Howdy
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wrote on 2 Sept 2022, 23:46 last edited by
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wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 03:25 last edited by
So, everyone loves to rag on The 13th Warrior, with Antonio Banderas.
It was based on Crichton's Eaters of the Dead.
...Which is a fictionalized embellishment of the real journal of Ahmad ibn Fadlan.
Which I happen to own a copy of, because I'm a nerd like that.
You know the scene in the beginning of the movie, when the young page stands on the boat before coming ashore? Fadlan asks his guide what the hell. They describe it in a mystical way, that the boy is practicing manners by letting himself be seen, so those ashore can be certain he's no apparition or shadow.
That's more or less from the original journal. Fadlan found it a strange custom.
Here's what I find funny: you deliver something that requires a signature, or go to a buddy's house. You knock on the door. You hear someone coming down the stairs to get to the front door. What do you do if you aren't an asshole? Step back from the door. Give some space so they can see who's at the door. Let yourself be seen.
We've been doing it for at least 1500 years.
(Other fun notes: the "sanitary bowl" scene is accurate: straight from the journal. But why most people ever read the thing in the first place is the viking burial scene, which, fine details aside, is exactly what you see in the movie, too. The woman's lines came from the journal, verbatim.)
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wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 08:45 last edited by
One of my favorite books by Crichton. I like the movie, too, even though critics have not been kind to it.
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One of my favorite books by Crichton. I like the movie, too, even though critics have not been kind to it.
Link to videowrote on 3 Sept 2022, 18:29 last edited byOne of my favorite books by Crichton. I like the movie, too, even though critics have not been kind to it.
Link to videoIt's not even remotely as bad as its reputation suggests. It's also strangely accurate in places.
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wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 18:54 last edited by
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wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 19:02 last edited by
And you can compare it to Hans Zimmer's work in King Arthur:
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wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 19:04 last edited by
Zimmer again, with The Last Samurai:
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wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 19:09 last edited by
Now, John Williams, from the first Harry Potter:
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wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 19:13 last edited by
Lastly, James Howard, from Fantastic Beasts:
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wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 19:13 last edited by
Now, which one said "Hello", best?
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wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 20:18 last edited by
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wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 22:23 last edited by
I think movie scores are the classical music of today. Goldsmith and Williams are pretty good.
Who knows? In 200 years, maybe the symphony opens with Bach and then twinkles into the music from the first Potter movie...
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I think movie scores are the classical music of today. Goldsmith and Williams are pretty good.
Who knows? In 200 years, maybe the symphony opens with Bach and then twinkles into the music from the first Potter movie...
wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 22:46 last edited byI think movie scores are the classical music of today. Goldsmith and Williams are pretty good.
Who knows? In 200 years, maybe the symphony opens with Bach and then twinkles into the music from the first Potter movie...
I'd agree. And yes, those two are extremely talented.
I just hope music survives the current dry spell.
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I think movie scores are the classical music of today. Goldsmith and Williams are pretty good.
Who knows? In 200 years, maybe the symphony opens with Bach and then twinkles into the music from the first Potter movie...
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wrote on 3 Sept 2022, 23:51 last edited by
So what does all this have to do with saying hello, howdy, ahoy or what’s happening?
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wrote on 4 Sept 2022, 00:24 last edited by
We morphed.
From individual greetings to signature theatrical greetings.
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wrote on 4 Sept 2022, 00:49 last edited by
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wrote on 4 Sept 2022, 00:55 last edited by