Re: The return of the king
Posted by matt on
Sun Nov 9th 2003 at 3:55pm
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What with the imanent lesease of the third movie, just thought i'de see who else was a big fan like me. (of the books) The second film sucked, but i'm hoping the'll pull their socks up for this one.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Orpheus on
Sun Nov 9th 2003 at 4:05pm
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last time i commented on this,yak_fighter threatened my very life :eek:
actually, he was shocked, but still i felt queasy for a while, like he put a mojo on me or something :dodgy:
Re: The return of the king
Posted by KoRnFlakes on
Sun Nov 9th 2003 at 4:27pm
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never read the books, not really a reader myself. I loved the films though.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by matt on
Sun Nov 9th 2003 at 4:45pm
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Ah, come on, it just a film. The books are so much better than the films anyway. They missed out the best bit of book one (Tom Bambadilo chapters.) Its one of the ongoing debates about the lord of the rings, who is Tom Bambadilo? Some say he's Eru, some just say hes an Elf/Man.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Mr.Ben on
Sun Nov 9th 2003 at 5:40pm
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The books have so much more content than the films and it's much easier to get immersed in them because of all the history and extra charecters who are around.
So many extra charecters like: glorfindal, fatty bolger, farmer cotton, tom bombadil... god thats jsut from the first few chapters!! I saw the trailor for lotr3 before revolutions and i wanted to pee my pants. Looks great!
Re: The return of the king
Posted by fishy on
Sun Nov 9th 2003 at 6:24pm
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it would take a lot more than 3 movies to do justice to the books.
and ol' yellow boots cant be a man/elf, cuz he was in middle earth before the elves, who were there before men.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Sun Nov 9th 2003 at 8:22pm
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Honestly the movies are good, if you take them to be movies, and don't compare them to the books.
LOTR is an incredible literary acheivement and a great story, but face it, tolkine just was not a very good writer. long stretches of those books are simply boring, and if you are cought up in the drama of the story, his long historical interludes are absolutly painfull. there are few other authors with his propensity for irrelevent tangential elaboration.
Don't get me wrong, I've read them at least three times, but my point stands.
Oh, and I don't see how ther can be any dabate about Bombadil. it says stright up the he is the Eldest. Bombadil is master. that is all you need to know.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Orpheus on
Sun Nov 9th 2003 at 8:46pm
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reading is still my most favorite past-time, and i feel there are much better choices to make movies into than any tolkien book..
the shanarra series for one would be an excellent choice, along with a few from the darksun universe.
i own all the hobbit books and they all reeked, i only continue to own them because i think all books are sacred..
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Orpheus on
Sun Nov 9th 2003 at 11:37pm
Posted
2003-11-09 11:37pm
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not kidding one ounce, but i have noticed over 35 odd years of books, that opinions about reading material are an extremely wide range..
i find tolkien very poor, but others are the opposite, i love ERB, i think he is the best all time author ever, others find him barely quaint.
i was told for years that the "Elric" books were the best of the best fantasy adventure books ever, after about 5 years of searching, i managed to acquire them all, and you know what, they were horrible, absolutely horrible.
still others like the dragon lance books, i don't, i prefer forgotten realms.. bottom-line, people will read what they like, and prolly never fully agree.
i am betting some others here found the shanarra books as fantastic as i do, and as boorish as you did.. ah well, i can live with it..
i judge an author, on their re-readability, and i have read all 11 books about john carter a dozen times or more each..
Long Live John Carter :biggrin:
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 12:19am
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2003-11-10 12:19am
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Ever since I've started trying to write, I'm much more picky about my reading material. if the author doen't use the language in a genuinely interesting way, I find it unreadable.
This I think is one of the major reasons for the popularity of Harry Potter. the stories are in some ways quite weak, but Rowling uses the language in a way that is irresitably entertaining.
If you havn't read them, you should definatly check out Martin's stuff. They are truely dark, which appeals to me immensly amongst the literary glut of happy endings.
