T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
307.1 | Advertising | 7299::PETERS | Be nice or be dog food | Tue Aug 24 1993 13:34 | 5 |
| It is advertising pure and simple. Some themes or some fraises don't
go over well in the UK as in the US. The Turkey and Jokes files are
full of every day fraises that weren't translated and received bad
receptions in the UK.
Jeff Peters
|
307.2 | Enquiering Minds Want To Know! | DECWET::HAYNES | | Tue Aug 24 1993 13:57 | 7 |
| I'm sure there are a few movie goers over here who would be interested
in the trivial value of knowing more of these "name changes" if someone
who is in the know would care to let us in on some of these tidbits...
maybe start a topic on this? Please?
MBH
|
307.3 | My favourite... | 42712::SMITHA | Il y a une sange, dans l'arbre | Wed Aug 25 1993 11:29 | 14 |
| ...but unfortunately I can't remember the title it was distributed with in the
UK.
A Gene Hackman film, about a wire-tapper and what he inadvertently hears while
tapping a phone line.
UK readers will understand why it couldn't go out with it's US title...
..."The Bugger"
T.
|
307.4 | certainly do !! | 42371::DAVISM | | Wed Aug 25 1993 12:00 | 3 |
| re 307.3
coolness !!!!!!
|
307.5 | | 3270::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Wed Aug 25 1993 12:08 | 12 |
| RE: .3 by 42712::SMITHA
>A Gene Hackman film, about a wire-tapper and what he inadvertently hears while
>tapping a phone line.
>UK readers will understand why it couldn't go out with it's US title...
> ..."The Bugger"
Very funny, ha ha. Sorry, but the title of this film, as released in
the U.S. was "The Conversation".
|
307.6 | References by request... | 42443::BUXTONR | | Wed Aug 25 1993 19:14 | 39 |
| I am fortunate enough to have two reference books:
Halliwells Film Guide 6th Edition -1987 which lists mainly english
language films with notes etc. -and- Halliwells Filmgoers companion
7th Edition - 1980 which explores Movie actors, some films and several
themes; amongst which is a section on Name Changes followed by lists of
British to American and American to British...Sadly the Bugger does not
appear but Halliwell writes...."The celebrated stand of the Hays Office
to the effect that the word 'behind' is permissable unless immediately
followed by a noun, does not alas appear to have affected any British
titles. (Under this ruling, a certain well-known poem would have to
begin: 'If winter comes, can spring be far in back of?')"
His lists cover about ten pages of title changes and his text the same
which is far too much to enter here.
My favourites are: Public Enemy's Wife (Am) -to- G-Man's Wife (Br)
Tomorrow We Live (Br) -to- At Dawn We Die (Am): Tom Brown's
Schooldays (Br) -to- Adventures At Rugby (Am): A Town Like Alice (Br)
-to- The Rape Of Malaya (Am): And Then There Were None (Am) -to- Ten
Little Niggers (Br).
Of this last title change Halliwell writes,..."At least on one occasion
the British were less sensitive than their American cousins. Agatha
Christie's murder puzzle Ten Little Niggers was filmed by Rene Clair in
1945 - in America, where the title could not be used. The nursery rhyme
was rewritten, and the picture became Ten Little Indians. This brought
more protests from minority groups, so it was released as And Then
There Were None. But Britons staunchly saw it under its original title,
despite the fact that the china figures were plainly Indians and only
Indians were mentioned in the dialogue. The sixties remake settled
firmly on Indians allround, which made it less puzzling."
And finally...Fanny By Gaslight = Man Of Evil
Hallelujah I'm A Bum = Hallelujah I'm A Tramp
Bucko....
|
307.7 | :^} | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Wed Aug 25 1993 19:33 | 15 |
|
Re -1
:^) on your last 2 entries, unfortunately the humor will be lost to
many on the Gaslight one on this side of the pond. I have an English
husband so it got a chuckle out of me.
This is the same reaction my husband got a couple of years ago when he
asked someone in Liverpool where he could buy a fanny bag, forgetting
the BIG change in meaning!
Marilyn
|
307.8 | Well excuse me... | 42712::SMITHA | Il y a une sange, dans l'arbre | Fri Aug 27 1993 09:44 | 10 |
| re. 5
> Very funny, ha ha.
