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- Dec 15, 2022
If Cthulhu ends up looking as good as Davy Jones did and still does then I will be thoroughly impressed.a CGI boat into a CGI Cthulhu in the CGI ocean with the CGI city of R'lyeh in the background
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If Cthulhu ends up looking as good as Davy Jones did and still does then I will be thoroughly impressed.a CGI boat into a CGI Cthulhu in the CGI ocean with the CGI city of R'lyeh in the background
The telegram that Jeeves had delivered with the breakfast tray had been a lulu, a crie de coeur from my old friend Captain Edward "Tubby" Norrys:
I say Bertie old man help. I am stuck here in this newly restored medieval monstrosity trying to buck up this gloomy old American bird progenitor of my late comrade at arms Alf Melmoth Delapore. Pop Delapore or de la Poer as he now styles himself you know how these Americans like to affect ancestral spellings Bertie has been having dreams of the queerest sort. All the cats have been acting rum as well. Come here at once and bring Jeeves. Jeeves is the only one who can get to the bottom of this mystery Bertie.--TUBBY
"What do you make of it, Jeeves?"
"Most sinister, sir."
"I know, Jeeves. Americans with sackfuls of the greenstuff to roll in tend to the eccentric. Throw in a few overexcited cats and you've got a recipe for disaster." As a rule I'm fond of the feline tribe, but in the aftermath of a certain luncheon engagement--of which more later--cats were for the moment low on my list.
When the geezer had exhausted the subject of his ancestors--and a rum lot they were too, all cultists and murderers and health-food fanatics, if you could credit the old legends--he filled me in on present family circs.
You've watched Benson and moorhead's other film's right? Something in the dirt is onanism, but The Endless and especially Resolution cabin of death are way better than Spring imo.Spring by Justin Benson is a low-budget horror with tendencies towards being Art (I mean that in the pejorative sense) but I mention because it has some themes of pre-civilisation cultures and unknown vistas of knowledge.
I agree that it's kind of dumb that the colour ends up being 'kinda purple', and yeah, it's not like it ever could have really worked, but I did like that in the film they specifically created a shade of purple that required a combination of colours that would never form naturally. But we really should only have ever seen it in reaction.yeah Mouth Of Madness was absolutely Lovecraft Without The Lovecraft
that old (but not that old) retro silent CoC was probably about as good as you could hope
I def agree that Lovecraft generally isn't so hot in visual media. A lot of the real fun is his ability to work with the English language. And when it's "this color is unknowable beyond all logic and reason" it works fine in a book, but in the movie The Color Out Of Space is "sorta purple"
which loses a lot
That sounds awesome, and I would kill for an ebook version. That would be the first thing I did when kindles came out if I had written books before the internet, just to get as many people reading it as possible.Forever Azathoth and Other Parodies
I'm assuming you're speaking of Gou Tanabe's manga adaptation. He also made a fantastic 2-volume adaptation of At the Mountains of Madness and even adapted a collection of some of Lovecraft's more obscure, early tales called The Hound and other Stories. You can get all three on Amazon for less than $50.the manga adaptations of Lovecraft's work, like The Shadow over Innsmouth
This sounds superb. I have to read this! Thank you!Though the best of the three stories, for me is "The Rummy Affair of Young Charlie" Jeeves and Wooster go to Paris on command of his haughty, domineering Aunt Agatha to check on the son of friends of hers, Charles Dexter Ward. This young American chap was in search of a mysterious collector of rare books, but became more interested in a certain old German viol player who lives on a street that can't be found on any maps...fortunately, another tenant of the house in the Rue d'Auseil, an elderly American has been observing this Erich Zann with interest and is willing to help Jeeves & Wooster. This "Mr. Altamont of Chicago" has his own interest in Zann's music.
Surprisingly, no. Spring was borderline as arthouse (am I using the term correctly?) as I was inclined to go though I did like it. I'll check out the others you mention - thank you.You've watched Benson and moorhead's other film's right? Something in the dirt is onanism, but The Endless and especially Resolution cabin of death are way better than Spring imo.
I have his AtMoM 2 volume adaptation. Other than the small format (about 5") and the perverse way the Japanese compile their literature back to front, it's faultless. Absolutely killer art.I'm assuming you're speaking of Gou Tanabe's manga adaptation. He also made a fantastic 2-volume adaptation of At the Mountains of Madness and even adapted a collection of some of Lovecraft's more obscure, early tales called The Hound and other Stories. You can get all three on Amazon for less than $50.
I also want to add to the list of Lovecraft inspired media - weeaboo edition - Occult (2009) and Record of Sweet Murder (2014) by Koji Shiraishi, Occult in particular, wear their lovecraft inspiration on their sleeves. And Uzumaki (2000) is a live action adaptation of Junji Ito's classic manga about a town infected by spirals, and it seems like it's the only way you can get a video version of the story now the anime adaptation has been indefinitely postponed. I'm drifting closer to existential horror here though, so to pull it back I'll also recommend the anime ova Housing Complex C, written by the guy who wrote Raging Loop, and the manga adaptations of Lovecraft's work, like The Shadow over Innsmouth.
