By Dracula, I mean, he was playing Dracula when he wasn't even playing Dracula. He was typecast and his other films didn't go very far to make you forget it. And he did play Dracula. A lot. Before and after the 1931 film.
Lugosi was approached in the summer of 1927 to star in a Broadway production of Dracula adapted by Hamilton Deane and John L. Balderston from Bram Stoker's novel. The Horace Liveright production was successful, running 261 performances before touring. He was soon called to Hollywood for character parts in early talkies.You're forgetting that most of Lugosi's stage work was playing Dracula.From 1947 to 1950 he performed in summer stock, often in productions of Dracula or Arsenic and Old Lace, and during the rest of the year made personal appearances in a touring "spook show" and on television. While in England to play a six-month tour of Dracula in 1951
Hi all, I'm currently doing research for my University dissertation in Animation. Although the course itself is in animation, for our written dissertation were encouraged to explore a wider range of media, so I have chosen to base my essay on Originality in Mainstream cinema, with a focus on the recent deluge of remakes and adaptations to come out of Hollywood.
I ask here because I need a lot of research to back up my work, and asking public opinion on the subject will be a massive help for me.
So, basically im here to ask the following questions: Do YOU think that Originality has Died in mainstream cinema? Why do you think its taken a backseat to remakes and adaptations? And is there still money to be made by original films?
Of course, I have my own opinions and assumptions on the above questions, but getting other opinions whether they are in agreement or disagreement will help me take this essay to the next level.
Thank you all in advance
-Dave
It is often said the golden age of science fiction is twelve. The same is certainly true of cartoons (well, eight perhaps.) It of course turns to crap around the point we're plain too old for this stuff.Think of it this way: back in the 60's, 70's and esspecially the 80's, there was a lot of creativity and originality going on. Growing up as a kid in the 80's I remember all the crazy movies that were out, all the saturday morning cartoons.... it seemed like the peak of creativity and originality was hit.
Then along came the 90's.....
yet the sad thing was that in the 90's (when I was a teenager) many of these shows were very predictable and I pretty well knew how the story was going to unfold and end within the first 5-10 minutes of the show in question..... and since then, everything just kept getting worse.
Why?
Because many of the plots and situations have already been done multiple times before in multiple sitcoms and shows in the past in which I grew up watching.
Exactly. You grew older, more genre-savvy and more cynical. The 1990s weren't lesser than the 1980s, you just had shifting standards because you were growing up.
I can't say that exactly, since I've continually watched cartoons and the sort non stop through my life, mainly because it's part of my profession.
As a sort of important quote. I watched all of these shows growing up, and while they varied in quality (Ren was little more than gross-out humour, as I dimly recall) they were overall fairly decent children's entertainment.While hits proved scarce for the broadcast networks in the 1990s, Nickelodeon gave birth to hit shows such as Doug, Rugrats, The Ren and Stimpy Show, Rocko's Modern Life, Hey Arnold!,
.... Ah, but you were also making a broader comment about movies and other TV shows. And I'd scarely consider the decade that brought us The Simpsons - one of the most successful and acclaimed cartoons ever, surely -
and Frasier - just a sitcom I love so very, very dearly - as something that was a slouch in the cartoon or sitcom department.
Sure, looking back wend at the 80s, Cheers is magnificient (though I like Frasier better) but there's nothing comparable to the Simpsons. A good decade for sitcoms, clearly, and I didn't even mention that one by Larry David people seem to like for some reason.
And while your article is pretty interesting, I'd point to this:
As a sort of important quote. I watched all of these shows growing up, and while they varied in quality (Ren was little more than gross-out humour, as I dimly recall) they were overall fairly decent children's entertainment.While hits proved scarce for the broadcast networks in the 1990s, Nickelodeon gave birth to hit shows such as Doug, Rugrats, The Ren and Stimpy Show, Rocko's Modern Life, Hey Arnold!,
I remind you that the Saturday morning cartoons of the 1980s were generally... well... not that good. The shows I mentioned were at least okay, particularly when compared to Transformers and the Turtles. Considering most of my morning cartoon watching was shows like that and the Animaniacs (and Jim and Tick), I don't think they're really exceptions.You continue to pick out exceptions, which I have already freely admitted there are always exceptions to every rule..... but generally, the decade was filled with crap
It's also worth noting that Simpsons and Frasier are routinely cited as two classic examples of spinoffs that may be better than the original. Certainly, the Simpsons is a spinoff of Tracey Ullman's Show in a fairly loose sense, and the initial premise for Frasier was not a spinoff of Cheers, but it was felt that any Kelsey Grammer vehicle would be benefited by the crossover appeal of that character.and the only good shows that existed in the 90's were spinoffs or continuations of shows that originated in the 80's (ie: The Simpsons, Cheers/Fraser Spinoff)
Fair enough.Inquiry:
What do you personally think of the cartoons and tv shows today? (Not including the movies today which is of course the main topic of discussion, but it's all related imo, since it all revolved around creativity and originality.)
i also can remember that once hollywood tried taking advantage of the "ADD/HD Generation" and re-tooled their cartoons accordingly, that the quality went into the crapper.
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