elspethdixon (
elspethdixon) wrote2006-04-15 01:39 pm
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RPF, HPF, and Based On A True Story, or What if Hollywood ficced them First?
I myself have never participated in any real RPS fandoms—I couldn’t tell N’Sync and the Backstreet Boys apart even back when they were all over MTV and the radio, which should give you some idea of the level of my interest in boybands, and when it comes to television and movies, I’m far more interested in the characters than the actual actors. I’d rather read about Jack Sparrow having sex with Will and Elizabeth Turner than about Johnny Depp, Keira Knightly, and Orlando Bloom performing the exact same sex acts, because Jack, Will, and Elizabeth are the ones I saw on screen and got all fangirly over. Mr. Depp, Ms. Knightly, and Mr. Bloom may be the talented and pretty people who helped create Jack, Will, and Elizabeth, but are they 18th century pirates?
Not that I’m totally against actorfic. When someone writes orgy fic featuring Shakespeare and the Lord Chamberlain’s men, then I’ll be all over actorfic like white on rice. Especially if they throw Marlowe into the mix as well. Mmmm… Marlowe.
And that begs the question: when exactly is RPS “RPS,” and when does it become something else? Sitting down at a computer and writing Depp/Bloom or Sean Bean/ Viggo Mortenson fic could theoretically get me sued for libel (though not for slander; to quote J. J. Jameson, “Slander is spoken. Libel is printed.”), but I could not only freely pen Marlowe slash, I could actually get it published. I submit as evidence Melissa Scott & Lisa A. Barnett’s Armor of Light. For that matter, I give you Shakespeare in Love, which might not be slash, but is certainly some degree of RPF.and totally stole the Oscar that should have gone to Saving Private Ryan
Granted, Mr. Mortenson et al are currently alive and well with their own agents and lawyers and press people to perform the aforementioned suing, and Christopher Marlowe has been dead for several hundred years, and moreover, left no descendants, but that’s the legal reasoning, not the moral argument. Why is Depp/Bloom squicky and wrong, and Shakespeare/Marlowe less so? Hell, I consider historical RPS less squicky than RPS with modern celebrities (as well as more interesting, since I’m a history geek), but I don’t know why.
And what about fic written for films and television series that are based on real people and events? To what extent is, say, a Doc/Wyatt slash fic based on Tombstone regular fanfic, and to what extent is it historical RPS? Wyatt Earp and John H. Holliday were, after all, real people. What about fic for a miniseries like Band of Brothers, which was based on a book that told the story of a real life army unit? What if I wrote fic for Good Night and Good Luck or Walk the Line or Capote?
Not only did Hollywood do the film equivalent of RPF in those movies, they used actual footage of Senator Joe McCarthy in Good Night and Good Luck, completely without his consent and permission, since he’s dead, and probably would have refused to give the film his blessing even were he alive to do so. His Hed Was Pastede On Yay! Granted, it was footage from a public broadcast, and therefore presumably up for grabs to anyone who cleared it with CBS first, but you see where I’m going with this, right?
If Hollywood or some published author has “done fic” about a celebrity or historical person first, does it absolve RPS writers who choose to write about those people of fic-writing sin, or does my Doc/Wyatt slash earn me a place in the Special Hell right next to the Timbertrick people?
Not that I’m totally against actorfic. When someone writes orgy fic featuring Shakespeare and the Lord Chamberlain’s men, then I’ll be all over actorfic like white on rice. Especially if they throw Marlowe into the mix as well. Mmmm… Marlowe.
And that begs the question: when exactly is RPS “RPS,” and when does it become something else? Sitting down at a computer and writing Depp/Bloom or Sean Bean/ Viggo Mortenson fic could theoretically get me sued for libel (though not for slander; to quote J. J. Jameson, “Slander is spoken. Libel is printed.”), but I could not only freely pen Marlowe slash, I could actually get it published. I submit as evidence Melissa Scott & Lisa A. Barnett’s Armor of Light. For that matter, I give you Shakespeare in Love, which might not be slash, but is certainly some degree of RPF.
Granted, Mr. Mortenson et al are currently alive and well with their own agents and lawyers and press people to perform the aforementioned suing, and Christopher Marlowe has been dead for several hundred years, and moreover, left no descendants, but that’s the legal reasoning, not the moral argument. Why is Depp/Bloom squicky and wrong, and Shakespeare/Marlowe less so? Hell, I consider historical RPS less squicky than RPS with modern celebrities (as well as more interesting, since I’m a history geek), but I don’t know why.
And what about fic written for films and television series that are based on real people and events? To what extent is, say, a Doc/Wyatt slash fic based on Tombstone regular fanfic, and to what extent is it historical RPS? Wyatt Earp and John H. Holliday were, after all, real people. What about fic for a miniseries like Band of Brothers, which was based on a book that told the story of a real life army unit? What if I wrote fic for Good Night and Good Luck or Walk the Line or Capote?
Not only did Hollywood do the film equivalent of RPF in those movies, they used actual footage of Senator Joe McCarthy in Good Night and Good Luck, completely without his consent and permission, since he’s dead, and probably would have refused to give the film his blessing even were he alive to do so. His Hed Was Pastede On Yay! Granted, it was footage from a public broadcast, and therefore presumably up for grabs to anyone who cleared it with CBS first, but you see where I’m going with this, right?
If Hollywood or some published author has “done fic” about a celebrity or historical person first, does it absolve RPS writers who choose to write about those people of fic-writing sin, or does my Doc/Wyatt slash earn me a place in the Special Hell right next to the Timbertrick people?
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Funniest example I've yet encountered: My pet comics fandom, The Authority. As anyone who's been exposed to this fandom for two paragraphs knows, the comic is, in part, about the big gay superheroic love of Apollo and Midnighter. Years before my time in the fandom, the canon relationship was ... I guess you could call it "subtextual." I mean, sure, in their very first scene in canon, the two of them are hanging out in an abandoned building, naked, clothes strewn about and hair mussed, killing time while waiting for the bad guys to show up, but neither of them is wearing a large neon sign flashing "WE JUST HAD SEX AND IT WAS
GREATHOMOSEXUAL" with voice-over for the blind, so, yes, I suppose it's subtextual. As opposed to the adopted child and the wedding later in canon, at least.I'm very sad that I was not in this fandom way back when, because evidently the snark between the slashers and omgnogayincomics!!!1! was epic. And hte slashers won. (And the writer, bastard demigod that he is, spent a couple of years gloating over the entertaining wank he had wrought before calmly addressing the issue on a message board with, I quote, "Yeah. So what?".)
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There are woobies. Woobies who get things done! And extremely imperfect heroes, and crazy old British bitches who accidentally gave Hitler some important career advice, and women who have conversations with each other about topics that aren't men, and drunken superheroics and PR stunts and bad decisions coming around to bite people in the ass in organic ways!
It really is my favorite comic, and I'll always love it dearly, despite the quality being a dodgy crapshoot depending on who's writing (as with anything).
*cough*
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I'd have gotten them sent sooner, but I was looking for a couple of the issues I knew I had lying around, that contained some truly glorious examples of the fact the while Midnighter may be the psychotic one, Apollo can damn well be a violent bastard when he pleases. Also, there are aliens on horses. I figured it would be worth the wait.
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Also *fangirls right back*. I thought I recognized your name- you've been writing the Authority fic for [Bad username or site: http://community.livejournal.com/fanfic100 @ livejournal.com], haven't you? I have to say- your take on Jenny Q is just utterly adorable.
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neverso slowly.(And
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