T O P I C R E V I E W |
BaftaBaby |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 18:24:20 In light of recent posts - no names, no packdrill - I'm completely baffled by these half-dozen rejections. I spent precious time on all of them. I don't believe any is boring or irrelevant, they all comply with 4 words, non-generic, accurate, and aren't duplicating anyone else's review.
Your collective experience, expertise, and generous spirit are welcome in the interests of helping me improve. TIA.
1] 12 Angry Men = Fonda sides with patricide. A patricide is someone accused of patricide. The defendent in the film is accused of being a patricide. Jury forman Fonda refuses to condemn him out of hand. It is the pivotal point of the film.
2] Bridget Jones's Diary = Bridget Grants Darcy's wish. Okay, it ain't Shakespeare but it's a wordplay on main character/star names that logically recounts an important, even seminal aspect of the film.
3] Fried Green Tomatoes = Ninny Thread[s]goode stories. Ninny Threadgoode is the narrator of the stories threaded together to enliven the narrative.
4] Nothing To Lose = Steve LOSEs Oedekerk plot. Again, not the greatest wordplay in the Hubble universe, but it's uniquely relevant to the film, written and directed by Oedekerk, who didn't contribute any other film with the word LOSE in its title.
5] The Thing From Another World = 'Matt Dillon' on ice. I don't normally refer to characters in one film using their character roles from another, but I did here because James Arness's performance starring as Marshall Matt Dillon held the US in thrall back in the 1950s. In the film, The Thing is discovered encased in a block of ice by the scientists who later regret reviving him. The pun, of course, refers to the Dillon character being "held over" to the film. Held over, as is "on ice."
6] The Hobbit = Bilbo's ring shapes trilogy. Even Tolkein is on record as saying that it was Bilbo's first journey in the Hobbit which engendered the Lord of the Rings trilogy. There's a small wordplay with ring and shape.
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15 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
ChocolateLady |
Posted - 06/08/2006 : 07:42:33 quote: Originally posted by Se�n 3] Fried Green Tomatoes = Ninny Thread[s]goode stories. This style is becoming more prevalent, but IMO some people are perhaps pushing their luck. Would a newspaper allow you to use this as a headline for an article? You are essentially using the [] to remove the 's' from the word to make it look like someone's name, but if you do that it no longer makes sense. So you then have to put the 's' back in AND add a space AND drop the 'e' in order to make it make sense, and by the time you've done that you are no longer using the name 'Threadgoode'. Specifically, "Ninny threads good stories" is a statement, but the name has disappeared, and "Ninny Threadgoode stories" makes no sense. So you've attempted to go for a happy medium and ended up nowhere, IMO.
I think he's got something here. What if you try "Ninny Thread(s) good(e) stories"? I did something similar with my Count of Monte Cristo review when I broke up the name Chamberlain (as in Richard, who starred in the film) to make the review "D'If's Chamber, lain empty".
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lemmycaution |
Posted - 06/08/2006 : 02:13:47 Yeah, I'd get the Matt Dillon thing, even without Kitty in my lap, but an old fart's knowledge doesn't seem to mean a hill of beans around here. Put '/' around patricide and it is unassailable. |
Earnest Scribbler |
Posted - 06/08/2006 : 01:23:58 The Hobbit one doesn't make any sense since the Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit only cross over one another. They are both set in Middle Earth, have some of the same characters, but are two different stories. So if you look at it seperately, LOTR already has been shaped by a history made up of a lot of different things.
Sorry if I'm reading into it a little too much but thats how I see it. |
Arch Stanton |
Posted - 06/08/2006 : 00:38:02 quote: Originally posted by BaftaBabe
In light of recent posts - no names, no packdrill - I'm completely baffled by these half-dozen rejections. I spent precious time on all of them. I don't believe any is boring or irrelevant, they all comply with 4 words, non-generic, accurate, and aren't duplicating anyone else's review.
Your collective experience, expertise, and generous spirit are welcome in the interests of helping me improve. TIA.
1] 12 Angry Men = Fonda sides with patricide. A patricide is someone accused of patricide. The defendent in the film is accused of being a patricide. Jury forman Fonda refuses to condemn him out of hand. It is the pivotal point of the film.
2] Bridget Jones's Diary = Bridget Grants Darcy's wish. Okay, it ain't Shakespeare but it's a wordplay on main character/star names that logically recounts an important, even seminal aspect of the film.
3] Fried Green Tomatoes = Ninny Thread[s]goode stories. Ninny Threadgoode is the narrator of the stories threaded together to enliven the narrative.
4] Nothing To Lose = Steve LOSEs Oedekerk plot. Again, not the greatest wordplay in the Hubble universe, but it's uniquely relevant to the film, written and directed by Oedekerk, who didn't contribute any other film with the word LOSE in its title.
5] The Thing From Another World = 'Matt Dillon' on ice. I don't normally refer to characters in one film using their character roles from another, but I did here because James Arness's performance starring as Marshall Matt Dillon held the US in thrall back in the 1950s. In the film, The Thing is discovered encased in a block of ice by the scientists who later regret reviving him. The pun, of course, refers to the Dillon character being "held over" to the film. Held over, as is "on ice."
