No way the coffee cup was an accident. Too obvious.
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This release pretty much identically mimics the comic pages that came out late last year (the one that looks like everyone was drawn screaming at each other). Same dialogue, very different look in delivery.
As for AP in shadow, that was an old cinematic lighting trick that was commonplace when TOS was filmed, placing the main character in shadow and having a narrow bar of light shining across the eyes, making for a more dramatic visual. They did that with Kirk a lot in Season 1 but toned it down later on:
I mean, I've been waiting for you...Oh boy. Ought I or oughtn’t I?
Please do.Oh boy. Ought I or oughtn’t I?
Exactly, which is why I find myself wondering why people who I know saw and reviewed the comic bothered watching the video, since Lane flat out said it would be the exact same thing.This release pretty much identically mimics the comic pages that came out late last year (the one that looks like everyone was drawn screaming at each other).
Yeah I never understood the point of doing an exact replica of the already released comic strip.Exactly, which is why I find myself wondering why people who I know saw and reviewed the comic bothered watching the video, since Lane flat out said it would be the exact same thing.
Exactly, which is why I find myself wondering why people who I know saw and reviewed the comic bothered watching the video, since Lane flat out said it would be the exact same thing.
Yeah I never understood the point of doing an exact replica of the already released comic strip.
But that's what he said he would do, and he delivered!
The question I had is "Faithful how?" Comics and novels and movies are not the same thing. Blade Runner is vastly unlike Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? and yet manages to hit most of the same thematic points. Ideally you adapt the story to the strengths of the medium, and what works on the page doesn't necessarily work on the screen and vice versa.So you guys have never watched or had the urge to watch a faithful adaptation of a novel, short story, comic, or even play that was turned into a film? There have been several properties where I've enjoyed novel, comic, cartoon, and film versions of the same story.
A couple of things for me. "Faithful" doesn't mean 1:1 recreation from format to format. Two, I use to want that but then I realized that part of creating art is adding an individual's spin to the material. That's the adaptation process. So, instead of wanting a perfect recreation I prefer seeing what a new artist sees in the work, rather than what I have already seen.So you guys have never watched or had the urge to watch a faithful adaptation of a novel, short story, comic, or even play that was turned into a film? There have been several properties where I've enjoyed novel, comic, cartoon, and film versions of the same story.
Sure. In the case of comics, faithful or nearly faithful adaptations, one notable instance was The Dark Knight Returns. Despite Weller's involvement, I was, sadly, disappointed with the overall result. Very little of it was actually in the category of good. It was pretty much inferior to the graphic novel across the board. Watchmen is a second case. The result there was more varied: there were quite a few good things about the film, but many negatives.So you guys have never watched or had the urge to watch a faithful adaptation of a novel, short story, comic, or even play that was turned into a film? There have been several properties where I've enjoyed novel, comic, cartoon, and film versions of the same story.
The question I had is "Faithful how?" Comics and novels and movies are not the same thing. Blade Runner is vastly unlike Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? and yet manages to hit most of the same thematic points. Ideally you adapt the story to the strengths of the medium, and what works on the page doesn't necessarily work on the screen and vice versa.
A couple of things for me. "Faithful" doesn't mean 1:1 recreation from format to format. Two, I use to want that but then I realized that part of creating art is adding an individual's spin to the material. That's the adaptation process. So, instead of wanting a perfect recreation I prefer seeing what a new artist sees in the work, rather than what I have already seen.
It's more the principle for me. I don't want frame for frame. I've wanted that in the past, growing up loving comics like Garfield and Calvin and Hobbes. But, faithful adaptation means something different to me now, and I don't want it to be shot for shot, identical.Again, agreed. Admiral and Mytran said it was an exact copy. Is it actually though? I'll have to dig up the comic and see. I suspect that they aren't but are instead just faithful adaptations instead... but I'm open to being proven wrong.
For some reason, I’m hearing Harry Dean Stanton shouting “this is what I live for” in my head as I read this.<cracks knuckles>
Y’all might want to get behind the plexiglass. This might get messy.
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