Posted on 04/11/2011 4:18:45 PM PDT by BCrago66
Atlas Shrugged, Part I comes to the big screen April 15. Ive seen the picture on an advance DVD, and for fans of Ayn Rand--and she was one of the heroes of my youth--it is well worth seeing. They will like it, mostly. It is Rands world, and remains true to the book. The movie falls short of the book, but given what sort of book it is, and that the movie was financed by a fan, and done in a hurry by a less-experienced director with non-famous actors on a limited budget, it is a creditable effort.
The novel Atlas Shrugged, published in 1957, is a perennial seller with millions of readers and many fans. It is 1168 pages long. There are too many speeches in it, so that 50 to 100 pages are excessive from a literary point of view, but otherwise the story is tightly plotted and told. It is not a story that can be condensed into a movie to be seen at one sitting.
(Excerpt) Read more at seattletimes.nwsource.com ...
A book for the ages. I thoroughly enjoyed it but, yes a few of the soliloquies were too long. John Galt’s radio address. OK, I get it; he didn’t have to speak for 47 pages to convey the message.
Still, I have my families tickets purchased for the 7:00 pm showing Friday night. I can hardly wait!
ping Atlas Shrugged
Glen Theater Pricing Information
Matinee (any movie before 6:00 p.m.): $3.50/person adult and child
After 6:00 p.m.: $3.50 child (12 and under) and senior (62+) $5.50 adult
I think it has been here since the late Forties...
Except, perhaps, Whittaker Chambers...:)
Don't know. I live in NC and the kids live in CA.
Thanks for the ping, Publius!
Bought tickets the minute I found out that the movie would be shown in Jacksonville.
Sunday afternoon, April 17 @ 2:00 PM. @ Five Points Theater.
Cannardly wait to see it — Atlas Shrugged is my all-time-favorite novel!
“Objectivism does not require one to be an atheist, she just happened to be one”
I agree that technically one could be a deist—i.e., believe in a Creator. But I strongly disagree if one’s conception of God is Christian, Jewish or Muslim—all of which are religions that preach the virtue of self-sacrifice and the “evil” of selfishness. Ayn Rand was unblinkingly consistent in railing against creeds that subordinated the individual to either a God or the State. In that regard, Whittaker Chambers was quite correct in recognizing that Atlas Shrugged was antithetical to his Christian beliefs even if Rand was a fellow-traveler when it came to criticizing the liberal welfare state or its evil twin cousins of communism and fascism.
“Don’t all parents have a “selfish” interest in the well being of their children? Of course they do.”
I concur, and so did Rand. She admittedly devoted precious little of the book’s 1100 pages to children, but there is a section in which she says exactly this—that a mother “sacrificing” time, money or even risking her life to rescue her children is not “sacrificing” at all since if she loves them—i.e., attaches a high value to them—it only makes sense she would trade something of lower value for them.
It’s great to see ‘Atlas Shrugged’ finally coming to the big screen. I cannot think of a more timely message. Hopefully the financial performance of this film will allow Part II to proceed.
I'm really lucky, in that AMC theaters is going to be showing it at a theater less than a mile from my place. I really want to see it, both because I want to see it, and because I want to support the producers. The problem is that I've got really bad arthritis and the last time I went to a movie, I could barely get up out of the seat once it was over. It was a painful experience. Still, I may go anyway.
Mark
You think these two guys were Wesley Mouch and Orin Boyle or just two SEIU 'Specialists'?
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