I'm not nearly as widely read as I'd like to be (no time), so I didn't recognize any of what you just threw out, except forgotten relams, but I've never read any of those, as I stay away from any sort of mass market worlds like star wars, star trek, forgotten realms, ect.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Orpheus on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 12:42am
Posted
2003-11-10 12:42am
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ERB=Edgar Rice Burroughs.. tarzan man?
and you should at least follow the starwars universe, it has some sort of a copyrights rule, that if an author writes a timeline, no one else can conflict it, unless its in a legitimate way..
funny thing, the ones i find most interesting are the very ones you avoid :razz:
i am a hardcore sci-fi nut as well tho, i cannot even name them all, but my repertoire is prolly in the 10's of hundreds of books read, or re-read :smile:
i would be afraid to type all the book titles i have read, it would just be too long, and as lep once said, it looks like i went to the library and copied all the sci-fi/fantasy section to paper :heee:
i suggest to anyone, broaden your horizons just a touch, and if the book is really good, knowing its contents will not ruin it, get someone to tell you what its about in depth, cause there is nothing worse than taking someones word for the quality, and no details to back them up..
Re: The return of the king
Posted by DesPlesda on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 1:50am
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Cassius, the word you are looking for is Istari.
Quenya skills ++;
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Dr Brasso on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 2:52am
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all this sci fi talk, and no Bradbury or Wells mentioned anywhere....hmmm...////contemplates the merits of mass hypnotism on snarkpit... :heee:
Doc Brass... :dodgy:
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 3:09am
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H.G. Wells is one of my favorites. I've only read, The Time Machiene and The Island of Dr. Morau, but both were fantastic.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 3:22am
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I've never seen either of the movies, and you are right, the writing is rather slow, butI've never read anything form that time peroid that wasn't.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Cash Car Star on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 4:10am
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What Tolkein truly accomplished was not incredible writing. What he accomplished was a fully articulated world in which his story takes place, a whole other place with its own rules, that is self substantial, and in a reader's mind, every bit as real as this one. No one before him even came close, very few after. Most of those that come after still don't come within miles of the historical detail to which his world was planned.
Regarding Brooks: His worlds seem so tiny to me. People come out of no where, things come out of no where. Cities exist and we accept that they do for little reason. There is no thought into economy, history, etc. It's quite fairy talish. The world of Shannara is thousands times more substantial than the awful imaging used in the Magic Kingdom series. I'd recommend them more for younger readers - once I hit about 15 I banned myself from reading anymore of his stuff. They are simple in plot, though, in a genre typically dominated by complexity, and as such might survive a movie translation.
Regarding Martin: This man is absolutely brilliant. He absolutely defies everything about what you believe the rules of structure are. He is willing to kill whoever dies (not just who deserves to die)... and for the most part, they stay dead. What I find more amazing though is his ability to jump into the mind of characters you absolutely hate and turn them into characters you can empathize with. If after the first book you told me Jamie, the Kingslayer, would be the focal point for a bunch of chapters, I woulda kicked you in the nuts (please don't kick me in the nuts, if all you've read is the first). The preview for the fourth book shows that we'll be looking through Cersei's eyes. All we need now is a Gregor Clegane chapter... although he hopefully won't be around much longer. Martin's books are incredibly complex though, and I doubt anything short of an not-so-mini mini series could come anywhere close to doing them justice. He has worked as a screenwriter before though, so hold out hope he may write something specifically for the screen - it could be incredible.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Orpheus on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 4:59am
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we can all agree that reading has many styles and likes, but it is refreshing to know that many of us find reading pleasant.
i think its cool that we all have more in common than mapping :smile:
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Cash Car Star on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 7:16am
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The most shocking moment for me had to be the sudden change of power that happened right at the end of the third book. What is not explicitly said has not necessarily occured though, there are few enough returns for you to keep hoping. Personally, I'm hoping the Wildling named Grigg the Goat is still up and running around - besides sharing a name with me, he was all around cool for a wildling that we aren't certain died, although it is highly likely. It makes the reading so much more intense when you know your favorite character or your favorite enemy could die any second. I don't get that feeling to the same extent when I read Tad Williams, Robert Jordan or Terry Goodkind - my other uberthick novelists of choice for now.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by 2dmin on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 8:47am
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I finished the second book, but I just didn't start the third for some reason ... lotr is heavy reading, particularly some chapters in the 2nd book...
tom bombadilo is AWESOME! i love his song :biggrin:
lol mrben, everything makes you want to pee your pants :razz:
yes, the movies rock. A film is a film, a book is a book. the film does not have to "do justice to the book", as it is a separate endeavour entirely.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Mr.Ben on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 9:02am
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Peeing my pants is fun and i do it quite regulary when it comes to lotr.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Kapten Ljusdal on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 9:46am
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Ih?ve just started reading the books (again). I love the movies, too :smile:
Re: The return of the king
Posted by gimpinthesink on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 10:22am
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2003-11-10 10:22am
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I have read through the first book and when I saw the film I was dissapointed that they didn't imclude Tom Bombadilo.
