Plot dumpPlot dump or exposition is a term used by the movie and television industries to describe a plot device by which critical elements of the plot, often involving the back-story, are not depicted directly but are instead elaborated in dialogue by one of the characters or by a narrator. The term is usually invoked in a derisive sense. Although plot dump at the beginning of a movie is often tolerated as necessity for setting the premise of the plot, for example in such widely-acclaimed movies as Casablanca and Star Wars, plot dump expressed by characters in dialog during the course of the movie is often taken to be indicative of an inferior narrative. Examples of the latter sense often take the form of one character explaining eloborate details regarding another character that would seem exaggerated and out-of-place in real-life conversation. Villains are frequently given to making speeches about their sinister plans to helpless heroes, often prefacing their exposition with the comment that it can't hurt to divulge the plan, since the hero will be dead soon anyways. A stereotypical and exaggerated example of inferior plot dump would be:
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"Moral indignation is jealousy with a halo." - H. G. Wells (1866-1946) |
