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Continuity (fiction)

In fiction, continuity is a consistency of the characteristics of people, plot, objects, and places seen by the reader or viewer over some period of time. It is relevant to several media.

Continuity is particularly a concern in the production of film and television due to the difficulty of rectifying an error in continuity after shooting has wrapped. It also applies to other art forms, including novels, comics, and video games, though usually on a smaller scale. It also applies to fiction used by persons, corporations, and governments in the public eye.

Most productions have a script supervisor on hand whose job is to pay attention to and attempt to maintain continuity across the chaotic and typically non-linear production shoot. This takes the form of a large amount of paperwork, photographs, and attention to and memory of large quantities of detail, some of which is sometimes assembled into the story bible for the production. It usually regards factors both within the scene and the technical details, including meticulous records of camera positioning and equipment settings. The use of a Polaroid camera was standard but has since been replaced by digital cameras. All of this is done so that, ideally, all related shots can match, despite perhaps parts being shot thousands of miles and several months apart. It is an inconspicuous job because if done perfectly, no one will ever notice.

In comic books, continuity has also come to mean a set of contiguous events, sometimes said to be "set in the same universe."

Continuity errors

 
A continuity error in Charlie Chaplin's 1914 comedy short The Property Man. In the first frame, Chaplin's character is seen carrying a trunk through a door, holding his hat behind him. In the immediately subsequent shot from the other side of the door, he is wearing the hat.

Most continuity errors are subtle and minor, such as changes in the level of drink in a character's glass or the length of a cigarette, and can be permitted with relative indifference even to the final cut. Others can be more noticeable, such as sudden drastic changes in the appearance of a character. Such errors in continuity can ruin the illusion of realism and affect the suspension of disbelief.

In cinema, special attention must be paid to continuity because scenes are rarely shot in the order in which they appear in the final film. The shooting schedule is often dictated by location permit issues. For example, a character may return to Times Square in New York City several times throughout a movie, but as it is extraordinarily expensive to close off Times Square, those scenes will likely be filmed all at once to reduce permit costs. Weather, the ambience of natural light, cast and crew availability, or any number of other circumstances can also influence a shooting schedule.

Measures against continuity errors in the film

Film production companies use various techniques to prevent continuity errors. The first would be to film all the shots for a particular scene together and all shots of consecutive scenes together (if the scenes take place together, with no break between them in the film's timeline). This allows actors to remain in costume, in character, and in the same location (and with the same weather, if shooting on location).

The second major technique is for costume designers, production designers, prop masters, and make-up artists to take instant photographs of actors and sets at the beginning and end of each day's shooting (once made possible by Polaroid cameras, now done with digital cameras and cell phones as well). This allows the various workers to check each day's clothing, set, props, and make-up against a previous day's.

The third is to avoid shooting on location entirely but instead film everything on a studio set. This allows weather and lighting to be controlled (as the shooting is indoors), and for all clothing and sets to be stored in one place to be hauled out the next day from a secure location.

Editing errors

Editing errors can occur when a character in a scene references a scene or incident that has not occurred yet, or of which they should not yet be aware.[citation needed]

An example of an editing error can be seen in the film It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), where a scene of people climbing a slope at the start is seen from below and then replayed from above.

Visual errors

Visual errors are instant discontinuities occurring in visual media such as film and television. Items of clothing change colors, shadows get longer or shorter, items within a scene change place or disappear, etc.

One of the earliest examples of a visual error appears in Charlie Chaplin's 1914 movie The Property Man.[1] Here, in a supposedly smooth step from one room to another, the Tramp loses his hat in one room, but it is instantly back on his head as he enters the next room. Rather "loose" plots and a lack of continuity editing made most early films rife with such errors.

Another example occurs in the 1998 film Waking Ned, when two of the film's characters, Jackie and Michael, are walking through a storm towards Ned's house. The umbrella they are under is black during their conversation as they walk towards the house (filmed from slightly above and to the front). However, after cutting to a lower shot (filmed from behind Jackie), Michael walks onscreen from the right holding an umbrella that is not black but beige, with a brown band at the rim.

Another glaring example of poor continuity occurs in the Disney film Pete’s Dragon (filmed in 1976). During the song "Brazzle Dazzle Day" when Lampie (Mickey Rooney), Pete (Sean Marshall), and Nora (Helen Reddy) climb the stairs to the top of the lighthouse, Pete's shirt beneath his overalls is orange. But after descending to the bottom again and coming out of the lighthouse door, his shirt is now grey.

