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Title: | Arcana Caelestia |
Notice: | Directory listings are in topic 2 |
Moderator: | NETRIX::thomas |
|
Created: | Thu Dec 08 1983 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1300 |
Total number of notes: | 18728 |
734.0. "The Land of Faraway [a film]" by FLASH9::KALLIS (Anger's no replacement for reason.) Tue Jan 17 1989 15:14
-<A film of some discussability>-
This film may have hit theaters, but it didn't make much of an
impression of it did. It's an international effort, and stars actors
from several countries. It was produced in Sweden with the aid
of some agency of the USSR.
The story is simple, and while it probably won't hurt, in case anyone
wants to see it, I'll put plotline on the other side of a "spoiler"
formfeed. If you don't want to know more about it, hit NEXT/UNSEEN.
<spoiler>
The story: once upon a time, there was an orphan who lived with
his (unappreciative) adoptive parents in Stockholm. When he hears
his "parents" discussing the character of his _real_ father, he
resolves to run away, and _find_ that father, just to prove that
the father's not a bum.
He stops off at a shop, where a very pretty lady gives him an apple
and a postcard to mail. On the postcard, addressed to the king
of the Land of Faraway, she writes that the prince has been found,
and is coming, bearing a golden apple. When the boy reads it, just
before mailing it, he discovers the beautiful red apple he'd been
holding now was gold! He sat at a bench, and he discovered that
the bottle next to him has something in it. Opening the bottle,
a spirit comes out that transports him to the Land of Faraway.
He discovers his father's the king, and that his name is "Mio."
He has a best friend who looks like his best-friend chum at school,
but the name is now Jum-Jum (pronounced "yum yum"; shades of _The
Mikado_!). They lead an idyllic life, but the king is troubled,
because there's this wicked knight (played by Christopher Lee) with
magical powers, who's caught children. The only one who can kill
him is a prince .... Mio says he'll go; in the process, he gets
bread that feeds you, no matter how hungry you are, and a cloak
that Mio (discovers belatedly) turns inside out to render the wearer
invisible. With an invincible sword, he faces the knight and prevails.
Now, the point here is that the story's a _classic_ fairy tale.
The Spirit of the Bottle, though powerful, is used _once_. The
cloak with the Lining of Invisibility is used once. And so on.
This can be contrasted to other non-fairy_tale forms of fantasy,
where things like the cloak would be used repeatedly.
The purpose of this note, is to discuss the whole spectrum of fantasy
_types_, if a Fantasy notesfile conference isn't established.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
734.1 | I couldn't help it.... | STRATA::RUDMAN | The Posthumous Noter | Thu Jan 19 1989 17:00 | 6 |
| Sounds a bit corny. If so, does it detract?
Don
"...an apple and a postcard to mail." Did the postage increase
accordingly when the apple turned to gold?
|
734.2 | sorta mental chewing gum for adults | FLASH1::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Mon Jan 23 1989 09:10 | 10 |
| Re .1 (Don):
If you're a child, particularly a subteen, then the film works fairly
well. My wife's four-year-old nephew, Ryan, _loved_ it and asked
me to make him a sword immediatyely after seeing is (I made him
one out of art mounting board; stiff but harmless material). To
an adult, it's slow and fairly stogy (the special effects are okay,
but nothing really noteworthy).
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
734.3 | | RICKS::REDFORD | Already worried about the 90s | Mon Jan 23 1989 17:18 | 9 |
| re: .0
That's an interesting distinction: a fairy tale only uses a
magical device once whereas a fantasy uses it many times. I've
always thought that a fairy tale was just an older form of
children's fantasy, but I can see how your distinction works.
Any ideas on why that's the case?
/jlr
|
734.4 | a convention | FLASH1::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Tue Jan 24 1989 08:26 | 8 |
| Re .3 (jlr):
>Any ideas on why that's the case?
I suspect that for smaller children, the idea of multiple uses of
a resource might be a bit confusing.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
734.5 | | RELYON::HIGINBOTHAM | Height Watcher's Anonymous | Wed May 03 1989 13:40 | 18 |
|
>Any ideas on why that's the case?
I suspect that for smaller children, the idea of multiple uses of
a resource might be a bit confusing.
----------------------------------------------------------
I believe it has more to do with teaching a lesson. You
are granted a power and must use it responsibly i.e. once,
correctly. Life does not give you an infinite amount of
chances to do a particular thing right. Usually it's one
shot. I think that is a veiled lesson of fairy tales,
and there are many.
Fantasy doesn't necessarily have to teach anything to young
children. Rather, it usually serves as escapist material
for young (and not-so-young) adults.
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