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OT: What novels and films are important to you?

Sci

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So I've watching two different documentary miniseries lately about the history of film -- The Story of Film: An Odyssey (2001, dir. Mark Cousins) and The Movies (2019) -- and it made me start to think about how certain novels and films can influence you and speak to you on a deep level.

So -- what films and works of literature have been important or influential to your life?

I'll start:

Nineteen Eighty-Four just might be the most important novel I've ever read. It's this gripping work that instantly transports me every time I sit down to read it, and I always get something new out of it.

The Spy Who Came in From the Cold and Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy are just astonishing works of literature. The 2011 film adaptation of the latter never fails to take my breath away.

Looking for Alaska is an incredibly moving novel about grief and guilt. It speaks to me a lot about the nature of nostalgia, of lost innocence, and of holding onto one's inner child even in adulthood. The Stand, that epic novel about the death and rebirth of America, has never lost its relevance to me -- especially not this year!

Certain YA novels I read in middle school have always stayed with me, too: Jacob Have I Loved, Bridge to Terabithia, and Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry all come to mind. Lord of the Flies has always stayed with me, too, even though I am today perhaps a bit more skeptical of its view of human nature.

In film, The Dark Knight just feels like 2008 to me -- a time when (naively, in retrospect) it felt like society was about to come apart. Titanic is a film that never fails to sweep me away with its Golden Age Hollywood melodrama -- but its political subtext is unmistakable to me today. Certain arch classics always transport me -- The Wizard of Oz, the original Star Wars trilogy, Back to the Future, Jurassic Park, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, The Muppet Christmas Carol, Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, Hook, Independence Day, Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Shrek, Superman. Disney Renaissance classics like Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, and The Lion King. Malcom X, The Silence of the Lambs, Psycho, Forrest Gump (though I have a lot of problems with this one's politics today). Classics like Mr. Smith Goes to Washington and It's A Wonderful Life. More modern fare like 12 Years A Slave, Sorry to Bother You, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Lincoln, Vice, The Witch, The Artist.

Certain plays are also very important to me, among them M. Butterfly by David Henry Hwang; Angels in America by Tony Kushner; The Saliva Milkshake by Howard Brenton; Cloud 9 by Caryl Churchill; Mother Courage and Her Children by Bertolt Brecht.

What about you?
 
To be clear, I posted this thread in TrekLit because I'm specifically interested in what novels and films are important to the TrekLit regulars.
 
To be clear, I posted this thread in TrekLit because I'm specifically interested in what novels and films are important to the TrekLit regulars.
I figured as much.

GENERAL MOD NOTE:
I'll let this one stay here since I can see that you would want to just talk to the subset of people who also read Trek Lit about their own other favourites.

However, that doesn't mean I will allow any other general threads simply because the thread creator just wants to talk to the Trek Lit folk. There's a wider BBS out there, go explore :)
 
The entire Baum Oz canon (all 14 volumes).

The entire Doyle Sherlock Holmes canon (all four novels and all five volumes of short stories).

The entire ADF Humanx Commonwealth canon.

As to movies, all of the Star Trek and Star Wars theatrical live-action films.

Kaufman's The Right Stuff

The restored Director's Cut of Edwards & Stone's 1776

Airplane (my in-flight movie of choice!)
 
"Winnie-the-Pooh" and "The House at Pooh Corner".

"Where the Wild Things Are".

The "Moomin" books of Tove Jansson.

"The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe".

As a teen, "The Hobbit" and "Watership Down". (A teacher lent me "Watership Down" while she tried to locate her copy of "The Hobbit".)

And not long after, "Superman: The Movie" and "Star Trek: The Motion Picture" (and its novelization), but managing to dodge completely "Star Wars: A New Hope" (when it was only "Star Wars").
 
A Bear Called Paddington by Michael Bond never fails to entertain, at any age.
I did not know Bond wrote fifteen Paddington books. I thought it was eight at most. I bought a complete box set recently.

In Peter David's early fanfic work, The TARDIS at Pooh Corner, Doctor Pooh meets Paddington, who appears to be a different regeneration of Doctor Pooh.
 
I am going to have to find that box set of Paddington books!