Plot errors

A plot error, or a plot hole as it is commonly known, reflects a failure in the consistency of the created fictional world. A character might state he was an only child, yet later mention a sibling. In the TV show Cheers, Frasier Crane's wife Lilith mentions Frasier's parents are both dead, and, in another episode, Frasier himself claims his father to have been a scientist. When the character was spun off into Frasier, his father, a retired policeman named Martin, became a central character. Eventually, in an episode featuring Cheers star Ted Danson, the inconsistency was given the retroactive explanation that Frasier was embarrassed about his father's lowbrow attitudes and thus claimed his death. This is a frequent occurrence in sitcoms, where networks may agree to continue a show, but only if a certain character is emphasized, leading other minor characters to be written out of the show with no further mention of the character's existence, while the emphasized character (usually a breakout character, as in the case of Frasier Crane) develops a more complete back story that ignores previous, more simplified backstories.

Homeric nod

A Homeric nod (sometimes heard as 'Even Homer nods') is a term for a continuity error that has its origins in Homeric epic. The proverbial phrase for it was coined by the Roman poet Horace in his Ars Poetica:[2] "et idem indignor quandoque bonus dormitat Homerus" ("and yet I also become annoyed whenever the great Homer nods off").

There are numerous continuity errors in Homer that can be described as "nods", as for example:

  • In Iliad,[3] Menelaos kills a minor character, Pylaimenes, in combat. Pylaimenes is later[4] still alive to witness the death of his son.
  • In Iliad 9.165-93 three characters, Phoinix, Odysseus, and Aias set out on an embassy to Achilleus; however, at line 182 the poet uses a verb in the dual form to indicate that there are only two people going; at lines 185ff. verbs in the plural form are used, indicating more than two; but another dual verb appears at line 192 ("the two of them came forward").

In modern Homeric scholarship, many of Homer's "nods" are explicable as the consequences of the poem being retold and improvised by generations of oral poets. In the second case cited above, it is likely that two different versions are being conflated: one version with an embassy of three people, another with just two people. Alexander Pope was inclined to give Homeric nods the benefit of the doubt, saying in his Essay on Criticism that "Those oft are Stratagems which Errors seem, Nor is it Homer Nods, but We that Dream.".

Aging discrepancies

The practice of accelerating the age of a television character (usually a child or teenager) in conflict with the timeline of a series and/or the real-world progression of time is popularly known as Soap Opera Rapid Aging Syndrome, or SORAS.[5] Children unseen on screen for a time might reappear portrayed by an actor several years older than the original.[6] Usually coinciding with a recast, this rapid aging is typically done to open up the character to a wider range of storylines, and to attract younger viewers.[5] A recent example of this occurring is in the BBC's Merlin series, in which Mordred is initially played by a young child in Season 4, yet suddenly grows up into his late teens in time for the start of Season 5, with the rest of the characters aging by only three years.

The reverse can also happen. On the television program Lost, the character of 10-year-old Walt Lloyd was played by 12-year-old actor Malcolm David Kelley. The first few seasons took place over the course of just a few months, but by that point, Lloyd looked much older than 10. In his remaining few appearances, special effects were used to make him look younger, or the scene took place years later.

Deliberate continuity errors

Sometimes a work of fiction may deliberately employ continuity errors, usually for comedy. For example, in the Marx Brothers' classic film Duck Soup, at the climax of the film, the camera shows a shot of Groucho Marx speaking a line, followed by a cutaway shot of something else happening, followed by another shot of Groucho. Each time, Groucho's hat changes, usually to something more outrageous than before (a Napoleonic hat, a Prussian hat, etc.).

Dealing with errors

When continuity mistakes have been made, explanations are often proposed by either writers or fans to smooth over discrepancies. Fans sometimes make up explanations for such errors that may or may not be integrated into canon; this has come to be colloquially known as fanwanking (a term originally coined by the author Craig Hinton to describe excessive use of continuity).[7] Often when fans do not agree with one of the events in a story (such as the death of a favorite character), they will choose to ignore the event in question so that their enjoyment of the franchise is not diminished. When the holder of the intellectual property discards all existing continuity and starts from scratch, it is known as rebooting. Fans call a less extreme literary technique that erases one episode the reset button. See also fanon.

