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Dukasaur wrote:It used to be you could go anywhere, anytime, and if you didn't know anybody you could start a conversation about Lord of the Rings and soon everybody would be jumping in.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
jimboston wrote:Ever see the graphic novel versions?
Drawn by artist David Wenzel...
Beautiful stuff.
jimboston wrote:The movies were too long... Hobbit was 3 movies?! Really!?
jonesthecurl wrote:I dislike the way generally that once there's a movie/TV series, people forget the book. If you say "Peter Pan", "Winnie the Pooh", James Bond", "Starship Troopers", Gone With the Wind", "One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest", "Game of Thrones", "Tarzan", "The Avengers"or a thousand others, almost everyone will assume you're talking about the screen versions and not the print ones. It's a shame - dramatisations should add, not take away..
Dukasaur wrote:It used to be you could go anywhere, anytime, and if you didn't know anybody you could start a conversation about Lord of the Rings and soon everybody would be jumping in. Even after society moved from the pubs to Usenet, still there was always a thread about LotR, and even if there wasn't one, you could still get one going without much effort.
Then came the movies. For a while there was a big rise in interest, but it didn't last long, and when it went, it took everything with it. I haven't seen any conversations about LotR in years, and when I try to start one, it falls dead.
In a way, I see this like the life and death of a sun. For billions of years it gives light and heat. Then for a little while it bursts out in a nova, brighter than ever before, but afterwards it falls dead, a crushingly lifeless dark ember.
Did the movies kill the books? Or is the making of a movie the natural tragic ending in the life cycle of a book?
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
Dukasaur wrote:If you could be any character from Middle Earth, who would you be?
My early favourite was always Beorn.
After I read the Silmarillion I found a whole pile of new characters to want to be, but in the early days it was always Beorn.
Dukasaur wrote:If you could be any character from Middle Earth, who would you be?
My early favourite was always Beorn.
After I read the Silmarillion I found a whole pile of new characters to want to be, but in the early days it was always Beorn.
riskllama wrote:twice, DB? once seems pretty fair to me, making them read it twice would likely constitute child abuse is some places, these days...
riskllama wrote:after (finally) getting around to reading "the grapes of wrath" mid lockdown - huge mistake reading arguably the most depressing book i've ever read during a quarantine...- i decided to go the "light & breezy" route & re read a couple dragonlance novels, which i hadn't read in at least 20 years & was glad i did. the first 20-30 books were really good, imo.
Doc_Brown wrote:I read through the LOTR series every year or so several times prior to the movies coming out. Since the LOTR movies, I think I've only read through the books again once. I'm not entirely sure why I haven't picked them up again and have likewise wondered if the movies killed the enjoyment of the books.
Doc_Brown wrote:And I'm not planning to make any effort to show them the movies that borrowed the title of "The Hobbit" since they have little to do with the book.
Cookster wrote:Thanks, u just convinced me I should probably go and read the books again - I can only remember the main characters from the films and wouldn't really want to be any of them. The films were certainly too long and yet hopelessly shallow at the same time (yes I am a snob). The books aren't really much fun to read either tbh, worth the effort would u say? There are soo many other books out there afterall and Tolkien is really dated and just plain padded out in many places (imo).
jimboston wrote:One thing about Tolkien’s writing... he made a lot of proper nouns very similar, both place names and characters. It makes it harder to identify and keep separated different characters. I know this is true in real life... try reading books on Medieval English History. Names are very similar for lord’s and Kings... and often they use titles which pass from one person to another, so you need to be cognizant of which “Duke of York” they mean based on the year. Tolkien’s books can be like that at times which slows down the reading.
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