T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1110.1 | Partial Answer | SWAM1::HERKELRAT_RA | If they fire one, we'll fire one. One fired, sir | Wed Sep 23 1992 08:59 | 12 |
| 'Destination Moon' was included in the Gregg Press hardcover of the
same name. The book is principally about the movie but it also
includes the original story. I believe this is the only place it
was ever published in book form.
You may have trouble finding this book though. Gregg Press did publish
a goodly number of SF&F titles but the print runs were generally 500
copies or less as they targetted the library market.
Gregg Press is located in Boston and published this book in 1979.
Herk
|
1110.2 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Sep 23 1992 13:31 | 4 |
| � [I could not find an appropriate topic to park this. Mr. Moderator, if
� you know of one, please move this]
DIR/KEY=HEINLEIN would have helped you find it.
|
1110.3 | | MILKWY::ED_ECK | Rambo Among the Roses | Wed Sep 23 1992 14:07 | 7 |
|
I have a vage memory of both _Destination Moon_ and
_Tenderfoot in Space_ being reprinted along with an
appreciation in a single volume published quite recently
(within the past few months).
Title, anyone?
|
1110.4 | REQUEIM | DPDMAI::MILLERR | I have a cunning plan... | Mon Sep 28 1992 12:28 | 15 |
|
The title of the collection mentioned in .3 is "Requiem" edited by Yoji
Kondo. It has "Destination Moon" in two versions, as well as
tenderfoot in space. It also contains several of Heinlein's writings
that have not been printed for a long time, some have never been
printed.
A good one.
If you need a pointer, let me know and I'll get the ISBN
and publisher from my copy tonight.
- Russ.
|
1110.5 | | ELIS::BUREMA | PRUNE JUICE: The warrior's drink | Tue Sep 29 1992 04:21 | 6 |
| .4> If you need a pointer, let me know and I'll get the ISBN
.4> and publisher from my copy tonight.
Yes, please (pant, pant)
Wildrik
|
1110.6 | | DPDMAI::MILLERR | I have a cunning plan... | Wed Sep 30 1992 10:00 | 9 |
|
"Requiem: New Collected Works by Robert A. Heinlein"
Edited by Yoji Kondo
ISBN 0-312-85168-5
TOR Books - Tom Doherty Assoc. , 175 Fifth Ave, New York, NY 10010
|
1110.7 | | MILKWY::ED_ECK | Rambo Among the Roses | Wed Sep 30 1992 17:59 | 3 |
|
Yup--that's the one. (I saw a copy remaindered at Stop & Shop,
so it can't be too hard to find)
|
1110.8 | Heinlein on the benefits of space | VERGA::KLAES | Quo vadimus? | Wed Sep 08 1993 10:40 | 85 |
| Article: 14932
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle
Subject: Re: Robert Heinlein's speech
Date: Sun, 5 Sep 93 02:39:51 GMT
Organization: Engineering Computer Services
In Article <[email protected]>
[email protected] (Brian Stanley) writes:
>[email protected] writes:
>
>>Does anybody have the text to Robert Heinlein's speech to the ?Senate?
>>?Congress? about how spinoff / space exploration is not only beneificial, but
>
>I don't have the actual text, however in _Expanded Universe_, Mr. Heinlein
>supplies an abridged version. ("Spinoff", pp. 500-513 in the 1982 Ace
>paperback edition). Or you might check a nearby government documents
>repository...
>
>------------------------------
>Brian Stanley -- [email protected]
>Neither the UND Department of Space Studies nor the US Air Force knows,
>nor do they likely care, what I have said here.
>--
>------------- Brian Stanley -------------- [email protected] ----------
>"That red stuff, that's BLOOD that is. Meant to be on the inside, it is. BAD
>sign if it's not on the inside, that's what I says." Master Redlaw
>(Sandman #51)
>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yes, but this speech *was* published in a magazine. Heinlein's
address was to a Joint Session of Congress on July 19, 1979 on the
topic: "Applications of Space Technology for the Elderly and the
Handicapped." Also testifying at that Session was Trudy E. Bell, then
of NASA. This is from Heinlein's "own mouth" ("Spinoff," pp. 500-513
of EXPANDED UNIVERSE)
If anyone knows where a complete copy of this speech--or Session--can be
had, please post. Here's one for your Trivia Phenom, Henry!
Thanks.
--
Sarah R. Yoffa
Disclaimer: I'm an ignorant idiot, but since I know it, I'm no fool.
