Posted on 12/27/2005 11:28:47 AM PST by Bob J
Hey! No dissing NPH! He rocked in H&KGTWC, what with snorting coke of some broad's butt out of the sunroof of Harold's Car as they watched while riding a Cheetah.
I'll be watching narnia in the next few days, I'll be sure to followup.
CS Lewis books, like the movie, target the 8-12 demographic (the movie is true to the book). Tolkien, like Rowling, targeted age 8 to adult.
I saw Cheaper by the Dozen 2 with my daughters yesterday and really liked it. I'm not going to post a thread onit though.
$6 for a friggin soda? I can do NETFLIX for 6 months for what i paid yesterday.
I understand, I read the Potter books and loved the movies.
re: lion didn't up and eat all those obnoxious kids
Take heart, there's a great story in the Bible about a bunch of kids teasing a prophet. He warns them to stop and when they don't he orders a she bear out of the woods who kills and eats them. Great story. Warms my heart every time I read it.
Oh wait! I definitely mean Voyage of the Dawn Treader, not Prince Caspian. I actually remembered the title as VotDT but someone just recently told me I remembered wrong, and that the title was Prince Caspian with VotDT as a subtitle..
i took my kiddos to see it and we all enjoyed it.
i also think it follows the book and is truly geared
to the children the series was written for.
i first read the entire series in elementary school and have
re-read them all as an adult. it's one of my fav kids series.
Thanks for the review. I like to see movies that evoke strong emotions, esp. ideological ones with points of view, which is why I'll see Munich, whatever the criticisms.
The Island was good. Not A+ but good. Now "Stealth," there was a truly bad movie.
Bob, I agree with you that its Kludgy.. its clearly a movie made for folks who have read the book... the character development and relationships that are at the heart of the story, never really develop on screen... time constraints would be my guess.
C.S. Lewis is.... Harry Potter's OCCULT-MASTER......1st Peter 5:8
That's the way C.S. Lewis wanted it. You read LWW then TMN. I think you are supposed to wonder "How did Narnia get there?" "Why did these kids get to go to Narnia?" "What happens to the kids?".
If you read TMN first, you don't have any questions about Narnia.
Sounds like you have more of a quarrel with the book than with the movie. Narnia, along with "Lord of the Rings" helped define the fantasy genre that still thrives today, a genre defined by the hero being the most unlikely of characters drawn by destiny into a conflict that he did not start, but is destined to end.
Sound familiar? Are we not living through that time right now, when George W. Bush, who many dismissed as being the most unlikely of people to lead this country, is now waging war against one of the darkest forces the world has ever encountered in the form of militant islam?
There's a reason this type of story works. The archetypes laid out in the Rings trilogy and the Narnia books are part of what give us the strength and courage to take on the enemies who would snuff out the light of our humanity and civilization. The heroes come from the least likely of places and are drawn into conflicts that at first do not involve them, but turn into personal missions.
You are, of course, free to laugh off the transformation of the child, the halfling, or any other "insignificant" person into a hero, but these stories will continue to give us hope against overwhelming odds.
Another square building came out, this time with windows and chimneys.A model of the Manchester branch of the Young Womens Christian Association, said Harvey.
Are there any lions? asked Eric hopefully. He had been reading Roman history and thought that where you found Christians you might reasonably expect to find a few lions.
Saki, The Toys of Peace.
It was no Lord of the Rings, but it was a good movie. You have to accept it at face value.
What is special about the children is that they are humans. Hence why the prophecy concerns them. The world was created by Aslan, spurred on by humans, and the world ends by the actions of humans. Yet there are few actual humans in the world of Narnia itself.
By the by, the Professor was, as a child, the main character of the first book in the series "the Magician's nephew".
I saw it yesterday. I enjoyed it.
Don't bother. You will be disappointed. I think you need to read them as a child to really get drawn in. The movie left me wondering about the books I read as a kid. Now that I have read them again, they are VERY simplistic. I still like them though.
Of particular interest to Christians was Aslan's death and resurrection, but more surprisingly, the frequent mentions of "sons of Adam" and "daughters of Eve." The lines jump out from the dialogue, instructing us that we're more than random collections of molecules.
I loved this movie, although unlike you, I did not expect anything but a fantasy/children's movie from a fantasy/children's book.
The scenery was breathtaking and the special affects/makeup of the creatures were just amazing. They did sissify Peter a bit, but in the book he was a bit of a weeny as well. The point in that I think was him stepping up and becoming a man.
It seems you were expecting more out of a children's movie than you should have.
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