Campion
Oh that's right. I forgot it was her who directed it. Made it even more disappointing to me because I loved her previous work.
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Campion
Oh that's right. I forgot it was her who directed it. Made it even more disappointing to me because I loved her previous work.
when you get people who refuse to read the books before they see the movies, it breaks your damn heart.
I prefer to see movies before reading the books they're based on (on the rare occasions when I'm interested in both) because the book is always going to include scenes and characters that aren't in the movie. If I read the book first, when I see the movie I will know what's "supposed" to happen (or what I expect) and I'll be distracted by that and annoyed when they change anything. I'm setting myself up to be disappointed, basically. If I see the movie first, I'm more likely to enjoy it on its own terms, and I can then enjoy the greater depth of the book.
And I don't really picture what characters look like when I'm reading unless there's some specific reason to do so. So you can rest assured that my imagination has not been hijacked.
Although I loathed the film version of Portrait of a Lady. But I can't remember what bugged me about it so much.
It was... strange. And not right. I can't really remember, except that it set of my not-right alarm bells. As Vonnie notes, you can tell it was not right because in real lief Martin Donovan really does know how to wash his hair, and I can't think of a good reason for fictional consumptives to fail to bathe.
(For the record, Viggo was in it. Actually he had his role all wrong too, in a way I can't remember except for the wrongness.)
I did think Barbara Hersey was well cast as Mme. Merle.
Between this and Alcharisi in the Beeb Daniel Deronda, she seems to have specialized in older women with more dignity and sidelong looks than morals. (Anyway, I know Alcharisi isn't really the villain Mme. Merle is, but they're both off-putting and manipulative.)
What is the general opinion of Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago? I've never read the novel, but my impression was that it was a literature classic. And I'd certainly hold the movie up as great.
Despite having read The Lord of the Rings decades ago, I've found that Ian McKellen and Cate Blanchett have replaced my prior mental images of Gandalf and Galadriel. The other actors, NSM.
What is the general opinion of Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago? I've never read the novel, but my impression was that it was a literature classic. And I'd certainly hold the movie up as great.
It's in my TBR pile, but I love the movie, too.
Oh, the novel is endless. And it's about so many more people than Dr. Zhivago and wassername. It's in no way an epic romance, it's a political novel.
Just so you know: don't have any illusions. In order to make a movie out of it they cut out about 70% of what happens in the book.
The movie Dr. Zhivago is full of pretty pictures, but the story just doesn't quite jell somehow. Haven't read the novel.
Wow. The movie was like 36 hours long even so...
In order to make a movie out of it they cut out about 70% of what happens in the book.
Heh. Is there any Russian novel in which this is not the case?
But--but--The Last Starfighter as a musical? Without Robert Preston? How cruel.