Categories

Archives

Recent Posts

  • QOTD 07142003

    Jonathan Winters: “Nothing is impossible. Some things are just less likely than others.” [Quotes of the Day]

  • After 96 Episodes

    I still giggle almost every time Kagome says ‘Sit!’ to Inu-Yasha.

  • Nice Weekend

    Well, we finally have had some really nice weather. Not too hot for a day or two. And the nights have been beautiful sleeping weather. Yesterday had a nice early brunch over at the Neighborhood Restaurant. After being stuffed with food there I made my way over to Harvard Square to meet up with my friend Lyn and her friend. We went to Pho Pasteur for lunch, which was quite good, I hadn’t been there before. Then we made it over to Tokyo Kid, which was fun. I like how they’ve remodeled recently. Then onto Newbury Comics and Million Year Picnic (where I got to pick up the second issue of Alien 9).

    Last night was a pretty quiet night in, and today I’ve been lounging around reading, watching anime, and playing Castlevania on my GBA. Tonight I’m hoping to get to sleep kinda early so I can exercise in the morning and not have to worry about going in the afternoon.

  • Those Bastages!

    Hmm. Sara Lee seems to be suing Spike Lee.

  • Comic to Film

    I wasn’t really planning on seeing The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. Mostly because I wasn’t sure they could do the comic justice. The New York Times has an excellent article by Douglas Wold titled The Comic Book ‘League’ Was Better that talks about some of what was wrong in the film adaptation of it.

    You would think it would be easy to turn a comic book into a movie, which is what the director Stephen Norrington and the screenwriter James Dale Robinson have tried to do with “The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.” All you have to do, after all, is to translate it from one visual medium into another; the comic book already looks like a storyboard. Of course, it’s nowhere near that simple, and the filmmakers behind “League” have failed to recognize what makes a good comic book tick in the first place.

    Alan Moore, author of the mock Victorian adventure tale on which the movie is based, is the most acclaimed writer currently working in mainstream comics, and much of his work seems, on the face of it, as if it could be made into spectacular cinema. He writes ingenious, psychologically resonant stories, full of breathtaking images and set pieces, and his famously detailed scripts “direct” his artist-collaborators in everything from the “camera angle” of each panel to the minutiae of the characters’ facial expressions.

    But that’s actually a problem when it comes to filming his work. “Watchmen,” written by Mr. Moore and drawn by Dave Gibbons, continues to be one of the best-selling graphic novels more than 15 years after its publication, but it has been notoriously resistant to attempts to adapt it into a workable screenplay: its narrative about aging superheroes and nuclear panic is so deeply rooted in the comics form that it could no more be filmed than, say, “Citizen Kane” could be adapted into a novel. “From Hell,” Mr. Moore and Eddie Campbell’s terrifying dissection of Jack the Ripper’s world and world view, was turned into a successful movie by the Hughes brothers a few years ago, but only by discarding most of its plot and structural framework, and recasting it as a straightforward thriller. [New York Times]

    This just reinforces my belief that there are some texts that just don’t cross well between mediums. Some books just can’t really be made into a movie that preserves all its elements. And some movies can’t really be adapted in a way that really does the visual impact of the movie justice. So often I wish that someone would adapt a book as a series on HBO or Showtime. So that they could take the time to tell the story more fully.

    This also made me think of an article I read ages back by Terry Rossio on adapting The Puppet Masters into a movie. It’s a great look into how Hollywood thinks.

  • QOTD 07132003

    Jimmy Stewart: “I’ve wrestled with reality for 35 years, Doctor, and I’m happy to state I finally won out over it.” [Quotes of the Day]

  • I RULE THE WORLD

    Last night I finished unlocking everything in Wario Ware, inc. At least I think I unlocked everything. The game is truly insane. If you have a Game Boy Advance you should drop everything and go buy it right now. It will eat your brain.

  • Update to MTThreadMail

    I updated MTThreadMail this morning. The old version didn’t really have any support for anonymous comments. So someone could check the box to be notified of comments and not give an email. It now checks that an email address is provided and returns an error if it isn’t. Enjoy.

  • Because Books are People Too

    Nick Mamatas announced that his new book, 3000MPH In Every Direction At Once is now available on Amazon (It’s sales rank as of this moment is 783). So you should get a copy. You know you want to.

  • mod_rewrite wackiness

    So, in my last post I was writing about using mod_rewrite to send people to another image. My initial thought was to just send any image request that wasn’t from my site to an alternate image. The first problem I had was the image I redirected to was caught by my rule also (which created a nice loop). Then I realized something else. If I did it this way, people reading my site via RSS wouldn’t be able to see images. And also, people reading this via LiveJournal would have the same issue. So in the end I’m going to just add sites that leech images from me as they do it.