To: Restorer
Yeah, but his mind was set in the "real world", wasn't it? He didn't imagine Elves or dragons, just real-world things that weren't actually there. Kinda like our own tinfoilhat people, I'd say.
1,686 posted on
04/03/2002 9:47:46 AM PST by
JenB
To: JenB; carton253; 2Jedismom
I just want to add that ITA with those who think FOTR should have won the adapted screenplay award. And no, I haven't seen or read ABM, but I have read enough reactions to it to know that while the story itself might have been well-done onscreen, it departed significantly from the work upon which it was based.
LOTR was absolutely the most difficult adaptation--just consider the fact that it took 8 years to develop a workable screenplay, and that is an indication of how challenging the material was to adapt. Then add in the sheer scope of what had to be translated from text to screen, with visuals, other-worldly characters, and the depth and number of characters, and it really is no comparison. It should have been a shoo-in, but it wasn't because it was not part of mainstream Hollywood's idea of who should win a screenplay award.
Hmph! Stupid academy!
To: JenB
True. I guess he didn't have a very inventive imagination!
If I was going to live in a fantasy world, I think it would look a lot more like ME.
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