A conflict with previously-established facts is sometimes deliberate; this is a retcon, as it is a retroactive change in continuity. Retcons sometimes clarify ambiguities or correct perceived errors. This is not to be confused with the continuance of a reality (continuality).

Real-time programs vs. traditional films

Television programs like 24, in which actors have to appear as if it is the same day for 24 consecutive episodes, have raised public recognition of continuity. However, traditional films have frequently had much of the same sort of issues to deal with; film shoots may last several months, and as scenes are frequently shot out of story sequence, footage shot weeks apart may be edited together as part of the same day's action in the completed film. In some ways, 24 presents a simpler situation, as costumes and hairstyles generally should not change very frequently; in many feature films, a range of different hairstyles and costumes must be created, changed, and then recreated exactly, as various scenes are shot.

Ageless characters

Some fiction ignores continuity to allow characters to slow or stop the aging process, despite real-world markers like major social or technological changes. In comics this is sometimes referred to as a "floating timeline", where the fiction takes place in a "continuous present".[8] Roz Kaveney suggests that comic books use this technique to satisfy "the commercial need to keep certain characters going forever".[9] This is also due to the fact that the authors have no need to accommodate the aging of their characters, which is also typical of most animated television shows.[10] Kevin Wanner compares the use of a sliding timescale in comics to the way ageless figures in myths are depicted interacting with the contemporary world of the storyteller.[11] When certain stories in comics, especially origin stories, are rewritten, they often retain key events but are updated to a contemporary time, such as with the comic book character Tony Stark, who invents his Iron Man armor in a different war depending on when the story is told.[12]

References

  1. ^ "Charlie Chaplin : Films".
  2. ^ Lines 358-359.
  3. ^ Book V Lines 576-579
  4. ^ Book XIII Lines 643-659
  5. ^ a b Clayton-Millar, Kim (April 24, 2006). "Soaps' rising stars". Tonight. Independent News & Media. Retrieved December 17, 2009.
  6. ^ Bird, S. Elizabeth (2003). The Audience in Everyday Life: Living in a Media World. New York: Routledge. p. 135. ISBN 0-415-94259-4. Retrieved December 12, 2009.
  7. ^ Parkin, Lance (2007). AHistory: An Unauthorized History of the Doctor Who universe (2nd ed.). Des Moines, Iowa: Mad Norwegian Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-9759446-6-0.
  8. ^ Jeffery, Scott (2016), Jeffery, Scott (ed.), "The Rhizome of Comic Book Culture", The Posthuman Body in Superhero Comics: Human, Superhuman, Transhuman, Post/Human, Palgrave Studies in Comics and Graphic Novels, New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, pp. 37–67, doi:10.1057/978-1-137-54950-1_3, ISBN 978-1-137-54950-1
  9. ^ Kaveney, Roz (2008). Superheroes!: Capes and Crusaders in Comics and Films. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 22. ISBN 9781845115692.
  10. ^ Goertz, Allie; Prescott, Julia; Oakley, Bill; Weinstein, Josh (2018-09-18). 100 Things The Simpsons Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die (in Arabic). Triumph Books. ISBN 978-1-64125-109-9.
  11. ^ Wanner, Kevin J. (2018). "Authority Apart from Truth: Superhero Comic Book Stories as Myths". In Urban, Hugh; Johnson, Greg (eds.). Irreverence and the Sacred: Critical Studies in the History of Religions. Oxford University Press. p. 84.
  12. ^ Méon, J. M. (2018). "Sons and Grandsons of Origins: Narrative Memory in Marvel Superhero Comics". In Ahmed, Maaheen; Crucifix, Benoît (eds.). Comics Memory: Archives and Styles. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 203–204. ISBN 978-3319917450.

Further reading

  • Miller, Pat (December 1998). Script Supervising and Film Continuity, Third Edition. Focal Press. ISBN 0-240-80294-2.
  • Gillan, Audrey (2008-11-10). "An Aston Martini, stirred not shaken, please Pennymoney / Site lists 007 continuity gaffes in new Bond film / Odd Corsas, corpses and capitals spotted in movie". The Guardian. Retrieved 2008-12-21.
  • Stamberg, Susan (2008-02-21). "When Continuity Counts, Call a Script Girl — Er, Guy". National Public Radio. Retrieved 2008-12-21.
  • Miller, Susan W. (2005-08-05). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on February 3, 2009. Retrieved 2008-12-21.

