T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
105.1 | | DECWET::SHUSTER | Egad! An Adage! | Mon Mar 29 1993 19:15 | 2 |
| No apostrophe. ;^)
|
105.2 | loved it | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | I want Spring *now*! | Tue Mar 30 1993 10:25 | 8 |
| Well, I did think this was a great movie. I've seen it three times so
far, and plan to see it again. It's one of my all time favorites. I'm
thrilled that Emma Thompson got the oscar for Best Actress since her
Margaret is one of my all time favorite female characters, from a
movie.
Lorna
|
105.3 | | 5235::J_TOMAO | | Mon Jun 21 1993 09:25 | 20 |
| Finally got to see this, on video though.
Excelelnt movie, though I though the editing was a little....abrupt at
times. I say this only because I don't usually notice the editing and
in this movie there were several scenes that were just cut to black and
the scene changed....like the seen after Anthony Hopkin's daughter's
wedding when Margret and Mr. Wilcox were discussing what happened -
Margret obviously though the conversation was over yet the scene came
back 3 times.....well those who have seen it will know what I mean.
I thought the character of Helen was 'over done' at times and I
sometimes found her annoying but the costumes and scenery and attention
to detail were fabulous and I just loved all the beautiful shots of the
hospital and the city streets and even the interiors of the homes
looked wonderful!
I'm glad I rented it
Joyce
|
105.4 | | 29124::MCABEE | and his pet rattlesnake, Lefty | Fri Jun 25 1993 12:29 | 7 |
| I had the same feelings about the editing. It had a rough, documentary feel
to it in a couple of places. Really strange for this genre. The other 98%
was consistently normal editing.
All in all, I liked it.
Bob
|
105.5 | On editing | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Mon Jun 28 1993 17:11 | 15 |
| Re the editing,
I haven't seen Howards End yet, but it sounds like the same type of
editing Merchant and Ivory chose for A Room with a View. It's been
years since I read HE, but I recently re-read RWAV, and the editing
follows EM Forster's writing in that book. The book is a series of
vignettes that follow the characters, rather than a smooth story.
The vignettes tend to end abruptly and the story picks up at another
place and time.
Perhaps the book in Howards End was written the same way, since it
was also by EM Forster.
Marilyn
|
105.6 | | 29124::MCABEE | and his pet rattlesnake, Lefty | Tue Jun 29 1993 20:32 | 16 |
| > I haven't seen Howards End yet, but it sounds like the same type of
> editing Merchant and Ivory chose for A Room with a View. It's been
> years since I read HE, but I recently re-read RWAV, and the editing
> follows EM Forster's writing in that book. The book is a series of
> vignettes that follow the characters, rather than a smooth story.
> The vignettes tend to end abruptly and the story picks up at another
> place and time.
In HE it is something different. It's not a cut from one scene or vignette
to another, but a cut from one part of a conversation to a later point in
the same conversation with a one-second blackout in between. It looks like
the editor wanted to trim the scene and couldn't do it any other way.
Bob
|
105.7 | | 5235::J_TOMAO | | Wed Jun 30 1993 10:18 | 5 |
| Thanks Bob - thats just how I would have liked to describe it....it
felt uncomfortable and thats just how I felt - like the director/editor
or someone just randomly cut out several minutes of dialouge
Joyce
|
105.8 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Thu Apr 28 1994 11:05 | 26 |
| I enjoyed the movie, but was rather surprised by it; all the
commentary and clips I'd seen previously had suggested that it was a
beautiful costume piece, whereas I found it a rather lacerating study
of interpersonal and inter-class relationships (with some beautiful
scenery thrown in to make the rest seem even nastier by contrast!).
Lots of fine performances, though I thought the younger sister was a
bit too mercurial, and I did have a little trouble believing Emma
Thompson as quite so meek (though she did have her moments). James
Wilby as the tick of a son was delightfully nasty. And the guy who
played Leonard Bast showed the edginess and defensiveness of someone
who feels himself beyond the pale very well indeed; when the sisters
kept trying to put him at ease, his longing and mistrust were palpable.
<spoiler>:
I found it - of note, I suppose - that at the end, the lower-class
Basts were simply forgotten... Not a hint as to whether either of the
sisters had even thought about the widow. [Today, of course, she'd have
brought a major lawsuit against the family, been on all the talk shows,
and maybe gotten a TV movie deal out of it, but back then one could
safely ignore "such people". At least, that's the feeling I was left
with...]
-b
|
105.9 | Putting on his pedant hat... | KOLFAX::WIEGLEB | Budding Luddite | Fri Apr 29 1994 14:59 | 5 |
| Could the moderator please remove the apostrophe from the title?
Thanks,
- Dave
|
105.10 | Dazed and Confused | HOTLNE::SHIELDS | | Fri Dec 06 1996 05:23 | 13
|