If you believe anything I say can be validated, you are not only
foolish but ... B-)
======================================================================
___ || Sarah R. Yoffa, Dept. of Mech. Engineering
/ o \___ || University of Massachusetts/Amherst, Mass.
| _/-} || Internet: [email protected]
_____/____|_______ ||
\ Phoenix Rising / || "The past only exists in the minds of those
\ Enterprises / || who choose to recall it." -- Kyree in
\ (c) 1993 / || "And the Children Shall Lead"
\ / ||
\--------/ || "A generation which ignores history has no
|| past--and no future!" -- Lazarus Long in
|| "Time Enough for Love" by Robert Heinlein
======================================================================
Article: 14938
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle
Subject: RE: Robert Heinlein's speech
Date: 6 Sep 1993 16:00:08 GMT
Organization: Stratus Computer, Laguna Hills, CA
In article <[email protected]>
[email protected] wrote:
>Greetings and Salutations:
>
>Does anybody have the text to Robert Heinlein's speech to the ?Senate?
>?Congress? about how spinoff / space exploration is not only beneificial, but
>how he personally benefited by the medical advances made?
His own condensed version is published in a collection of his writing
entitled "Expanded Universe." Should be available at any general bookstore.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Rich Ahrens | [email protected] |
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1110.9 | The Puppet Masters being filmed in Iowa | JVERNE::KLAES | Be Here Now | Tue Mar 29 1994 17:02 | 41 |
| Article: 5188
From: [email protected] (AP)
Newsgroups: clari.local.iowa,clari.news.movies
Subject: Sci-Fi Takes Over Des Moines
Date: Sun, 27 Mar 94 12:10:13 PST
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- Downtown Des Moines was dead this
weekend. Blame the alien slugs.
Production crews buzzed the city with two helicopters Saturday
and Sunday, filming the climax of the science-fiction movie ``The
Puppet Masters.''
Because the crew needed Des Moines to appear devoid of life,
police kept the streets clear of cars and people each time a
helicopter made a run over the business district.
Sightseers gaped. Business owners seethed.
``How can they do this to a business area?'' asked Lee Ozdych,
manager of the downtown J.C. Penney Co. store.
The store has been flooded with customers for a closeout sale.
But the filming frequently prevented employees and customers from
entering for up to 10 minutes at a time.
``We've got some really irate people,'' said Linda Sinclair,
who was helping the filmmakers keep people from crossing a street.
``And then others are OK. Some of them are really fascinated.''
The movie, starring Donald Sutherland and Julie Warner, is
based on the novel by the late Robert Heinlein. In the movie, slugs
land outside an Iowa community, called ``Ambrose,'' take control of
residents and invade Des Moines.
``Des Moines will be saved from aliens, but there won't be
anybody left,'' said Tim Hillman, the location manager.
Most of the filming was completed on a Los Angeles sound stage
and in Fresno, Calif.
|
1110.10 | I'll go, but I might not stay | ZENDIA::BORSOM | | Mon Apr 04 1994 19:53 | 2 |
| Great book. Hope they don't mangle it too badly.
|
1110.11 | when, when, when ?? | OTIGER::R_CURTIS | | Mon Apr 18 1994 18:19 | 10 |
| Any idea when this movie will be released ? Sounds like it's just in
the initial stages of production.
I have hoped for years that SOMEONE would make ANY Heinlein novel into
a movie..... Starship Troopers, Tunnel in The Sky, Methuselah's Children...
Puppet Masters is great, too. Gee, I wonder how this will translate
into a film...I have to re-read the book.
I think I was about 16 when I read it the first time....and it was pretty
racy at that time...
|
1110.12 | Deja vu? | CAIMAN::MAY | Nick May | Tue Apr 19 1994 06:53 | 2 |
| Having Donald Sutherland in it invites comparisons with Invasion of the Body
Snatchers...
|
1110.13 | Woodrow Wilson Smith for President!! | POBOX::MONAGHAN | | Fri Apr 22 1994 15:04 | 2 |
| I vote for a miniseries based on the lives of Lazarus Long.
|
1110.14 | Or, Stranger in a Strange Land... | NEMAIL::CARROLLJ | Gilligan! Drop those coconuts!! | Fri Apr 22 1994 20:24 | 13 |
| re -.1
*all* his life(lives)?? That'd be more than a *mini*series - to do
it right, it'd have to be a 5 year run . . . :-)
Actually, a any series based in his 'Future History' would probably
be pretty cool - start with Piraro, go on to the road-cities and the
Howard Families, etc, etc.