I preordered the Atmom deluxe edition coming out in August, I can't wait. I've only read soi so far, but like overly serious said, it's flawless. Plus it was only $10 more than buying the two volumes in Australia.I'm assuming you're speaking of Gou Tanabe's manga adaptation. He also made a fantastic 2-volume adaptation of At the Mountains of Madness and even adapted a collection of some of Lovecraft's more obscure, early tales called The Hound and other Stories. You can get all three on Amazon for less than $50.
Yeah Spring is definitely arthouse imo, fortunately their other films are much more conventionally structured (although I wouldn't call either of them conventionally structured, for reasons you'll understand when you watch them.) The Endless is the better made film, in part because it has a bigger budget and additional crew, plus additional experience, but Resolution is my favourite, and technically The Endless is a sequel, so I'd say start with Resolution unless the low budget student film look is too off-putting.Surprisingly, no. Spring was borderline as arthouse (am I using the term correctly?) as I was inclined to go though I did like it. I'll check out the others you mention - thank you.
I haven't actually seen Marebito, it's in my library but I thought it was about a vampire?There's also Marebito
Yay!! Hope you like itI preordered the Atmom deluxe edition coming out in August, I can't wait. I've only read soi so far, but like overly serious said, it's flawless. Plus it was only $10 more than buying the two volumes in Australia.
I haven't actually seen Marebito, it's in my library but I thought it was about a vampire?
It's harder to do that these days because audiences are less capable of nuance. Things have to be overwhelmingly powerful or they're weak. The concept of a weak thing being dangerous is lost on modern media-saturated audiences despite it being a very true thing in real life. For a similar symptom look at old Raymond Chandler movies - you have ordinary people having ordinary fights with one maybe two punches being exchanged and it worked for audiences back then because they knew real fights, because they'd just come out of a world war, because they lived when life was more overly precarious. They'd have found modern endless fight scenes ridiculous because they knew that one good punch to the jaw took a man down. Any old mook can club you round the back of the head with a cosh if they get the drop on you.Oh, and Whisperer is also quaint in that at one point the aliens get scared off and one of them killed by literal guard dogs. I don't remember if the breed of dog is mentioned but I find it funny to imagine aliens versus pitbulls, and then suddenly it becomes plausible.
I agree, but unfortunately I am not capable of escaping that desensitization.It's harder to do that these days because audiences are less capable of nuance. Things have to be overwhelmingly powerful or they're weak. The concept of a weak thing being dangerous is lost on modern media-saturated audiences despite it being a very true thing in real life. For a similar symptom look at old Raymond Chandler movies - you have ordinary people having ordinary fights with one maybe two punches being exchanged and it worked for audiences back then because they knew real fights, because they'd just come out of a world war, because they lived when life was more overly precarious. They'd have found modern endless fight scenes ridiculous because they knew that one good punch to the jaw took a man down. Any old mook can club you round the back of the head with a cosh if they get the drop on you.
Someone in the 1930's could still find an alien scary even if one of its fellows was killed by dogs. Because they understand that the alien was still threatening and unknown. They didn't need an enemy to be an invincible force to think it was dangerous. Heck, in Well's War of the Worlds I'm fairly sure the navy took down at least one of the alien walkers. Danger isn't real to most of the audience anymore, so if something isn't cartoonishly power, they don't get it.
tbh once my nerd circle in the day realized that Peter Jackson was the same Pete Jackson who introduced lawnmower to zombie we got a LOT more hype about the prospects of the LotR moviesand it's not like anyone would have named a campy b-tier horror director like Peter Jackson to be the one to pull it off.
I feel like the only way to have a faithful film adaptation of Lovecraft nowadays without external meddling is if you’re an indie film director and your movie is circulated only at film festivals (like a majority of films that show at the H.P Lovecraft Film Festival, which never make it onto physical media or streaming services. but unfortunately whoever runs the festival is now demanding that movies be more inclusive) or the Director 100% funds the film from their own savings.Peter Jackson had already made The Frighteners and Heavenly Creatures before he took 5 years to develop LOTR. He also didn't have to operate within the constraints of DEI.
This is going to be utter shit (at best, I still doubt it ever gets made), and if you're even remotely optimistic, you haven't been paying attention.
The Frighteners bombed hard, and while it was a good movie I really don't recall a lot of nerds out there stanning hard for Heavenly Creatures. Wan has much more of a track record of critical and commercial success than Jackson did at the time, you can nitpick the details all you want but he just does.Peter Jackson had already made The Frighteners and Heavenly Creatures before he took 5 years to develop LOTR. He also didn't have to operate within the constraints of DEI.
This is going to be utter shit (at best, I still doubt it ever gets made), and if you're even remotely optimistic, you haven't been paying attention.
Tangent, but Heavenly Creatures is not a good movie. I always thought it was something of a rip off of "Fun" with Alicia Witt, though looking them up they weirdly came out in the same year. Alicia Witt > Kate Winslet.Peter Jackson had already made The Frighteners and Heavenly Creatures before he took 5 years to develop LOTR. He also didn't have to operate within the constraints of DEI.