Third-Act Misunderstanding: Difference between revisions

m
clean up
m (update links)
m (clean up)
Line 1:
{{trope}}
{{quote|I'm torn, because on one hand, I want to share something important that happened to me while we were apart... But on the other hand, [[Genre Savvy|bardic tradition demands]] that I withhold it all so that at some later point, you can accidentally learn an incomplete version and jump to all the wrong conclusions--thus leading to entertaining dramatic conflict later in our relationship.|'''Elan''', ''[[The Order of the Stick]]''}}
[[File:graph_9958graph 9958.jpg|link=Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal|frame|If there are zombies involved, it ends with the man eating the woman's face.]]
Alice is keeping a secret, perhaps even a hidden agenda, from Bob<ref>(though gender flips are commonplace)</ref> and his [[True Companions]]. She may benignly want to befriend or romance him, or less scrupulously steal something from him, or gain his trust as [[The Mole]] and betray him. Regardless, she's holding back key facts about her background which would make him doubt her honesty or outright hate her. But before long she [[In Love with the Mark|genuinely develops feelings for him]], and may find she's [[Becoming the Mask]].
 
Line 10:
Often, Alice [[We Could Have Avoided All This|could have avoided]] this situation if she'd [[A Tragedy of Impulsiveness|thought things out]] and revealed her secret earlier when it wouldn't be as damaging. On the plus side, this is one narrative circumstance in which it is all but guaranteed that [[The Reveal Prompts Romance]].
 
[[Rom Com|Romantic comedy]], as a genre, [[Omnipresent Tropes|abuses this trope]]. Most [[Chick Flick|Chick Flicks]]s need to have the characters break up without losing audience sympathy, so some sort of misunderstanding usually drives the third act.
 
Compare with [[Third-Act Stupidity]] and [[Second Act Breakup]].
10,856

edits