My vote for a movie would be The Moon is a Harsh Mistress ( hmm..
maybe that would have to be a miniseries as well... )
- Jim
|
1110.15 | | ODIXIE::MOREAU | Ken Moreau;Sales Support;South FL | Sun Apr 24 1994 22:14 | 41 |
| Sorry, most of what made SIASL good was the philosophy: whether you agreed
with them or not, the comments were certainly conversation-provoking... I
am currently re-reading the "original uncut version", and see why it was
cut for its original publication.
I was going to suggest that "Starship Troopers" would be a good movie:
plenty of action (both large fleet and one-on-one ground action), enough
of a story to carry it, and you could even slip in some of Juan Rico's
experiences in History and Moral Philosophy class. And can you picture
the job that the IL&M team could do with a powered suit?
But on second thought I don't think it would translate well. The producers
would be more likely to simply ignore any of the philosophy in the book,
and just turn out a John-Wayne-in-the-22nd-century war movie. Now, there
is nothing wrong with a John-Wayne-in-the-22nd-century war movie, as such,
but it wouldn't be the Heinlein book that many of us know and love.
And that led me to the realization that *much* of what made Heinlein books
so good would be ignored/not understood/lost/deliberately corrupted by the
Hollywood producers of today. With the possible exception of James Cameron
(maker of "The Abyss", "Terminator", "Terminator II", "Aliens" and others),
no producer to my knowledge has the love of the story, or the ability to put
in emotion and philosophy, into a fantastic action picture. Either it gets
bogged down in philosophy and delivers no action ("Dune" comes to mind), or
it is a mindless shoot-em-up (compare "Terminator II" with "Predator", both
of which are superb action movies, but the depth of emotion and philosophy
in "T2" is *miles* beyond that of "Predator").
Sorry, but while I would love to see a good adaptation of "Between Planets",
"Citizen of the Galaxy", "Glory Road", "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress", "If
This Goes On --", "The Puppet Masters", "Starship Troopers", and "Stranger
in a Strange Land", I believe that my insistence on a *good* adaptation
precludes any such effort being accomplished.
"Good" in this case means fairly true to the source material, decent casting,
good action, and enough of the Heinlein questions that people will walk away
from the movie talking about them. Agree or not, I don't care, but if the
movie does not generate earnest conversation about the philosophy, then it
is not true to its source material.
-- Ken Moreau
|
1110.16 | "Red Planet" now on FOX | SCAS01::MILLERR | A Tractor on the info farm rd | Fri May 20 1994 11:36 | 7 |
| I caught the tail end of a commercial this week on FOX for "Robert Heinlein's
Red Planet". I THINK it's animated. My TV Guide shows it being on at 11:30
Central Time this Saturday. I have no idea if it's new, or what.
Set the VCR, Ma.......
- Russ
|
1110.17 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri May 20 1994 16:32 | 3 |
| re .16:
I've seen the commericials, it is animated.
|
1110.18 | | OOTOOL::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Fri May 20 1994 17:21 | 2 |
| It started last week. It's an animated mini-series, lasting three
weeks, I think.
|
1110.19 | Action figures on tv | APACHE::PETERS | Be nice or be dog food | Mon May 23 1994 10:25 | 5 |
| I watched it saturday. It is 3 weeks long and start two saturdays ago.
The story carries vaig simularities between it and the book. The
characters are the same. The story is simplified and action is added.
this made it just another kid action series.
Jeff Peters
|
1110.20 | | CSOA1::LENNIG | Dave (N8JCX), MIG, @CYO | Fri Oct 07 1994 22:02 | 5 |
| Just saw an advert for "The Puppet Masters"
The movie opens Friday Oct 21st. Rated R.
Dave
|
1110.21 | I've got a real bad feeling about this one... | SEND::PARODI | John H. Parodi DTN 381-1640 | Mon Oct 10 1994 09:14 | 6 |
|
Yes and not only were the aliens not the slugs I remember so fondly,
but Donald Sutherland appears to have a leading role.
JP
|
1110.22 | but then, it's been years... | QUARRY::petert | rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty | Mon Oct 10 1994 12:04 | 7 |
| It's certainly been decades since I read the Puppet Masters, but from what
I've seen in the promo's advertising this, it seems to resemble a bit
what I thought they might look like. Specifically, smallish sized lumps
that sit between the shoulder blades. Any one know if this is the first
major Heinlein book that's made it to film?
PeterT
|
1110.23 | | NETRIX::thomas | The Code Warrior | Mon Oct 10 1994 12:27 | 2 |
| Both Destination Moon and Rocket Ship Galileo have been made into movies
in the 50s
|
1110.24 | Nazis on the Moon | ZENDIA::BORSOM | | Mon Oct 10 1994 14:58 | 8 |
| re: .23
>Both Destination Moon and Rocket Ship Galileo have been made into movies
>in the 50s
Rocket Ship Galileo! Good lord. What title was the movie released under?
