Fogburn95 said:FL_Ag1998 said:Bunk Moreland said:
I more meant the way they presented the main characters to us. From what they looked like to also introducing them together physically in reality much earlier on. Instead of an apartment in Columbus, Wade is with Artemis and then Aech. That stuff.
Oh, I agree with your review above. The movie removed any parts of the book that provided reasons to get to know and care about the protagonists. But it also took out the uniqueness of the challenges and made it very generic.
I don't think the book challenges would translate well to big screen (i.e. watching them play Joust). Personally I would have enjoyed it but I understand why the larger audience probably would not.
I get what you're saying. I get the initial thought of "just watching the Joust challenge would be boring", but if you shorten it up and liven up the dialogue a little I honestly think you can make an interesting, fun scene. Plus you still have the chance to introduce Artemis organically like she is in the book.
It feels like these days we're automatically thinking every scene in a movie of this type has to be a dazzling high-speed action scene, and I just find that a little sad. I feel like Hollywood has trained us to think this way. They/we aren't giving ourselves or our kids enough credit for enjoying a scene like Chet being turned into a big blob in Weird Science or the training scenes in Karate Kid. Most of us posting on this thread grew up on kid's/teenager movies that didn't rely strictly on mindless high-speed action. For example Goonies, WarGames, E.T., Ferris Bueller's Day Off, The Karate Kid, Weird Science......the very movies that are revered in Ready Player One. Yet supposedly the Joust Challenge scene in Ready Player One is too boring these days and has to be replaced with a cliche racing scene.
Sorry, old man rant over.