Woudn't that help the foppish Don Diego persona?Nah, he's too pretty. Zorro should be handsome as hell, sure, but in an at least vaguely rugged way, Banderas being the perfect case in point. Depp's different but also awesome screen presence is due in large part to his mildly androgynous fine features.
Nah, he's too pretty. Zorro should be handsome as hell, sure, but in an at least vaguely rugged way, Banderas being the perfect case in point. Depp's different but also awesome screen presence is due in large part to his mildly androgynous fine features.
Though it has been done before...Turning Zorro into a sci-fi character isn't terribly original either, but it does show a smidge of creativity or at least the unexpected.
On second look, that doesn't look "post-apocalyptic" to me, but here's how they should do Zorro: send him to outer space and have him fight for justice on the frontiers of space among the lawless aliens and greedy human colonists! That's the best analogy to frontier-era California.
His great grandma is Cherokee or something like that.
Hey! Maybe Depp should be Zorro!![]()
I always thought of Zorro as the slender-athletic type, not rugged or brutish in the least. His foes are a bunch of knuckle-draggers but he dances rings around them and laughs at their clumsiness, tossing roses and sipping fine champagne while swinging from a chandelier.
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Greg, have you read Isabella Allende's Zorro novel? I thought it was an interesting take on it, if a departure from the usual legend.
What sort of anachronistic self-indulgences? Did Zorro have moments of navel-gazing introspection? Or did the book bring up “issues” that weren’t really relevant to the time frame?. . . There are great moments and elements, but Allende both took herself too seriously and undermined herself with anachronistic self-indulgences.
Good gort, I had no idea people were still writing Zorro novels!This thread has been more educational than I expected.
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Greg, have you read Isabella Allende's Zorro novel? I thought it was an interesting take on it, if a departure from the usual legend.
I really enjoyed the Allende novel, which, I confess, is the only thing by her that I've read.
The book is first-person narrated by a side character named Isabel (hint, hint), who is very contemporary in tone, often pokes fun at Diego in a way that tends to deflate the pulp appeal of the story (or rather, multiple stories, as the text reads closer to a biography than your average novel, with the perhaps the smallest ratio of quoted dialogue I've ever seen), and in the epilogue, she actually says that she's tired of him - which would be insulting if she hadn't made us tired of him/the book also by that point.What sort of anachronistic self-indulgences? Did Zorro have moments of navel-gazing introspection? Or did the book bring up “issues” that weren’t really relevant to the time frame?. . . There are great moments and elements, but Allende both took herself too seriously and undermined herself with anachronistic self-indulgences.
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