreams, memories, submerged trauma, or horrifying truths. These are other genres of Horror that other people enjoy. They're just not my flavor. Gore has replaced tension. You can have more tension in a one-on-one cat and mouse chase than you do from one-hundred special-effects-laden deaths. The mythologies aren't sufficient or are missing entirely. The writers/directors aren't good at managing the tension gas pedal, of creating a sense of unease that leads to delicious jump scares. I am waiting for someone to make horror great again. It won't be Blumhouse. They disappoint me every time.

A few I consider satisfying (mostly movies of late).

The Exorcist (original)

What Lies Beneath

The Conjuring movie universe

Annabelle Comes Home

Last House on the Left

The Woman In Black by Shirley Jackson, movie adaption with Daniel Radcliff was pretty good too.

Insidious movie franchise.

Sixth Sense

The Black Phone based on a Joe Hill story.

The Haunting 1989 based on Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House

Rose Red scripted by Stephen King.

There are more examples I could give but you get the gist. I want to be scared with the tension gas pedal expertly applied and good jump scares. I want to leave the experience looking over my shoulder and closing my curtains at night. I want a satisfying mythology, and there are many cultural mythologies to explore. I don't mind a "who dies next" plot like And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie as long as the other elements are in place and I am rooting for the protagonist to survive.

Further reading:

Mastering Horror

Top 10 Things That Horrify

Stirring The Plot With Isolation

Story Skeleton: Watcher In The Woods

House At The End of The Street Part 1

House At The End of The Street Part 2

Dark Places Story Skeleton Part 1

Dark Places Story Skeleton Part 2

As always if you find this information helpful, share it, like it. If you want more free information, sign up to follow the blog on blogger or the Story Building Blocks Facebook Page. Free tips and tools are also available on my site https://dianahurwitz.com



Master List of Self-Publishing Platforms

Self-publishing continues to gain in legitimacy. As traditional publishing has faced challenges and contraction, self-publishing has blossomed. There are many options. Some writers prefer to stay with Amazon with their amazing distribution network. Others choose to go wide with aggregators with equally strong reach in foreign markets. One thing to consider as new platforms pop up is whether or not they are an established entity or a fly-by-night scammer. Always do your research. If a publisher is only one person, there are legal issues if they die, stop paying, or go out of business. Always read the fine print.

The information is accurate as of my research date of May 2024. I have links to each platform in the post you can check for updated information. To make it easier to compare the different publishing platforms, here is a list of the blog posts comparing cost, rights, distribution, services, and payments..

















17. XinXii https://dianahurwitz.blogspot.com/2024/09/the-abcs-of-self-publishing-platforms.html

As always if you find this information helpful, share it, like it. If you want more free information, sign up to follow the blog on blogger or the Story Building Blocks Facebook Page. Free tips and tools are also available on my site https://dianahurwitz.com



The ABCs of Self-Publishing Platforms XinXii

This week we finish our posts on self-publishing platforms with one of the newest options.

XINXII  https://www.xinxii.com/ 

XinXii is a new player out of Germany and distributes ebooks and audiobooks through major retailers internationally. It has a 100% trust score on Scam Alert. They support documents no matter what length, filetype or style, a short story, biography, Excel template, pattern, recipe, guidebook, study notes or material to prepare for exams.

There is no minimum page length, no exclusivity, no contract duration, and no DRM restrictions. You use one XinXii account to publish under multiple pen names and in different languages. 

Your products remain for sale on the XinXii Store until you choose to remove them, regardless of how many people buy them.

Cost: They do not charge payment processing fees (by PayPal e.g.). Publishing and selling are completely free. No cost to upload. No charge for changes.

Rights: You retain your copyright and can remove your work at any time.