Touchy, touchy. My apologies for getting it wrong. This entry was
based on a comment by Barry Norman when reviewing the film in the UK.
Sadly I was unable to verify it by checking out the US run. I'll know
better in future than to trust everything I see, hear, and read.
T.
|
307.9 | what will they call it in the UK? | SMAUG::LEHMKUHL | H, V ii 216 | Tue Aug 31 1993 16:20 | 6 |
| Here's one I can't imagine on the marquees in
Leicester Square:
"Free Willy"
Pity that "Boy on a Dolphin" has already been used.
|
307.10 | Whale, not Dolphin | 29067::J_RABKE | | Wed Sep 01 1993 12:16 | 3 |
| > Pity that "Boy on a Dolphin" has already been used.
Willy is a whale........except, maybe in the UK :-)
|
307.11 | | SMAUG::LEHMKUHL | H, V ii 216 | Thu Sep 02 1993 14:54 | 1 |
| Oops. You're right.
|
307.12 | Not too fast! | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Tue Sep 07 1993 17:23 | 13 |
|
RE the last 2,
Actually, I was watching a documentary the other night, and it seems
from what they said, that killer whales are the largest *dolphins*.
So SMAUG::LEMKUHL was right, albeit accidentally.
( I make no claims to knowing the above data to be absolutely correct.
I'm merely quoting information from the Discovery Channel)
Marilyn
|
307.13 | | 12035::MDNITE::RIVERS | | Wed Sep 08 1993 16:52 | 15 |
| I suppose the Law of Trivia demands me to inform those who care that there
is a dolphin that is a fish, too. As I understand it, quite the game
fish. It looks nothing like our mammalian friends.
(Also, the Law of "I thought..." demands me to inform those who care
that I thought the classification of whales included dolphins--the
mammal--rather than the classification of dolphins including whales.
As in, dolphins are a type of toothed whale, and one of the smaller
sort, while say, a fin whale is a rather large baleen whale. But
Jacques Cousteau, I ain't.)
We now return you to your regularly scheduled....
kim
|
307.14 | | 29067::T_HAYMON | | Mon Sep 20 1993 13:00 | 5 |
| I was in New Orleans when they filmed Undercover Blues and at that time
the name of the movie was Cloak and Diaper. I'm glad they changed the
name.
Tim
|
307.15 | "That's not a movie, that's a special offer" | SMAUG::LEHMKUHL | H, V ii 216 | Mon Feb 07 1994 15:27 | 33 |
| Amazingly enough, "Free Willy" did NOT get a name change
for its opening in the UK this week. I noticed posters
for the film in the distributors' windows on Wardour
Street (Soho) and was surprised. I expect the local
working girls and boys found the advert a hoot.
Then in 30 January's London _Times_ Jonathan Margolis
discussed at length the reaction to the film's trailer.
Some of the high points of his column are reproduced
below:
"At my local Odeon, back in November, there was about
a nanosecond of silence -- of the shocked, embarrassed
variety. Then it started, first a slight snigger, then
complete uproar, making it impossible to hear any more
of the trailer. I recall seeing amid the tumult, that
"Free Willy" was to be a U certificate [translation -
G/PG]...
"I couldn't concentrate on the film that followed for
imagining the glorious disaster that must surely be
unfolding at the British film distributors. I could
almost hear the voices screaming down telephones from
Los Angeles: "Willy means *what* in Britain? You
allowed this to be released? You're fired, do ya hear
me, FIRED!"...
..."But within days, I discovered that I was not alone
in finding the trailer very funny indeed. _The Face_
magazine reported on the ribaldry it was causing, and
one newspaper wrote of a camp voice at one West End
[London] cinemal calling out out, after the big deep
voice says, "Free Willy", [see note title]."
|
307.16 | You should be able to guess this one. | 52925::WHITE | They're the wrong salopetes Gromit ! | Fri Mar 04 1994 07:53 | 3 |
| What's Mr Jackson's favourite film ?
Free Willy !
|
307.17 | I guessed something else! | 29067::A_FROST | Roadkill on the Information Highway | Fri Mar 04 1994 19:32 | 5 |
| re .16
I thought the answer was going to be:
Close Encounters of the Third Grade!
|