I am about a 1/4 the way through the 2nd book and I have seen the film for it I'm not a very avid reader as lotr series and the hobbit are the only books I own but I am realy enjoying reading them when i pick them up which isn't very often.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by fishy on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 5:40pm
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the last book i read was almost a year ago. genesis revisited, by zecharia sitchin. some might call it sci-fi, but it really explains how, around 6000 years ago, the dudes on the planet that's not been found yet, came here and, using their own dna, genetically engineered some high primates to be their workers. then the alien dudes had a fight between themselves and pissed off home, leaving us to get on with it..............
....................'till they come back, that is.
true story, btw :eek:
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Diarmaidx2 on
Mon Nov 10th 2003 at 8:42pm
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also have read the first and second book, and a chapter of the third. never got around to finishing it.
can anyone tell me when the third movie is out?
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Gwil on
Tue Nov 11th 2003 at 12:54pm
Posted
2003-11-11 12:54pm
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Diarmaid! He returns! With the greatest avatar known to man :biggrin:
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Orpheus on
Tue Nov 11th 2003 at 1:02pm
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sadly, i hated the books and the movie so much, i have yet to view the 2nd film at all, in spite of the fact that i dloaded it ages ago :sad:
the movies IMO suffer from the same slow, draggy storyline as the books, the transition was not a step up or down :sad:
usually the movies show some marked differences, but both are hard viewing..
still i know its only a matter of taste here, my view is not shared by many about this story.
i like movies that do not require one to look to close to see the inner intent, if i have to understand tolkien to like the movies/books, then tolkien lost a potential viewer..
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Gollum on
Tue Nov 11th 2003 at 1:45pm
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All I have to say on this can be boiled down to a few generalities:
1. The books, in my opinion, are the best I've ever read. Nothing compares with them.
2. The movies are for the most part a very good representation of the books within the amorphous contraints of cinema, but there are parts of the movies that I think are inexcusably stupid.
3. The movies could have been made more "exciting" by bastardising Tolkien even more than they already do. I hold that their restraint in this is a Very Good Thing (just as, pace Priestley, negative exponentials in integration theory are a Very Good Thing).
Re: The return of the king
Posted by KoRnFlakes on
Tue Nov 11th 2003 at 2:44pm
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meh, Non colour films are good sometimes also. Shindlers list is one of my favourite films, Only film ive watched thats ever made me upset.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by matt on
Tue Nov 11th 2003 at 3:47pm
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Hmmm I would have to say that the original Star Wars films are very good, and what about Laurel and Hardy films?
Some of their shorts are very good, but If you havn't seen "Blockheads" then watch it now. Its only like an hour long, and also very funny. On a more cinimatic topical note, I also like ALL the Matrix films, and perhaps actually people shouldn't be so hard to judge the new one. The whole hate thing probably arose after someone said
"Damn this film sucks"
someone else heard it and thought, well I'll agree with him cos its easier than forms my own opinion. Not that I'm trying to antagonise the people who really hate the films, I respect those guys too.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Gollum on
Tue Nov 11th 2003 at 3:52pm
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Don't know about anyone else, but I walked into the second Matrix film thinking, "This is going to be great", and walked out thinking, "That was a bit rubbish really, if still quite fun".
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Orpheus on
Tue Nov 11th 2003 at 3:54pm
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altho i agree it happens from time to time matt, its not a common occurrence at SP..
i have had many alternate views here but with few exceptions, i hold none of them as important enuff to jade my view of the people involved.
just because someone i admire hates something i like, it doesn't mean i have to alter that admiration..
i think my thinking is more prevalent, damned few of us confuse the two, mostly the more childish among us actually..
i can hate someone, but agree with them if the conditions warrant it... and so do many of the rest of SP :smile:
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Monqui on
Tue Nov 11th 2003 at 4:04pm
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I think the second Matrix sucked for many reasons... I'm a relatively opinionated person to begin with, and I formed that one by my little old self. I'm not that much of a conformist.
Re: The return of the king
Posted by matt on
Tue Nov 11th 2003 at 4:12pm
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Starts with lord of the rings, ends in tears. Now I've seen everything. :smile:
Re: The return of the king
Posted by Monqui on
Tue Nov 11th 2003 at 4:22pm
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Actually, honest to christ, my hair is sticking up right now. Just rolled out of bed about 20 min ago, haven't shambled over to the mirror to tame it yet.
Mines longer than that avatars though :razz: (My hair, people... yeesh)