I loved Sky Captain, and Conran's Barsoom movie does look like it could have been really good.
I don't know why they bothered setting the movie on Mars if they're going to the trouble of eliminating it from the title. Just say it's a faraway planet or something.
I don't know why they bothered setting the movie on Mars if they're going to the trouble of eliminating it from the title. Just say it's a faraway planet or something.
Then why bother making a John Carter movie?
In chapter 11 of A Princess of Mars, Dejah Thoris tells Carter that she knows he's not of Barsoom and is of Earth. She's aware of what Earth is like and what Earth humans look like (the Red Martians have some sort of super telescope), and John Carter fits the parameters of an Earth human. It is a vague conversation, though, and one could rationalize its vagueness as a twenty-year-old memory of Carter's as he sits down to write his memoirs.Going by the first four books (the ones I've read), I don't think there's anything that specifically confirms that Carter's actually on Mars. And as far as Carter believing himself to be on the red planet, remember that he's a Civil War verteran with no specific gift for astronomy.
First John Carter Reviews: A Flawed But Worthwhile Epic?Given the naysaying hype, the first batch of reviews are surprisingly... positive. Well, mixed positive, for the most part -- critics agree on many of the film's strengths, from the well-crafted CG world of Barsoom (that's Mars, to us humans) to the spirited action sequences Pixar veteran Stanton has pulled off. (Look for Movieline's John Carter review to post next week.)
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