I don't know if Amazon links are okay, but it's this one. I really liked the image of Paddington across the spines, and it's unbroken across the back of the slipcase. If you have an Ollie's Bargain Outlet nearby, check there; you might find it for about half Amazon's price.
 
I don't know if Amazon links are okay, but it's this one. I really liked the image of Paddington across the spines, and it's unbroken across the back of the slipcase. If you have an Ollie's Bargain Outlet nearby, check there; you might find it for about half Amazon's price.
Awesome - thank you!


It's not a novel but I think the poetry of T.S. Eliot probably counts as most important to me (religious texts aside) - muttering random lines has got me through some stressful days at work!

Also, the Mr. Men books by Roger Hargreaves, they - like Paddington - were formative in my (ancient) youth and portray a world of kindness (if you skip over the bullying threats of the Mr. Mean book...). Mr. Quiet still makes me cry.

(and if anyone's interested - I wrote a DS9 / Mr. Men crossover for a contest in the fan fiction forum, it's a fair few years ago but it should still exist via the search box :) )
 
One my favorite writer growing up that I will always have a soft spot for is Bruce Coville. I absolutely loved his Rod Albright Alien Adventures, My Teacher is an Alien, and I Was a Sixth Alien were some of my favorite series growing up.
And despite the rather unpleasant recent revelation about JK Rowling, I still love the Harry Potter franchise. It was a huge part of my later childhood and early teen years.
The Star War and Star Trek movies will always be some of my favorite. I think growing up watching the Disney Renaissance movies is probably a big part of why I love animation so much.
I know you didn't mention video games, but I can't let a thread like this go by without mentioning the Last of Us and The Last of Us Part II. I'd put those two right up there with the best books and movies when it comes to storytelling. The first game is a spectacular road trip story focused on the growing father/daughter bond between the two main characters. The second is an absolutely phenomenal story about the cycles of revenge and violence and just how much damage they do. It's the only video game I've every played that actually shows just how damaged all of the fighting and killing has left the main characters. They are both the absolute best written and acted games I have ever played. I have to confess, there were a couple scenes in Part II that actually made me start to get a little emotional during the playthrough I just finished this morning.
 
The Search For Spock was important to me as the first sampling of Star Trek that I chose, owned and could rewatch when the television was available. The original Star Wars trilogy has always been important to me.

When I was really young the first books I received as a gift from my grandfather was the box set of the Chronicles of Narnia. It was much later that I eventually finally read them all, but The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe was the important one that immediately got read, and multiple reads through the years. The series I discovered on my own that turned out to be exactly what I wanted at time was The Chronicles of Prydain; I never read any entire series non-stop all the way through except that one. I read Lord of the Rings because it was a family thing, but Prydain was a more accessible reading experience and more the level of magic that I wanted than LotR.

@JD The Bruce Coville book I got hold of was The Monster's Ring. I loved it and still have it...and I had a surprising number of classmates who were envious and fascinated by it. I actually lent it to a couple people, it's incredible that one of them didn't borrow it forever.

Frank Herbert's Dune is the major novel that is important to me in this day and age. It surprises me how much I obsess about Dune, as it was a difficult experience the first time I read it. Everytime I pick it up I'm shocked by how densely written it is, I'm always discovering new facets and layers, and end up with new questions.

One of my favorite books is a spin-off of a spin-off from Doctor Who: Faction Paradox: The Book of the War.
 
Depends on age. I grew up reading Who novelisations and Narnia. But a terrific memory is when, at 14 and 10 respectively, my sister knocked on my door in the small hours asking if I'd finished The Two Towers as she'd finished Fellowship and wanted to carry on...
 
@JD The Bruce Coville book I got hold of was The Monster's Ring. I loved it and still have it...and I had a surprising number of classmates who were envious and fascinated by it. I actually lent it to a couple people, it's incredible that one of them didn't borrow it forever.
I'm pretty sure I read that one, but I don't really remember it. It was first book in his The Magic Shop series, where each book follows a different kid who wanders into the magic shop and ends up with a different magical artifact. I just looked the series up, and apparently there was one last book written in 2003 that I never read, since I had moved on to more adult stuff at that point.
 
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