Absolutely agreed. Far superior to the original adaptation.Cail wrote:Carpenter's The Thing is a tremendously good adaptation of the book.
As much as I love the title Who Goes There? . . .
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Absolutely agreed. Far superior to the original adaptation.Cail wrote:Carpenter's The Thing is a tremendously good adaptation of the book.
As is Rashomon not just a simple retelling of the stories by Akutagawa. That's part of the reason I mentioned those two, and I'm glad you picked up on that. The Shining is a great example of reworking a book into a superior version, in my view.Zahir wrote: Interesting, because I thought the film version of The Shining simply threw away the whole heart of the novel. Jack wasn't supposed to be an evil man who found his home, but rather a good but flawed man un-equal to an evil place.
Yes, I do. Flawed as it is. The first time I saw this film (when I was quite young), I was simply blown away by the animation techniques used for the Orcs and the Ring Wraiths - both conceptions of which are both a lot closer to the books, and a lot better than Jackson's Warhammer inspired "Oi Gov'" orcs. There was nothing in the new trilogy that came close to making me think "gee, that looks cool", in the same way the hordes of Saruman did in Bakshi's.Zahir wrote: You really prefer Bakshi's LOTR????? Really??????? Wow. Even Sam-the-neanderthal? And the rolly-polly troll?
yea, he can do just about anything. he also plays guitar, the bass, is a writer. right now he is painting a picture with me in it.Menolly wrote:And again...
the multi-talents of those on the Watch simply astounds me.
Supreme debater.
Painter.
Beer brewer extraodinaire.
Beautiful, Malik.
Agreed. I thought TTT was the most action-y and carried the least Tolkien-esque. It exposed Jackson's sword-and-sorcery framework, mainly because: A), the first movie already introduced us to the characters and built them up, and B) the third movie got to have the emotional payoff.Malik23 wrote:I didn't like how much TTT diverged from the books--and not necessarily out of any "purist" sense of loyalty, but because those parts were simply bad choices. How many freakin' characters have to fall off a cliff or crevice, only to reappear later? Gandalf was enough. We didn't need Aragorn, Frodo, and Gollum repeating that stunt.
Yep. He had the voice, the looks, the menace, but it didn't seem very deep. When I read "The Voice of Saruman", I felt mesmerized; I was ready to join Saruman, but Lee's speech didn't persuade me.Malik23 wrote:Grima and Saruman were indeed nicely expanded, though I wish Lee had portrayed Saruman with a bit more subtlety. I never imagined him saying, "Burn it," with such evil glee. We're talking about an angelic being, here. I know he "went to the dark side," but Lee didn't portray any inner depth I would have expected.
First of all, anyone who's read the book carefully should realize Theoden has more than one character "turn" in them. Also, the above seems to me a call for something that is dramatic death--a static character. That is the stuff of tertiary characters, not leads or even good supporting characters. Theoden feels many times more human to me, having doubts and fears and a temper, and frankly far more heroic in overcoming them. Theoden in the films is to me an extremely noble man, in some ways more noble, not least because we see him genuinely care for Eowyn, as well as inspiring the Rohirrim in many more ways than on the written page.And Theoden didn't need to have two character turns; his "awakening" was enough. From then on out, he should have been the noble Theoden of the books.