Book was better, but that was a really fun movie! So much of my childhood crammed in there. No complaints really.
a Ryu move?Fogburn95 said:
I think. Looked like it. Right after he used a Ryu move.
queso1 said:
Book reader. I thought it was pretty good. My favorite character was the bad guy whose midsection was a skull.
Spoiler:
I found it very odd and poor writing that the others showed up to pick him up right after Artemis texted them. I guess we are to believe that they all conveniently lived in Columbus, Ohio? In the book I remember the Japanese guys living in Japan and the friend living in a different state. That just seemed too easy for me.
I think it was a fantastic movie for what it was; however I did not think it was a great adaptation.
queso1 said:
Book reader. I thought it was pretty good. My favorite character was the bad guy whose midsection was a skull.
Spoiler:
I found it very odd and poor writing that the others showed up to pick him up right after Artemis texted them. I guess we are to believe that they all conveniently lived in Columbus, Ohio? In the book I remember the Japanese guys living in Japan and the friend living in a different state. That just seemed too easy for me.
I think it was a fantastic movie for what it was; however I did not think it was a great adaptation.
Again, this shouldn't be a surprise. The producers stated very early on in production that this would happen. It was not possible from a business standpoint to follow the book.nai06 said:queso1 said:
Book reader. I thought it was pretty good. My favorite character was the bad guy whose midsection was a skull.
Spoiler:
I found it very odd and poor writing that the others showed up to pick him up right after Artemis texted them. I guess we are to believe that they all conveniently lived in Columbus, Ohio? In the book I remember the Japanese guys living in Japan and the friend living in a different state. That just seemed too easy for me.
I think it was a fantastic movie for what it was; however I did not think it was a great adaptation.
That's VA really common problem with book adaptations. When you sell movie right you basically give up any control over the film. But seeing as Cline was one of the.screenwriters, that should have been a very big issue. I think that's what irritates me the most.
wangus12 said:a Ryu move?Fogburn95 said:
I think. Looked like it. Right after he used a Ryu move.
The Hadouken is like the most legendary combat move in fighting games
I plan on seeing it again on Tuesday. This time with the knowledge that it is nothing like the book and hopefully get the full enjoyment out of itQuote:
It's better to see the movie, then read the book. There were just too many differences for me to enjoy, it was just too annoying each time you waited for something specific from the book, and then it's something else.
The movie alone I'm sure is fun as a stand alone.
AgHawkeye said:
It is definitely a different experience from the book. It had a Spielberg feel to it. Overall everybody we went with (6 people - all having read the book) really enjoyed it.
Summary of what I can remember from Cline Q&A after the movie last night.
- Iron Giant. Cline is friends with the auther/filmmaker for Iron Giant and wrot it in to the book as a tip of the hat to him. Really wanted Ultraman for the last fight with Mechagodzilla but that was one they were unable to get due to licensing law suits with the Japanese company that had the license. Later decided to work in a bigger part for Iron Giant. Actually got licensing OK'd for Ultraman later but it was too late.
- Shining. Wanted to use a moving that was not in the book for the movie. Spielberg really didn't want to use one that he was heavily involved in. (actually didn't want to use anything he did directly and the effects teams worked hard to slip things by him - see gremlin in the movie) They made a list of movies and Spielberg went for the Shining right away. Clinie said Spielberg was a huge 'fanboy' of The Shining and loved watching him 'geek out' over putting that in his movie and focusing on all the details.
- Director. Cline said they let him make a list of dream directors and Spielberg wasn't even on it because he didn't think it was possible. He had Nolan and I can't remember the other name he mentioned. Interestingly he talked about how it had a "Goonies" type feel to it with the kids banding together. That was clearly a Spielberg item as the book had the opposite feel as they all stayed seperate as long as possible.
- Adventure. Several here mentioned ET and as above Spielberg specifically mentioned not wanting to use things he was involved in. More important however, Cline specifically mentioned finding that Easter Egg in Adventure when he was kid as being a big part of the inspiration for him writing the book. He is actually very good friends with Warren Robinette (the creator of Adventure) and Warren was actually sitting with him last night at the movie. I got the feeling that they were close and there was very little chance that part of the story was being changed.
- Easter Eggs. He talked about all the hidden things in the movie. I thought it was interesting all the parties that got involved putting those in. He mentioned things Spielberg put in but that the different effects teams would also just add things and try to slip them by Spielberg. He noticed new things with every viewing. Specifially spoke about Happy Time Pizza which was seen in the background of the movie and important in the book. It was a place Cline and his friends went to in Ohio growing up.
That's all I remember right now.
Yoda said:
Took the whole family this afternoon. 3 kids, ages 14 to 8. Everyone had a ball. I have never read the book, so I had no expectations there to miss.
I'll agree with someone else that I kept waiting for that Delorean to fly. In my nerd brain, there were so many characters I was hoping to see pop up, so I'm sad to have not seen:
- Gen 1 Optimus Prime
- Silver mask Cobra Commander
- Any Star Wars vehicles (Luke's speeder would have been great in the car race)
- KITT
- Jaws
- M.A.S.K.
- Last Starfighter
- Predator
- Sloth
- Scott Howard, aka Teen Wolf
- Daniel Larusso or Johnny Lawrence
- Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man
References I appreciated:
- Was it just me, or did Parzival wear Han Solo's blaster holster?
- Missed KITT, but pretty sure they gave the Delorean his flashing red hood light
- The Shining, as many have said. Wow.
- T2 Iron Giant thumbs up nod
- Alan Silverstein score and BTTF musical bits
- Atari 2600
- Rare Lex Luther Superman quote
- The Bandit's Trans Am
- Greatest American hero logo on earphones
Not sure if it was my theaters sound mix, but I never felt like the 80's music was blasted the way it should have been with that audio pushed front and center.
All in all, a darn fun flick that I look forward to seeing again at home with the pause button.
Belt was Han's. Logo is ThundercatsBrian Earl Spilner said:
His belt buckle was Han Solo's, right? Minus the logo.
Yoda said:
References I appreciated:
- Was it just me, or did Parzival wear Han Solo's blaster holster?
- Missed KITT, but pretty sure they gave the Delorean his flashing red hood light
- The Shining, as many have said. Wow.
- T2 Iron Giant thumbs up nod
- Alan Silverstein score and BTTF musical bits
- Atari 2600
- Rare Lex Luther Superman quote
- The Bandit's Trans Am
- Greatest American hero logo on earphones