I was an expert in writing a certain kind of comedy. As well as one can in an artistic endeavor, I
knew what to do. My “inner mechanism” – part natural, part
honed by experience – directed me concerning what to put in and what to leave
out. It also guided me in rewrites,
innerly indicating the better joke, and the superior alternative for maximizing
the “ha-ha.”
In the same way that I know my way around comedy, I do not know my way around drama, in today’s
instance, police drama, even though I watch them all the time. In police drama, I am entirely lacking in “inner mechanism.” In my more cynical – or, perhaps, competitive
– moments, I am not sure there is
one. In comedy, you have jokes, you have
relationship moments, you have expository pieces of business, all working in
the service of the comedy.
In drama, the moments seem, to me, arbitrary and and
interchangeable.
Take, for example, a repeated element in police dramas:
The detectives arrive to
arrest the suspect. The suspect
escapes. The detectives give chase. The suspect is eventually apprehended. A detective “reads the suspect his rights”
while escorting him back to their vehicle, where he opens the back door, and places
his hand on the top of the suspect’s head so he won’t bump it getting into the
car.
We have all witnessed that scene on police dramas numerous
times. Here’s the thing, though. The detectives come for the suspect, he is
eventually apprehended, and they put him in the car. That’s what you need for the story – the
detectives arrest the suspect.
The creative challenge for the police drama writer come
during the selection process in the “eventually” section – the content of the chase itself, what you choose to have happen between…the
time the…
Uh-oh. I am suddenly experiencing a powerful magnetic
tug, and I can feel myself getting sidetracked.
I can do nothing about it. The
“sidetrack” has me under its control. It
is irresistible. I cannot escape it.
I am really sorry
about this. I was going someplace, and
now, I am compelled to go someplace else.
Please forgive me. I will return
tomorrow to write the post my getting sidetracked prevented me from writing
today. Unless I get sidetracked again
tomorrow.
And away we go.
“Sidetrack”
“The detective places his hand on the top of {the suspect’s}
head, so he will not bump it, getting into the car.”
Okay. Personal
experience. I am not saying this is
everybody, though I suspect that it is.
I have been getting into the back seats of cars my whole
life, and I do not recall bumping my head once. You bend your knees, you get into the
car. How difficult it that? Even in handcuffs?
And yet, in all my years watching police dramas, I have
never seen a detective assisting a suspect into the back seat of their vehicle
Without placing his hand on the top of the guy’s
head!
What exactly is that about? Is it some obscure rider in the “Miranda”
ruling?
“The police officer is required to read the person, herein
referred to as “The Suspect”, their rights. See: Applicable Footnote Below. “Applicable Footnote Below”: “And
he is mandatorily obligated to place his hand atop the aforementioned Suspect’s
head, while assisting the aforementioned suspect into their vehicle.”
Is that part of the law?
Are they duty-bound to do that?
And what if they don’t?
CAPTAIN OF
DETECTIVES: Did you read the
suspect his rights?
DETECTIVE: Loud and clear, Captain.
And did you place your hand on his head while assisting him
into your car?
Um, I did.
I detect some hesitation there, Detective.
I always do it,
Captain. It’s “regulation.”
Detective, I don’t care what you “always do.” Did you do it this time?
Things were moving pretty fast out there. I can’t be a hundred percent certain. But I’m pretty sure I did.
Can your partner corroborate your actions?
No, sir. He went into
the pizza parlor to buy us a slice. We
were both hungry after the pursuit.
So, no witnesses at all.
Except for the suspect.
And who’s going to believe him?
Do you think this is funny, Detective?
No, sir.
Because it’s not. Putting
aside the disciplinary issues you will certainly be faced with, have you any
idea how badly you have compromised this case?
Captain, the man is a serial killer…
All the more reason for leaving no opening for an acquittal.
An acquittal? For a
little bump on the head?
Let me give you a preview of what will undoubtedly happen in
court. “Your Honor, my client has a
contusion on the top of his head. His
consequent disorientation renders him incapable of assisting in his own
defense, which he is Constitutionally entitled to do. I would therefore request his immediate
release.
Come on, Captain. No judge
would ever go for that.
No? Then how about
this? “Your Honor, considering the
detective’s egregious behavior towards my client – by flagrantly ignoring to
place his hand on the top of the defendant’s head while assisting him into his
vehicle – the door is wide open, so to speak, for speculation concerning other “egregious behavior” the detective
or his partner may have engaged in.
Their hands are dirty, Your Honor.
These are rogue cops, recklessly flaunting the rules. Bad apples like these would not think twice about
planting evidence.”
But wouldn’t the prosecution jump in and say, “Your Honor,
that is exactly why the detective’s actions, although regrettable, should not
be admitted into evidence. Such evidence
is prejudicial to the case and would seriously detract from the central issue of
this case – the defendant’s murdering fourteen people. That we know of.”
“The offense is indisputable, Your Honor. The lump is clearly visible. And we have experts who will testify that its
size, shape and coloration are all consistent with my client’s head making
direct contact with the molding on the top of a car door. We will further introduce hair and blood
evidence – taken from the detective’s vehicle – that are an exact match with
the defendant’s. We’ve got him dead to
rights, Your Honor. The blood is on the
detective’s hands. As well as his car.”
And then, there’s the defendant.
“May I speak, Your Honor?”
“The defendant is not permitted to speak at arraignment. But okay.
Make it snappy.”
“Your Honor, I may be a serial killer, though I submit that’s
a matter for the jury to decide. What is
indisputable is that this detective caused me grievous bodily harm, by
neglecting to place his hand on the top of my head while assisting me into his
vehicle. No matter how you feel about me, Your Honor, that is just wrong! And not only that, but, Your Honor, honestly,
I am seriously messed up. You ask me if
I could tell you where I was when the crimes were committed? I’d be happy to tell you. But I can’t remember anymore. You question my not remembering where I was,
I’ll tell you the truth, Your Honor, I don’t know where I am now!
I have been horribly injured, Your Honor. And if that doesn’t merit an outright acquittal,
I ask you to take it into consideration during sentencing, in the unlikelihood
that I am found guilty.”
I never realized how serious this was. I should have shot the guy when he was
running away. You can be damn sure I
won’t make that mistake again!
See that you don’t, Detective. Because your behavior has gotten us into a
boatload of trouble!
At the very least, it’s a distraction from the legitimate
pursuit of justice. Or so it would
appear, by the care the detectives on police dramas take in not bumping the
suspect’s head while assisting him into their car. And yet, this mandated delicacy did not, at
least in one case on Law & Order,
stop a detective from, to extract a confession, shoving a suspect’s head into
the toilet.
Again, sorry about the sidetrack.
I will be back with the other thing tomorrow.
Dear Mr. Pomerantz; isn't drama "getting from A to B with variation on the route", while comedy is "let's do funny stuff at C"?
ReplyDelete-z