Has anyone heard of this I heard that it influenced wasteland and fallout. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0898367/ looks good. discuss.
euhm.sickfuck_diablo said:The book was great, but definitely one of the most depressing things I've ever read
Eyenixon said:The new formula is taking Cormac McCarthy novels and producing respective film adaptions, it's already getting old.
LogisticEarth said:Eyenixon said:The new formula is taking Cormac McCarthy novels and producing respective film adaptions, it's already getting old.
Huh? The only other recent movie was No Country for Old Men. I don't know if that classifies as a "formula" yet. The Road had some massively positive critical reaction when it first was published and they were quickly talking about a movie, even before No Country was released.
Yeah, the book, how many Pulitzer Prize Winners have made good Hollywood movies?LogisticEarth said:The Road had some massively positive critical reaction when it first was published
I found it bleak (as would be expected given the circumstances), but there also some small happy moments that were tucked into the story.sickfuck_diablo said:The book was great, but definitely one of the most depressing things I've ever read
I don't think Bethesda had The Road influence Fallout 3 in any good way, but there are several changes to the Fallout universe that they made to make it more like The Road: Cannibalistic supermutants, shopping carts, abundance of stuff to loot (even though the bombs dropped 200 years prior), places full of dead people, and the art style changing from more stylistic husks of buildings to more realistic burned houses, telephone poles, etc.welsh said:I know those assholes at Bethesda are saying that the Road is an influence to the game [Fallout 3], but those assholes would sell that bullshit to anyone willing to believe it. SO far I have seen no references to the Road in Fallout 3, except that both are generally post-apocalyptic.
Well Godfather 1 and 2 were both adaptions of icredible books. Though they are arguably not as good as the book, they're still considered among the best movies.Cimmerian Nights said:Yeah, the book, how many Pulitzer Prize Winners have made good Hollywood movies?LogisticEarth said:The Road had some massively positive critical reaction when it first was published
Does anyone possibly think they can cram the essence of a Pulitzer Prize winner into a 90minute mainstream movie? Why bother?
A 90 minute Hollywood movie is quite simply the wrong medium for presenting things like that. The only PP winners that got their due recently were Killer Angels (aka Gettysburg) and Lonesome Dove - but they're like 8 hours long. Return on investment not high enough to bother, dumb it down, whore it out, cash it in.
Actually, The Godfather 1 and 2 movies both come from the same single book. So it took, what, 2 movies and a total of 6 hours to do the book justice. Imagine it as a 90 minute feechuur film, blech. Besides, as good as the Godfather is, it ain't Pulitzer material. It wasn't on Oprah's book list neither.M-26-7 said:Well Godfather 1 and 2 were both adaptions of icredible books. Though they are arguably not as good as the book, they're still considered among the best movies.
M-26-7 said:Well Godfather 1 and 2 were both adaptions of icredible books. Though they are arguably not as good as the book, they're still considered among the best movies.
Ashmo said:The Road?
I never bothered to finish that tripe. The writing style wasn't exactly helpful -- ignoring literary conventions (italics for thought, quotations for speech, etc) isn't artistic, it's just confusing.
Cimmerian Nights said:I'll tell you what I think influenced The Road that nobody ever talks about.
Father and young son, travelling down the highway in a violent, hellish wasteland. Struggling against the dark side of human nature. Death everywhere.
In a fucking shopping cart?
Lone Wolf and Cub much?
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What's his next book going to be about, a blind masseuse with a cane sword?
Hack.