At a recent short-film workshop in Hangzhou, a producer drew laughter—then concern—after bluntly summarizing the state of the industry: “In the past year, more than 5,000 CEOs were drugged, 3,000 heroines entered the wrong hotel room with perfect accuracy, 2,000 long-lost heiresses reunited with their families on stage, and the number of slaps in these films could wrap around the Earth several times!”
Though the figures were clearly satirical, they resonated widely because they perfectly capture the overwhelming repetition plaguing today’s short-form drama scene.

A Formula Factory: Drugging Scenes and Instant Plot Boosters
Within the “fast-film factories” that churn out micro-dramas, the infamous “drugging scene” has become the universal tool for pushing the story forward. Whether involving mischievous side characters, obsessive CEOs, or last-minute plot twists squeezed into a 3-minute runtime, nearly every conflict hinges on this cliché.
Netizens mockingly call it the “screenwriter KPI.”
Equally overused are scenes of mistaken identity, sudden amnesia, villainous poisoning attempts, and heroines who bring their children to the marriage registration office—motifs recycled so frequently that viewers can often predict the entire plot from the first three seconds.
Cookie-Cutter Characters and Unrealistic Luxury
Short-form dramas also rely heavily on stereotypical character archetypes:
- The CEO who is “obscenely wealthy yet romantically blind,”
- The heroine portrayed as a long-suffering Cinderella,
- The villain whose every plan begins with drugging or kidnapping someone.

Despite displaying extravagant lifestyles, the sets and props often appear cheap and hastily assembled, revealing a disconnect between the characters’ supposed wealth and the production value.
Micro-dramas may provide quick, addictive entertainment, but their glossy surfaces cannot hide the hollow narratives beneath.
Three-Second Climax, One-Week Production
Most short films—often lasting just one to three minutes—are structured around “3-second climaxes” designed to grab algorithmic recommendations. Production cycles have shrunk drastically, with many films written, shot, and edited within seven days.
As this formula becomes industry standard, creators are trapped in a loop:
the more they rely on clichés, the more audiences lose interest, forcing them to produce even more exaggerated clichés to stay visible.

A Satirical Warning for a Stagnant Market
The viral line—“5,000 poisoned CEOs in one year”—may be an exaggeration, but producers believe it highlights a real and worsening creativity drought. When endless “slap scenes” become a symbol of the genre, it suggests not innovation but exhaustion.
Industry insiders argue that the only way forward is to invest in genuine storytelling: richer characters, fresh perspectives, and socially meaningful narratives. Only then can short films evolve from “fast-food entertainment” into sustainable, compelling content.
Source: 163.com

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