Wapitikev Wrote:Category 1: Don't even get me started on Conan the Barbarian, Scott! Let's take Robert E. Howard's origin-story, completely throw it out the window, make our own movie about some slave with muscles and call it Conan...yeah! That's it! It'll be great! NOT!
Oh, and we'll move Valeria completely out of context and have her meet conan 20 years early...no one will notice.
Oh, and Conan will have brown hair, too...no one will notice that it's not black.
Etc, etc, etc.
Category 2: Name of the Rose...while it had to be trimmed to make it fit into its 2 hour & 11 minute run-time, both the book and the movie are satisfying.
Category 3: First Blood...sure the story was changed a little (Rambo doesn't kill any of the police, directly, in the movie, making him a more sympathetic character) and he lives at the end (instead of Trautman killing him) but the overall theme of "the alienated veitnam vetran" came through loud and clear. The movie was simply a more interesting experience than the novel.
-Wapitikev
Mick C. Wrote:There were a lot of good things about Conan, but it hasn't aged well in terms of film technology. I still enjoy it, as I do most things John Milius has done. I will blame the bad on Oliver Stone's involvement.
Hey, it still beats "Red Sonja"!
Mick C. Wrote:(I have the same problem when I power up my Commodore VIC-20, by the way.)
Mick C. Wrote:Yeah, the ultimate Tarzan movie has never been made. He's always treated as jungle naif or borderline mentally
challenged, never with the power and majesty you see in the books (or the excellent Kubert comics adaptation).
Quote:I am the only American who has never seen "Jaws", so I'll have to withhold comment on #3.
wdg3rd Wrote:The VIC-20 is a lightweight when it comes to sucking from the Grid. The machines I mention were heavy-duty business machines "back in the day". 8" floppy drives and all. The Mod 2 is the same kind of machine Asimov typed his last 150 or so books on (he never "upgraded" if that's the right word, to a PC) and the T6k was a multi-user system with the port of Unix that Microsoft won't admit to having made (and never really supported, that was my job at Radio Shack). Each suck over half a kilowatt just idling. Based on the serial numbers, the Mod 2 came off the line in early 1980 and the T6kHD was mid-1985. The Mod 2 is what I really learned word processing on, and the T6k is the successor to the Model 16 that started me in Unix system administration (but I'm not holding a grudge). They don't spend a lot of time fired up lately, but they both still work.
Mick C. Wrote:Yeah, KRW...jeez, dude, that cuts kind of close to home.
wdg3rd Wrote:No you're not. I saw the trailers and never had interest in the movie. I'd read something else by the author so never bothered with the book either.
Mick C. Wrote:I learned to word process on one of the old Burroughs computers (no relation to Edgar Rice, but a slight relation to William S.), one of the more bizarre purchasing decisions by the federal government. Man, the tiny little screens they had back then...William S. Burroughs' grandfather founded the Burroughs Adding Machine Company. In a way, I've had two rounds of employment with them. When I was fresh out of the USAF, 1978-9, I worked for Memorex in Santa Clara, a couple years after I left, Burroughs bought the Memorex computer products division (and Tandy, for whom I was working by then, bought the consumer products division). Then in 1990-1 I worked for Unisys at the old Convergent Technologies campus in San Jose.
bones weep tedium Wrote:You've never seen Jaws??
Really? Honestly? Truly? :confused: