Awwwwwwwwwww. Totally old-school.
Buffista Movies 6: lies and videotape
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we've been watching Young Indiana Jones Chronicles and I am getting so excited! When the trailer plays at work people clap for the theme tune.
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus has started shooting again.
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus has started shooting again.
Excellent. Also nice to see that Tom Waits is in the cast. I can't remember if I've seen him in anything since Mystery Men.
Okay, so I just got around to seeing Atonement tonight.
I'm still mulling it over, but I have one question: when Robbie and the other 2 soldiers are making their way back, and Robbie sees all the dead girls laid out in the meadow, was that a hallucination on his part? Or were there really lots and lots of dead girls in school uniforms laid out in a meadow?
According to the NYorker review, that is a scene in the book, but with one dead girl, so I'd assume it was not supposed to be a hallucination.
Well, at that point, we're in FictionLand anyway, so I think it's not so much a hallucination as a...I don't know. A literary device?
It's one of those moments that I think illustrates exactly why this movie was a valiant effort at adaptation, but fails on some very fundamental level to make the transition from page to screen. I can't remember the last time I spend so much of a movie thinking, "Wow, I bet that worked really well in the book," and so little thinking "Wow, this is working really well in this movie."
I ... couldn't finish the book. And man, I tried. It's a fabulous story, and I usually like McEwan, but it was so incredibly (read: boringly, self-indulgently) dense and slooooow. I only got about a third of the way through.
Well, at that point, we're in FictionLand anyway, so I think it's not so much a hallucination as a...I don't know. A literary device?
Oh, yeah. I didn't think about that.
So, anything within the movie that is NOT from Briony's direct POV is probably fiction-within-the-movie?
That makes my head hurt.
anything within the movie that is NOT from Briony's direct POV is probably fiction-within-the-movie?
Everything that happens after Robbie goes to jail is Briony's fictionalized account, IIRC. There are "real" facts sprinkled in, but the story is entirely told from her novel.