continuity, fiction, this, article, about, consistency, throughout, single, work, fiction, broader, franchise, related, works, fictional, universe, continuity, applied, fictional, universe, canon, fiction, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve. This article is about consistency throughout a single work of fiction For a broader franchise of related works see Fictional universe For continuity as applied to a fictional universe see Canon fiction This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Continuity fiction news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions March 2013 This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains wording that promotes the subject in a subjective manner without imparting real information Please remove or replace such wording and instead of making proclamations about a subject s importance use facts and attribution to demonstrate that importance May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In fiction continuity is a consistency of the characteristics of people plot objects and places seen by the reader or viewer over some period of time It is relevant to several media Continuity is particularly a concern in the production of film and television due to the difficulty of rectifying an error in continuity after shooting has wrapped It also applies to other art forms including novels comics and video games though usually on a smaller scale It also applies to fiction used by persons corporations and governments in the public eye Most productions have a script supervisor on hand whose job is to pay attention to and attempt to maintain continuity across the chaotic and typically non linear production shoot This takes the form of a large amount of paperwork photographs and attention to and memory of large quantities of detail some of which is sometimes assembled into the story bible for the production It usually regards factors both within the scene and the technical details including meticulous records of camera positioning and equipment settings The use of a Polaroid camera was standard but has since been replaced by digital cameras All of this is done so that ideally all related shots can match despite perhaps parts being shot thousands of miles and several months apart It is an inconspicuous job because if done perfectly no one will ever notice In comic books continuity has also come to mean a set of contiguous events sometimes said to be set in the same universe Contents 1 Continuity errors 1 1 Measures against continuity errors in the film 1 2 Editing errors 1 3 Visual errors 1 4 Plot errors 1 5 Homeric nod 1 6 Aging discrepancies 2 Deliberate continuity errors 3 Dealing with errors 4 Real time programs vs traditional films 5 Ageless characters 6 References 7 Further readingContinuity errors Edit A continuity error in Charlie Chaplin s 1914 comedy short The Property Man In the first frame Chaplin s character is seen carrying a trunk through a door holding his hat behind him In the immediately subsequent shot from the other side of the door he is wearing the hat Most continuity errors are subtle and minor such as changes in the level of drink in a character s glass or the length of a cigarette and can be permitted with relative indifference even to the final cut Others can be more noticeable such as sudden drastic changes in the appearance of a character Such errors in continuity can ruin the illusion of realism and affect the suspension of disbelief In cinema special attention must be paid to continuity because scenes are rarely shot in the order in which they appear in the final film The shooting schedule is often dictated by location permit issues For example a character may return to Times Square in New York City several times throughout a movie but as it is extraordinarily expensive to close off Times Square those scenes will likely be filmed all at once to reduce permit costs Weather the ambience of natural light cast and crew availability or any number of other circumstances can also influence a shooting schedule Measures against continuity errors in the film Edit Film production companies use various techniques to prevent continuity errors The first would be to film all the shots for a particular scene together and all shots of consecutive scenes together if the scenes take place together with no break between them in the film s timeline This allows actors to remain in costume in character and in the same location and with the same weather if shooting on location The second major technique is for costume designers production designers prop masters and make up artists to take instant photographs of actors and sets at the beginning and end of each day s shooting once made possible by Polaroid cameras now done with digital cameras and cell phones as well This allows the various workers to check each day s clothing set props and make up against a previous day s The third is to avoid shooting on location entirely but instead film everything on a studio set This allows weather and lighting to be controlled as the shooting is indoors and for all clothing and sets to be stored in one place to be hauled out the next day from a secure location Editing errors Edit Editing errors can occur when a character in a scene references a scene or incident that has not occurred yet or of which they should not yet be aware citation needed An example of an editing error can be seen in the film It s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World 1963 where a scene