Did
you know that: if you want to shoot at a horseman riding downhill, you aim at
his knee? For a time bobbies in England were called crushers? Adding nickel to
gold will harden it? If an Adult swallowed enough table salt, he could die of
heart failure? (What a nifty way for an undesirable character to rid
her/himself of a rival, especially if the victim is a fanatic on taking herbs
in capsules. Someone could easily replace the herbs with salt.)
Old
movies are my downfall. I thoroughly enjoyed the beginning of I Was A Male
War Bride starring Cary Grant. He marches into the heroine's office with an armload of clothes and
dumps them on her desk. Their laundry got mixed up, but he purposely gives
everyone the idea that she has left her things in his apartment. The more she
denies the implied accusation, the more he tsks.
What
a cute scene!
With
a different setup, this could be a delicious way for the protagonists to meet,
or to create friction, or it could be a means for them to see each other again
and make up.
In
Mazy in the Congo starring Ann Sothern, Mazy, a show girl, dresses up
and convinces the attacking natives that she is a witch by doing simple
magician's tricks,
thus saving everyone. The locale could easily be changed to the early West and
the natives to Indians. The heroine could be running a friend's traveling magic show when the scene
unfolds.
But
why stop there? What if the heroine is actually using the show as a cover in
order to dig up evidence that could clear her father of fraud, but the way she
goes about it could send her to prison? What if the hero is sent out by
Pinkerton Detective Agency to investigate the case and rumors pertaining to a
certain young lady only to find...by golly, I think I've
come up with another plot.
From
the cop shows, I've found
different ways to defraud people out of their money, learned what can spoil a
good murder, and figured out how to set up clues. Thanks to the talk shows, I've gathered a wide range of scholarly
nuggets from the molding of a serial killer and the psychological makeup of a
schizophrenic, to split personalities and extreme life styles. All fodder for a
good plot.
There
are other pluses! Have you ever copied down last names from the list of
credits? Have you ever written descriptions of the actors--their personality
quirks, facial expressions, the way they walked, talked, acted--and put what
you’ve found on cards to file away? Or have you ever watched a movie and come
up with a twist of your own?
Well
if you haven't, come
on over. You bring the popcorn, I'll
furnish the drinks. If anybody asks … we’re doing research.
If you enjoyed Sherry's post be sure to check out her books on Amazon. Her newest novels are THE DEADLY DOUBLECROSS and TENDER DECEPTIONS...
If you enjoyed Sherry's post be sure to check out her books on Amazon. Her newest novels are THE DEADLY DOUBLECROSS and TENDER DECEPTIONS...