6] The Hobbit = Bilbo's ring shapes trilogy. Even Tolkein is on record as saying that it was Bilbo's first journey in the Hobbit which engendered the Lord of the Rings trilogy. There's a small wordplay with ring and shape.
I'm off to bed Bafta - put the lights out when you come...
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Sean |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 23:52:01 1] 12 Angry Men = Fonda sides with patricide. We all understand this one, but think you're 100% incorrect. If you called the defendant a 'patricide' during or after the trial you'd be sued for libel. He's only a patricide if he actually did it or was found by the court to have done it.
2] Bridget Jones's Diary = Bridget Grants Darcy's wish. Might be OK, but I don't recall what wish it was that was granted.
3] Fried Green Tomatoes = Ninny Thread[s]goode stories. This style is becoming more prevalent, but IMO some people are perhaps pushing their luck. Would a newspaper allow you to use this as a headline for an article? You are essentially using the [] to remove the 's' from the word to make it look like someone's name, but if you do that it no longer makes sense. So you then have to put the 's' back in AND add a space AND drop the 'e' in order to make it make sense, and by the time you've done that you are no longer using the name 'Threadgoode'. Specifically, "Ninny threads good stories" is a statement, but the name has disappeared, and "Ninny Threadgoode stories" makes no sense. So you've attempted to go for a happy medium and ended up nowhere, IMO.
4] Nothing To Lose = Steve LOSEs Oedekerk plot. Don't know anything about this movie.
5] The Thing From Another World = 'Matt Dillon' on ice. Haven't seen the film, but is this one intelligible without your explanation?
6] The Hobbit = Bilbo's ring shapes trilogy. If I saw the review in the bubble, I'd assume you meant LOTR:FOTR which makes it generic I think.
Sorry to be brutal with some of these, but that's what you wanted, I hope? |
BaftaBaby |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 23:26:02 quote: Originally posted by Tori
That's really strange, when I looked it up on IMDB it said "Idgy" was her first name. Maybe one is a nickname.
No, Idgy is the person that Ninny tells the stories about! Great names, though, eh?
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Tori |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 23:11:14 That's really strange, when I looked it up on IMDB it said "Idgy" was her first name. Maybe one is a nickname. |
BaftaBaby |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 23:05:23 quote: Originally posted by thefoxboy
quote: Originally posted by BaftaBabe Funny though how some people are ready to accept certain women characters as slags, cunts and whores when all they've done is have a shag
And a man is a stud.
Yeah, but not a patch on you, Foxy -- specially ridin dat hog!
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BaftaBaby |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 23:02:28 quote: Originally posted by Tori
3- FIRST, THAT ISN'T THE CHARACTER'S NAME
SORRY FOR BEING SHORT BUT I'M USING ONE HAND AND YHE BABY TURNED ON CAPS
Hi Tori ... v. grateful for your input -- especially with a handful of baby!
Sorry, but yes Ninny Threadgoode IS the character played by Jessica Tandy who tells Evelyn the stories. Ref: http://www.imdb.com/Find?select=Characters&for=Ninny%20Threadgoode
And, sorry 2, I just don't buy that The Hobbit has nothing to do with setting the groundwork for the trilogy ... it introduces the ring and its incumbent dangers as well as characters who take the story forward in the trilogy. It's a sort of prequel.
In BJ's Diary - yes, Bridget gets diverted by Grant, but Darcy does fancy her and they do get together so I believe the review works in its own small way.
Oh well ... still good to get some feedback
And, glad to see you're introducing the baby to FWFR in those formative years
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thefoxboy |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 22:54:46 quote: Originally posted by BaftaBabe Funny though how some people are ready to accept certain women characters as slags, cunts and whores when all they've done is have a shag
And a man is a stud. |
Markandlain |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 22:50:34 Before you retire #1, chucking a set of quotation marks around patricide may assist (slightly). Just a thought. |
BaftaBaby |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 22:47:13 quote: from Chocolate Lady Now, this one I love. But perhaps you can adjust it a bit to be more acceptable with a space after the [s]? Just a thought. I'd vote for it either way. Did you explain this to the MERPs?
Thanks CL. Yes, I did explain. If I put the space I think the M's would shoot it down 'cause goode ain't a word on its own.
But re: 12 Angry Men ... I'll retire it gracefully since no one else seems to get what I mean. Funny though how some people are ready to accept certain women characters as slags, cunts and whores when all they've done is have a shag
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Whippersnapper. |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 22:36:55 Just to be irritatingly picky, Fonda is not the foreman of the jury.
Told you it was irritating, didn't I?
As to whether or not the kid was a patricide we'll never know. It's not correct though to say he was not a patricide because he was not found guilty. He either was or wasn't depending on whether he did or didn't.
Maybe if you put patricide in inverted commas it might be accepted?
Give it a bash, Baff!
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randall |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 22:33:29 BB, IMHO, #1 doesn't work at all. Fonda spends the entire picture trying to cast a reasonable doubt about the patricide. He doesn't "side" with it at all. If it were up to me, declined. |
Tori |
Posted - 06/07/2006 : 22:19:14 THE HOBBIT ONE- EVEN THOUGH THEY'RE BASED ON THE SAME SET OF STORIES, THE TWO FILMS (TRILOGY ANFD HOBBIT) don't have anything to do with each other |
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