the voyage of the WHAT?
Dec. 9th, 2010 03:13 pmI've been trying lately to suppress my outrage at stupid films made from decent books. It's not the book: it's an adaptation. It's a different thing entirely. It has different demands, different audience expectations and needs. It's okay that they change things.
And I thought that the film of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe was about the best film they could have made of that book. Even the random chase sequence on a frozen river didn't detract from it. Plus, Tilda Swinton imbues everything she touches with a degree of awesome. Not always enough awesome to save it, mind you, but still, awesome. And they started with LWW instead of Magician's Nephew, which lends them a certain credibility.
(Of course, pondering LWW leads one inexorably to Aslan Shrugged, and from there to John Rogers's dictum:
Right, anyway. I never did see Prince Caspian, although it wasn't really much of a book to start with so I can't imagine I missed much. I confess to being somewhat curious as to how (and why) they brought back Tilda Swinton's White Witch, since I'm told she's in it. I was kind of interested in seeing the new Dawn Treader movie: that's always been one of my favorite of the books. Then I read the plot summary in Roger Ebert's Dawn Treader review:
(I note with some bafflement that Tilda Swinton is once more listed in the credits as the White Witch. This is not nearly enough inducement to get me to see this trainwreck.)
On the other hand, TRON Legacy will be out in eight days, which will soothe some of the hurting.
And I thought that the film of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe was about the best film they could have made of that book. Even the random chase sequence on a frozen river didn't detract from it. Plus, Tilda Swinton imbues everything she touches with a degree of awesome. Not always enough awesome to save it, mind you, but still, awesome. And they started with LWW instead of Magician's Nephew, which lends them a certain credibility.
(Of course, pondering LWW leads one inexorably to Aslan Shrugged, and from there to John Rogers's dictum:
There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old's life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs.Which in turn brings up thoughts of the LotR movies, and thus back to the topic at hand, or at least its environs. What was I talking about?)
Right, anyway. I never did see Prince Caspian, although it wasn't really much of a book to start with so I can't imagine I missed much. I confess to being somewhat curious as to how (and why) they brought back Tilda Swinton's White Witch, since I'm told she's in it. I was kind of interested in seeing the new Dawn Treader movie: that's always been one of my favorite of the books. Then I read the plot summary in Roger Ebert's Dawn Treader review:
"Lucy and Edmund, now in their mid-teens, seem uncommonly calm about being yanked from their everyday lives and put on a strange ship in uncharted seas, but these kids have pluck."Fair enough.
"They're briefed on the situation: Narnia is threatened by evil forces from the mysterious Dark Island, which no one has seen but everyone has heard about."What?
"There is a matter of seven missing magical swords representing the Lords of Telmar, which were given to Narnia by Aslan the Lion..."WHAT?
"...and must be brought together again to break a spell that imprisons the lords."I just what I don't even.
(I note with some bafflement that Tilda Swinton is once more listed in the credits as the White Witch. This is not nearly enough inducement to get me to see this trainwreck.)
On the other hand, TRON Legacy will be out in eight days, which will soothe some of the hurting.
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Date: 2010-12-11 04:34 am (UTC)