of people climbing a slope at the start is seen from below and then replayed from above Visual errors Edit Visual errors are instant discontinuities occurring in visual media such as film and television Items of clothing change colors shadows get longer or shorter items within a scene change place or disappear etc One of the earliest examples of a visual error appears in Charlie Chaplin s 1914 movie The Property Man 1 Here in a supposedly smooth step from one room to another the Tramp loses his hat in one room but it is instantly back on his head as he enters the next room Rather loose plots and a lack of continuity editing made most early films rife with such errors Another example occurs in the 1998 film Waking Ned when two of the film s characters Jackie and Michael are walking through a storm towards Ned s house The umbrella they are under is black during their conversation as they walk towards the house filmed from slightly above and to the front However after cutting to a lower shot filmed from behind Jackie Michael walks onscreen from the right holding an umbrella that is not black but beige with a brown band at the rim Another glaring example of poor continuity occurs in the Disney film Pete s Dragon filmed in 1976 During the song Brazzle Dazzle Day when Lampie Mickey Rooney Pete Sean Marshall and Nora Helen Reddy climb the stairs to the top of the lighthouse Pete s shirt beneath his overalls is orange But after descending to the bottom again and coming out of the lighthouse door his shirt is now grey Plot errors Edit Main article Plot hole A plot error or a plot hole as it is commonly known reflects a failure in the consistency of the created fictional world A character might state he was an only child yet later mention a sibling In the TV show Cheers Frasier Crane s wife Lilith mentions Frasier s parents are both dead and in another episode Frasier himself claims his father to have been a scientist When the character was spun off into Frasier his father a retired policeman named Martin became a central character Eventually in an episode featuring Cheers star Ted Danson the inconsistency was given the retroactive explanation that Frasier was embarrassed about his father s lowbrow attitudes and thus claimed his death This is a frequent occurrence in sitcoms where networks may agree to continue a show but only if a certain character is emphasized leading other minor characters to be written out of the show with no further mention of the character s existence while the emphasized character usually a breakout character as in the case of Frasier Crane develops a more complete back story that ignores previous more simplified backstories Homeric nod Edit Look up Homer nods in Wiktionary the free dictionary A Homeric nod sometimes heard as Even Homer nods is a term for a continuity error that has its origins in Homeric epic The proverbial phrase for it was coined by the Roman poet Horace in his Ars Poetica 2 et idem indignor quandoque bonus dormitat Homerus and yet I also become annoyed whenever the great Homer nods off There are numerous continuity errors in Homer that can be described as nods as for example In Iliad 3 Menelaos kills a minor character Pylaimenes in combat Pylaimenes is later 4 still alive to witness the death of his son In Iliad 9 165 93 three characters Phoinix Odysseus and Aias set out on an embassy to Achilleus however at line 182 the poet uses a verb in the dual form to indicate that there are only two people going at lines 185ff verbs in the plural form are used indicating more than two but another dual verb appears at line 192 the two of them came forward In modern Homeric scholarship many of Homer s nods are explicable as the consequences of the poem being retold and improvised by generations of oral poets In the second case cited above it is likely that two different versions are being conflated one version with an embassy of three people another with just two people Alexander Pope was inclined to give Homeric nods the benefit of the doubt saying in his Essay on Criticism that Those oft are Stratagems which Errors seem Nor is it Homer Nods but We that Dream Aging discrepancies Edit The practice of accelerating the age of a television character usually a child or teenager in conflict with the timeline of a series and or the real world progression of time is popularly known as Soap Opera Rapid Aging Syndrome or SORAS 5 Children unseen on screen for a time might reappear portrayed by an actor several years older than the original 6 Usually coinciding with a recast this rapid aging is typically done to open up the character to a wider range of storylines and to attract younger viewers 5 A recent example of this occurring is in the BBC s Merlin series in which Mordred is initially played by a young child in Season 4 yet suddenly grows up into his late teens in time for the start of Season 5 with the rest of the characters aging by only three years The reverse can also happen On the television program Lost the character of 10 year old Walt Lloyd was played by 12 year old actor Malcolm David Kelley The first few seasons took place over the course of just a few months but by that point Lloyd looked much older than 10 In his remaining few appearances special effects were used to make him look younger or the scene took place years later Deliberate continuity errors EditSometimes a work of fiction may deliberately employ continuity errors usually for comedy For example in the Marx Brothers classic film Duck Soup at