It's a completely original story, backfitted into being a quasi-tenth robot story.
I thought the original screenplay was just basically Asimov-verse fanfic.
A place to talk about movies--Old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
It's a completely original story, backfitted into being a quasi-tenth robot story.
I thought the original screenplay was just basically Asimov-verse fanfic.
Is Murder by Numbers the Sandra Bullock thing? Saw it. Didn't hate it.
We saw Swimming Poolk last night, which is very European and very much about Ludivine Sagnier's breasts, but not a bad movie.
I, Robot isn't even true to the story, much less a true story.
By story you mean the conglomeration of the nine?
I thought the original screenplay was just basically Asimov-verse fanfic.
I read it was completely unrelated.
Yeah, Peter Greenaway and Stanley Kubrick both suck mightily. Give me a Michael Bay or McG movie anytime. They rawk!
t /Removing tongue from cheek
Wait, that was Barbet Schroeder. You're thinking of maybe Drowning by Numbers.
Yeah, that's the one.
Also, for no reason at all, I happened to be reading Clancy Brown's bio, and I stumbled across this little factoid that made me smile:
Although his character Rawhide dies in "The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension" (1984), Brown is still under contract to appear in a sequel to the film.
I wonder if it's true. I'd really love to see a sequel get off the ground, and I'd love to see him in it.
Sean ... there has been talk of a sequel for years. There was even talk of a tv series 2 or 3 years ago but nothing has come of it ... yet.
By story you mean the conglomeration of the nine?
Any combination you want. There's more than nine anyway. Asimov wrote a lot of robot stories. The Bicentennial Man was also one of his robot stories. In all of them the three laws worked the same way.
I thought the original screenplay was just basically Asimov-verse fanfic.
There's also a screenplay that was written by Harlan Ellison that was under consideration for a while, but never produced. He eventually released it in book form. I have a copy of it, but have never got around to reading it.
There's more than nine anyway.
I was only talking about I, Robot.
Nobody dies permanently in the Banzaiverse.
Well, "inspired by" usually refers to a true story.
Except it was used for The Iliad in Troy, wasn't it? I've seen it used on novels too, where the adaptation was especially unfaithful.
I think there must be formal guild rules, related to the legal rights, that get wrangled out based on percentage of material used or something, or else they'd all use the same phrase, right?