Topic: Hitchhiker's.

Party time up in this bizness.

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

I actually quite like Jim Dale's reading of Harry Potter. I was apprehensive at first, because I was used to Fry, but he's not bad. The only thing that really annoys me is "Harryyyyyyyy", but otherwise, it's not bad.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

I'll say it here just for posterity, if you ever want to check out the Hitchhiker's guide series but don't feel like reading, check out the entire series on audiobook read by Douglas Adams himself, great listen, and as an added bonus he knows how to pronounce everything and listening to the master in action is a beautiful beautiful thing.

ZangrethorDigital.ca

Re: Hitchhiker's.

Naturally, the very best way is to listen to the original 12 radio episodes smile

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

I've listened to about a half our of the episode so far, which mean about 10 minutes of the movie smile I won't actually have a copy until Netflix sends one hopefully Wednesday so I may not finish it today, but I have to say it's interesting to listen to you four talk about the actors when none of you are comparing them to the originals. It's just... well, a foreign concept, as I started with the radio show when it first aired on the local public radio station around 1980 and always heard those voices when reading the books (and the same actors, apart from a new Ford and Trillian, did the TV series). It's like a reviewer of the new Trek movie who has never seen Shatner playing Kirk. I'm getting a kick out of it, but at least one member of the panel should have been familiar with the original (which is Trey's usual role with you kids). Then again, at least all your arguments about the film are different then the ones I would raise!

(and, from the sound of it, Stephen Fry in the audio book is imitating the original Eddie. It wasn't a case where he had to come up with original ways these characters would sound)

Last edited by Invid (2011-04-12 00:20:58)

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

Actually, Humma Kaluva was created by Douglas Adams especially for the movie. So there.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

For a connection between Douglas Adams and Terry Gilliam, there are some as Python as a whole were fans. The original Arthur for example shows up in The Meaning of Life when Death interrupts a dinner party, as well as in Brazil (he delivers the papers to the family when the solders break into the wrong apartment at the beginning).

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

I loved these books as a kid. They've continued to influence my sense of humor about the world to this day, and I carry the memory of them with me everywhere. On my phone, the little device I keep in my pocket from which I can access the largely apocryphal (or at least wildly inaccurate) knowledge of the internet, I have on the front in large friendly letters the words "Don't Panic." The devices that science fiction let us dream of for all those years are real, and people can use them to follow Charlie Sheen from anywhere. That's progress.

I'm fine with there not being a really big successful movie version of this story, because the things that make it so great require thought and intelligence to understand, and any version that would find mainstream success wouldn't ask people to imagine "a liquid that was almost, but not quite, entirely unlike tea."

The fact that this film is largely forgotten means knowing who Zaphod Beeblebrox is still kinda speaks to someone's character, which means writing his name in on the ballot for city council is still funny.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

Re Douglas Adams / Python crossover, Adams wrote a sketch for the last series of Monty Python (the "stabbing nurse" one) and actually starts in another sketch as a surgeon. He also co-wrote pretty extensively with Graham Chapman after Python finished.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

Welcome to the forum, Wiggles.

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

Cheers Teague

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

Good one,

Just commenting on the "Last chance to see" issue:

Douglas Adams & Mark Carwardine did a radio show for BBC in 1989. The year after, they released the excellent and funny book as well.

20 years later, Mark Carwardine and Stephen Fry did a TV series as a follow up and continuation of the project.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

Also welcome Tobias. smile

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

Thumbs up Thumbs down

14

Re: Hitchhiker's.

Invid wrote:

Naturally, the very best way is to listen to the original 12 radio episodes smile

QFT.

Although, strictly pedantically, which is the best kind of pedantically: there were six original radio episodes, then a special episode, then the remaining five episodes, then all the other media-cross-platformery afterwards.

I say this based on two things:

  • my own off-the-air cassette tape recordings of the original series (which don't include the first episode, since I didn't know the show was going to be good enough to tape until I was already listening to the first episode);

  • my erstwhile membership of the original Hitchhiker's fan club, which was so long ago, that I don't remember what the club was called, but I'm pretty sure it involved panicking and harmlessness, or maybe that was just the inaugural convention in Glasgow;

  • and the time I chatted with Douglas Adams while he was waiting to sign a little pile of his books in a little bookshop in Leeds in 1984, and I was literally the only other person in the shop with him, at lunchtime on a sunny day, so famous was he at the time.

How things change, including my estimate of how many things I was intending to list.

Re: Hitchhiker's.

The history of the original radio show is interesting. An original idea for a series in which the Earth is destroyed in each show turned into 6 episodes with a definite ending from which there can be no sequel. Then they had to come up with a way to get the characters together again, minus Trillian, and end it with an open ending leaving room for an expected sequel... and Adams was never asked to do more smile The gymnastics they had to do to try and match the end of the radio show to the start of the 3rd book for the new radio adaptations is rather extensive.

Also interesting is there were changes to the first series when it was released on records. The Restaurant at the End of the Universe episode was changed/expanded somewhat. Not sure which version is now available when you buy the show.

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

The original radio series for those who haven't heard it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZnJFo2hSe7Q

And Teague, unlike the book, this actually has an ending!

Thumbs up Thumbs down

Re: Hitchhiker's.

It's well worth checking out Neil Gaimans "Don't Panic" a biography of Adams and Hitchhikers.

edit: you mentioned several times that Edgar Wright would have been a better choice to direct. He's actually in the film.

Last edited by Faldor (2011-04-15 13:04:25)

Extended Edition - 146 - The Rise Of Skywalker
VFX Reel | Twitter | IMDB | Blog

Re: Hitchhiker's.

PAL edition now available; sorry for the delay folks.