law dawg Wrote:Ken, you have my full respect for even finishing LOTM. I couldn't do it.
The writing was tedious, but the story was pretty good. It's the first example of a novel where fictional characters were placed into an actual historical event. The seige of Fort William Henry. (The movie covered it pretty accurately too. Including the massacre by the Indians after the fort had fallen.)
Quote:But what a movie! Gorgeous and moving. Great soundtrack too.
I agree with every bit of what you say.
To me, that movie makes up for what the director did to FPW's THE KEEP.
Quote:Your other choices I have no experience with, so I can't comment.
They're both mini-series', and because they're both five hours long, the screen writer was able to follow the book very closely.
A TOWN LIKE ALICE is based on an actual historical event:
There were about 80 women and children who were captured by the Japanese on Sumatra. Nobody in the Japanese military knew what to do with them, so they were marched from one area to another throughout the entire war. (Let somebody else deal with it.) Only about 30 of the prisoners survived to the end of the war.
The novel was written by Neville Shute, who also wrote ON THE BEACH -- another good movie.
Quote:Do love Colin Firth though. Great actor.
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE was the role that gave him his real start -- the one that made him famous.
It follows the novel so closely that if you see the movie, you can pretty much say that you read the book.
Ken V.