Distribution: You select which channels you wish to partner with. They distribute through Tolino, Kindle, Google Play, Apple Books, Barnes & Noble, Draft2Digital, Audible, Angus and Robertson, buecher.de, casedellibro.com, Family Christian Stores, Fnac, Hugendubel, Indigo, Kobo, Libris BLZ, Livaria Cultura, Modadori, Thalia, Weltbild, Whitcoulls, WHSmith. They distribute eBooks without ISBN to: Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Casa del Libro. If your ebook has an ISBN, they distribute it to Angus & Robertson, buch.de, buecher.de, Der Club Bertelsmann, donauland.at, e-Sentral, Family Christian, Flipkart, Fnac (.com/.pt), Google Play, Hugendubel, iBookstore, Indigo, Kobo, Libris, Livraria Cultura, Mondadori, OTTO Media, Rakuten, Thalia (.de/.at/.ch), Weltbild (.de/.at/.ch), Whitcoulls, and WHSmith.

 Services: You have an author page on their site. You can modify your entries and check your sales reports at any time. They do not exercise any editorial control over the information entered as long as the user does not violate their Terms of Use.

You can upload your eBook (maximum 80 mb) in the following formats: Adobe PDF (.pdf), ePUB, Word .doc and .docx, Microsoft PowerPoint (.ppt/.pps/.pptx), Microsoft Excel (.xls/.xlsx), Mobipocket / Kindle-Format (.mobi), mp3 (Audio Book), LibreOffice/OpenOffice Text Document (.odt), rich text format (.rtf)..They convert your eBook to the ePub format (for iBookstore) and for free for fiction books. 

XinXii handles the complete order, customer support, and billing processing behind the scenes. You can see real-time sales reports about how often (but not by whom) your eBooks are bought at XinXii.

You can react by changing the description or the price. An alert system notifies you via e-mail about any activity concerning your eBooks such as when someone has purchased one or comments on one of your eBooks. 

You can generate coupon codes for your eBook. You can limit the number of downloads or allow unlimited downloads. You specify when the promotion starts and ends (1 – 12 days). Then you distribute the coupon code in your promotions. The readers submit the code when checking out and they can download the book free of charge. You can check the number of the redeemed coupons in the section Coupon Manager as well as delete/deactivate the coupon code.

If you need ideas how to use coupon codes for marketing your eBook. They offer tips and examples.

PAYMENT: XinXii uploads your sales reports from our retail outlets to your account weekly. You set whatever price you want for the eBook and keep.70 percent of net sales for works and eBooks with a list price greater than $2.49 / £1.59, 40 percent of net sales for works and eBooks with a list price at or between $0.99 and $2.48 / £0.89 and £1.58 for every purchased eBook on XinXii. Royalties on sales transacted via distribution partners varies

XinXii royalties are "net royalties": The "net sales" is equal to the eBook's net sales price. We do not reduce royalties by fees such as payment processing fees (by PayPal e.g.), retailer discounts, costs due to erroneous or fraudulent transactions or credit card charge-backs.

To receive your royalties, you can choose between PayPal and Bank Transfer as payment method. They perform transactions via Bank Transfer only in the European currency zone and in Euro (more information: SEPA).

An American author is not asked to give a tax ID number, just name and address. They do not report income to the IRS. As XinXii is a European based company, they have to pay the German VAT to the tax office for each digital product sold (7%) and the VAT must be always included in the final price of all products listed on XinXii. So after a sale, they have to transfer the VAT to the tax office, and the author will get his percentage of the net price as provision/royalty. Once the minimum amount of EUR 20,00 (~ US$ 27.00 / GBP 17.00) has been confirmed, you can request the payment by click. The amount will then be paid at the end of the following month after being requested. You can select the currency in which you want to be paid by us (USD, GBP or EUR).

You can modify your entries and check your sales reports at any time. If you select USD e.g., you will be paid by us in USD (w/o conversion). You can pay by PayPal or Credit Card for purchases. They use iPayment as a partner for credit card transactions and they implement state of the art security tools and techniques to ensure that your card details are secure. XinXii does not have access to any of your credit card details.

Next week, I will make a master list with links to all of the posts for the different platforms.

As always, if you find this information useful, share it, like it. If you want more free information, sign up to follow the blog on blogger or the Story Building Blocks Facebook Page. Free tips and tools are also available on my site https://dianahurwitz.com/.