the climax of the film the camera shows a shot of Groucho Marx speaking a line followed by a cutaway shot of something else happening followed by another shot of Groucho Each time Groucho s hat changes usually to something more outrageous than before a Napoleonic hat a Prussian hat etc Dealing with errors EditWhen continuity mistakes have been made explanations are often proposed by either writers or fans to smooth over discrepancies Fans sometimes make up explanations for such errors that may or may not be integrated into canon this has come to be colloquially known as fanwanking a term originally coined by the author Craig Hinton to describe excessive use of continuity 7 Often when fans do not agree with one of the events in a story such as the death of a favorite character they will choose to ignore the event in question so that their enjoyment of the franchise is not diminished When the holder of the intellectual property discards all existing continuity and starts from scratch it is known as rebooting Fans call a less extreme literary technique that erases one episode the reset button See also fanon A conflict with previously established facts is sometimes deliberate this is a retcon as it is a retroactive change in continuity Retcons sometimes clarify ambiguities or correct perceived errors This is not to be confused with the continuance of a reality continuality Real time programs vs traditional films EditTelevision programs like 24 in which actors have to appear as if it is the same day for 24 consecutive episodes have raised public recognition of continuity However traditional films have frequently had much of the same sort of issues to deal with film shoots may last several months and as scenes are frequently shot out of story sequence footage shot weeks apart may be edited together as part of the same day s action in the completed film In some ways 24 presents a simpler situation as costumes and hairstyles generally should not change very frequently in many feature films a range of different hairstyles and costumes must be created changed and then recreated exactly as various scenes are shot Ageless characters EditMain article Floating timeline Some fiction ignores continuity to allow characters to slow or stop the aging process despite real world markers like major social or technological changes In comics this is sometimes referred to as a floating timeline where the fiction takes place in a continuous present 8 Roz Kaveney suggests that comic books use this technique to satisfy the commercial need to keep certain characters going forever 9 This is also due to the fact that the authors have no need to accommodate the aging of their characters which is also typical of most animated television shows 10 Kevin Wanner compares the use of a sliding timescale in comics to the way ageless figures in myths are depicted interacting with the contemporary world of the storyteller 11 When certain stories in comics especially origin stories are rewritten they often retain key events but are updated to a contemporary time such as with the comic book character Tony Stark who invents his Iron Man armor in a different war depending on when the story is told 12 References Edit Charlie Chaplin Films Lines 358 359 Book V Lines 576 579 Book XIII Lines 643 659 a b Clayton Millar Kim April 24 2006 Soaps rising stars Tonight Independent News amp Media Retrieved December 17 2009 Bird S Elizabeth 2003 The Audience in Everyday Life Living in a Media World New York Routledge p 135 ISBN 0 415 94259 4 Retrieved December 12 2009 Parkin Lance 2007 AHistory An Unauthorized History of theDoctor Whouniverse 2nd ed Des Moines Iowa Mad Norwegian Press p 13 ISBN 978 0 9759446 6 0 Jeffery Scott 2016 Jeffery Scott ed The Rhizome of Comic Book Culture The Posthuman Body in Superhero Comics Human Superhuman Transhuman Post Human Palgrave Studies in Comics and Graphic Novels New York Palgrave Macmillan US pp 37 67 doi 10 1057 978 1 137 54950 1 3 ISBN 978 1 137 54950 1 Kaveney Roz 2008 Superheroes Capes and Crusaders in Comics and Films Bloomsbury Academic p 22 ISBN 9781845115692 Goertz Allie Prescott Julia Oakley Bill Weinstein Josh 2018 09 18 100 Things The Simpsons Fans Should Know amp Do Before They Die in Arabic Triumph Books ISBN 978 1 64125 109 9 Wanner Kevin J 2018 Authority Apart from Truth Superhero Comic Book Stories as Myths In Urban Hugh Johnson Greg eds Irreverence and the Sacred Critical Studies in the History of Religions Oxford University Press p 84 Meon J M 2018 Sons and Grandsons of Origins Narrative Memory in Marvel Superhero Comics In Ahmed Maaheen Crucifix Benoit eds Comics Memory Archives and Styles Palgrave Macmillan pp 203 204 ISBN 978 3319917450 Further reading EditMiller Pat December 1998 Script Supervising and Film Continuity Third Edition Focal Press ISBN 0 240 80294 2 Gillan Audrey 2008 11 10 An Aston Martini stirred not shaken please Pennymoney Site lists 007 continuity gaffes in new Bond film Odd Corsas corpses and capitals spotted in movie The Guardian Retrieved 2008 12 21 Stamberg Susan 2008 02 21 When Continuity Counts Call a Script Girl Er Guy National Public Radio Retrieved 2008 12 21 Miller Susan W 2005 08 05 Career Counselor Script Supervisor Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on February 3 2009 Retrieved 2008 12 21 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Continuity fiction amp oldid 1127090950, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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