Its hard to know what to do with IMDb’s plot keywords.
I've always considered them completely useless—in the context of my personal database—for the reasons you describe. They're fine when used in a tool like
MoKA, where they can easily be added/excluded on-the-fly along with other criteria.
BTW, just to make sure we're not confusing anyone... There is no "keyword" field in PVD. I believe IMDb keywords are downloaded to
Tags.
I prefer
Allmovie "Keywords" and "Tones", which I download to a custom field named
Keywords and
Tags respectively.
Allmovie keywords seem to reflect some measure of editorial control—they seem less far-flung and more relevant to the movies to which they're applied. Even so, I don't find them of much use. "Tones" are something entirely different—more like
Genre in that there are not a huge number of them, each has a specific meaning and they're consistently applied. I like them because they accurately describe the mood of a movie.
Ordinary things do take on some special meaning in the context of a film and plot keywords...
Agreed, but again, I don't believe the data (especially the correlation to specific scenes) exists. If one were serious about this sort of thing, I think the way to do it would be to collect movie scripts (also easier said than done). Since PVD doesn't do search summaries or show where hits are within a field, they would best be saved outside the database. There, a Windows or other search tool could be used and the hits associated to the movies via the file names (i.e., the scripts would be named something like
[Title] ([Year]) Script.doc). I'm doing this now with subtitles (because they're readily available for all movies), but, of course, they include only dialog—and not even who spoke the words. They do, however, include time codes which would allow the exact spot in the movie to be found.
So here's another wacky feature suggestion: Find the given search term in the subtitle files located beside the currently displayed movies. Launch the screenshot maker and grab X shots from the time interval from the end of the previous dialog to the start of the next. Tag the screenshots (another new feature) with "[hh:mm:ss] [search term]" and save them in their respective movie records.
Initially, I was very excited about plot keywords in PVD as a movie discovery tool...
Just because it's the best movie database software on the planet doesn't mean it should be used for everything.
MoKA seems to work reasonably well, especially when
My Movies and the "Movie Collection Manager"
Greasemonkey script are used.
Jinnie also looks very interesting. I wish there was a way to upload movies and ratings to sites like this. I use
Web search to integrate PVD with sites like this (I haven't yet figured out how to do so for
Jinni).