-doug
|
1110.25 | | UPSAR::WALLACE | Vince Wallace | Tue Oct 11 1994 22:21 | 2 |
| I believe "Destination Moon" was the movie based (very loosely) on
the book "Rocket Ship Galileo".
|
1110.26 | | CUBA::GUENTHER | | Wed Oct 12 1994 15:40 | 6 |
| re: .25
Actually, I think it is based on "The Man Who Sold the Moon". But its
been a long time since I've seen the movie.
/alan
|
1110.27 | | SCAS02::MILLERR | A Tractor on the info farm rd | Thu Oct 13 1994 14:06 | 12 |
| Nope. "Destination Moon" was a script that Heinlein worked up loosely based upon
"Spaceship Galileo". There is a reference book published after his death (I
believe called "Requiem") which contains the fleshed out story based on that
screenplay.
After all the problems he had dealing with the producers and the film studio, he
swore that he would never again make a movie from one of his books.
Looking forward to the Puppet Masters. I'm re-reading it right now to refresh
my memory.
- Russ
|
1110.28 | There was a ST:TNG episode that was sorta similar, too | OKFINE::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Thu Oct 13 1994 15:02 | 4 |
| There was a ST:TOS episode with a plot that was reminiscent of "The
Puppet Masters." I hope this flick is better than that episode.
andrew
|
1110.29 | | CSOA1::LENNIG | Dave (N8JCX), MIG, @CYO | Sun Oct 23 1994 18:33 | 8 |
| Went to see the movie this week-end...
It sorta more or less followed the book (I re-read it before going),
though there were a few bits that they introduced on their own.
I won't spoil things for anyone just yet...
Dave
|
1110.30 | | SEND::PARODI | John H. Parodi DTN 381-1640 | Mon Oct 24 1994 09:34 | 16 |
|
This weekend I picked up the uncut version of "The Puppet Masters."
This has about 100 new pages and the book is _much_ improved as a
result. It makes me hope that there is some extra material from "Beyond
This Horizon" lurking about (I always thought BTH resembled TPM in that
they were both excellent but kind of choppy).
Note that Barnes&Noble did not have it...in fact they had only three
Heinlein titles, which makes me think there might be yet another set of
Heinlein releases on the way, spearheaded by the release of the movie.
I certainly hope that is the case. Heinlein paperbacks have been in
print for as long as I've been prowling bookstores. I think the first
one I bought was a Signet publication and I paid $.50 for it.
JP
|
1110.31 | Rates ** on a ***** scale | RAGS::GINGRAS | | Wed Oct 26 1994 16:55 | 25 |
| If you haven't seen the movie yet, then this will be a spoiler....
SPOILER:
Well, I went to see if last night and I pretty much thought it was
a poor choice of SciFi for Hollywood to spend their money on. The
screen play was reminiscent of 50's/60's type stuff. It's about as
far removed from modern (90's) works as Flash Gordon serials are
from it. The story has been worn out over the years and the holes in
plot and continuity are a little aggrevating to more sophisticated
viewers. There were times when it was more than a little silly.
I thought the action sequences were mildly exciting - perhaps a little
too staged. This is definitely a low-budget, B film. I was one of
four people in the theater for the 7:15 showing on a Tuesday night.
Of course, I had to see it and I'm not sorry I did. I'd recommend it
for home-video viewing, not for box-office prices (I used a CANAD
VIP ticket, but even $4.50 was more than it was worth).
To sum up, save your theater-dollars for Star Gate and Generations.
_Marty
|
1110.32 | | CSOA1::LENNIG | Dave (N8JCX), MIG, @CYO | Thu Oct 27 1994 07:04 | 23 |
| re: .-1
I thought it was a solid "B" movie, say *** out of *****, but that may
have been influenced by the fact that I made a point of re-reading the
book before I went; it was interesting watching how they condensed the
book, plot device substitutions, etc. Overall, I thought it was fairly
faithful to the main plot line in the book, with a few exceptions...
Spoilers:
1) Mary's 'possession' was a significant plot line in the movie, and
didn't really have any correspondance with the book
2) They substituted elevated body temperture as a means of detection
instead of 'Operation Bare-backs' (and it still got an R rating??)
3) The alien 'nest'/HQ; huh??
4) they supposedly managed to kill _all_ the aliens.
The aliens themselves were interesting; they differred from what I
imagined in the book, but after thinking about it the movie aliens
actually seemed to make more sense than the book aliens.
Dave
|