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06-08-2008, 04:15 AM
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#1 (permalink)
| | Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 9
| Best Films Your top 5.
mine:
1. The day the earth stood still. (remake coming)
2. Life of Brian.
3. Star Wars.
4. 6th Sense.
5. Driving Miss Daisy. |
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06-08-2008, 11:20 AM
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#2 (permalink)
| | Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: wonderland
Posts: 401
| 1, The Wall
2, silent running
3, Chocolat
4, Casablanca
5, The life of Brian
But they change depending on my mood
__________________  Wherever we go, every one knows
It's me and my arrow
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06-14-2008, 09:03 AM
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#3 (permalink)
| | Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 9
| Quote:
Originally Posted by poppy 1, The Wall
2, silent running
3, Chocolat
4, Casablanca
5, The life of Brian
But they change depending on my mood | Number 2. is that the Sci-Fi one ? |
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06-16-2008, 09:07 PM
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#4 (permalink)
| | Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: wonderland
Posts: 401
| yes old black and white sci fi
__________________  Wherever we go, every one knows
It's me and my arrow
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08-05-2008, 08:17 AM
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#5 (permalink)
| | Decaying old hippie
Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Norath.
Posts: 393
| Jean de Florette/Manon de Source.
The Lord Of The Rings Trilogy
O Brother Where Art Thou?
The Love Match (with Arthur Askey)
A Hard Days Night
__________________ The Relic Richard Dawkins for Pope. |
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08-05-2008, 08:20 PM
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#6 (permalink)
| | Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: wonderland
Posts: 401
| Quote:
Originally Posted by The Relic Jean de Florette/Manon de Source.
The Lord Of The Rings Trilogy
O Brother Where Art Thou?
The Love Match (with Arthur Askey)
A Hard Days Night | Love them all exept the Lord of the rings, which is probably unfair because no one could make a film as good as the one that has lived in my head for the last 50 years.
I think it OK to read a book after seeing a film, but watching afilm about folk that are so well established in your brain is not going to work.
__________________  Wherever we go, every one knows
It's me and my arrow
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08-08-2008, 06:38 PM
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#7 (permalink)
| | Decaying old hippie
Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Norath.
Posts: 393
| I don't know, I think it was a near-as-dammit effort. The scripts certainly drew the story threads together and made them work. Tolkien was a towering fabulist, bless his tweed trousers, but he was a terrible novelist. The way The Return Of The King reaches a natural conclusion then sort of creaks back into action with The Scouring Of The Shire seemed to unblance the whole thing.
__________________ The Relic Richard Dawkins for Pope. |
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08-08-2008, 10:04 PM
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#8 (permalink)
| | Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: wonderland
Posts: 401
| Quote:
Originally Posted by The Relic I don't know, I think it was a near-as-dammit effort. The scripts certainly drew the story threads together and made them work. Tolkien was a towering fabulist, bless his tweed trousers, but he was a terrible novelist. The way The Return Of The King reaches a natural conclusion then sort of creaks back into action with The Scouring Of The Shire seemed to unblance the whole thing. | I missed Goldberry and Bombadill, I cant remember them in the film, I do agree Tolkien did ramble a bit I was was used to it, like an old pair of shoes, new shiny ones are never as comfy
__________________  Wherever we go, every one knows
It's me and my arrow
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08-09-2008, 04:40 PM
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#9 (permalink)
| | Decaying old hippie
Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Norath.
Posts: 393
| Some of the Bombadil/Goldberyy stuff was conflated into the films: teh carnivorous tree, and parts of speeches, but I understand why they were dropped as they would have killed the pace at the exact moment when the momentum was gathering. I think the Barrow Downs should have got in there though!
A mate of mine reckons that Tolkien originally saw The Hobbit as an extended bedtime story and the trilogy as a campfire saga, more like the Silmarillion, but the success of the former forced him into turning the Rings trilogy into something approaching a novel. I do wonder if the trilogy and even the genre it spawned would ahve sunk without trace if he'd written it like the Silmarillion and the ephemera, which I read almost out of duty.
(I have a compulsion to read books right through. Amonst others I've read Das Kapital, Finnegans Wake and that wretched, tedious thing Foucalt's Pendulum form beginning to end. I must be punishing myself for something.)
__________________ The Relic Richard Dawkins for Pope. |
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08-10-2008, 07:44 AM
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#10 (permalink)
| | Have you got a link?
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 2,674
| Shawshank Redemption is one. |
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