Results 1 to 15 of 23
Thread: I'm one cool hoopy frood,
-
1st May 2005, 11:06 AM #1
I'm one cool hoopy frood,
Morning all,
Went to see Hitchikers guide last night. had to say it was panned by the press for being americanised and smaltzy. However as a long time fan of HHGTTG I loved it.
Alan Rickman as Marvin the paranod aindroid was excellent.
The only thing they really played up on that wasnt in the script was the interface between trillian and arthur... they zipped up the romance-o-meter between them... but it didnt affect the movie one bit.
Zaphod was awesome and they played up on his stupidity.... Im glad they did something about his extra head.
Arthur has grown a few pubes and has more balls about him... not in a soccer hooligan type of way but rather in a "volunteer for queen and country" type of way - he even faced up to zaphod rather than be a pushover...
They could have worked Slartibartfast (I love that name - I'm gunna name my next pet Slartibartfast) up a bit more.... he was more of a un understated david niven character...
Ford is a black man - he, I feel stole the show. the bit where he and zaphod drink pan galactic gargleblasters is a hoot.
Even the Vogons are cool.
Douglas Adams and the original Marvin make camio appearances..
the voice of the guide is the same as it was in the tv series too so had nice continuity there too... although they could have zapped up the graphics a bit better - the tc series graphics were better than this version of the movie.
there is room for a swag of sequels- they didnt get to the restaurant at the end of the Universe, although they did mention it at the end where ford says "I know a great place to eat"
YOu'll love it - go see it. if you've never read the books - get 'em they are some of the few books I've actually p!ssed myself laughing in mid read- most embarrassing in the train oh great sandwich maker...
Signed,
Your humble servant
Prostetnic Vogon JeltzZed
-
1st May 2005, 11:52 AM #2
Interesting.
Seems like the movie provokes mixed emotions.
Margaret and David loved it, yet Paul Byrnes in the Herald yesterday panned it.
I guess it's one of those ones you have to make your own mind up about.
Glad you enjoyed it though Zed.
-
1st May 2005, 01:55 PM #3
I hate cinema's, uncomfortable and cramped, I'll wait for the DVD and watch it at home.
Can relate to the book incident, happened to me years ago when I was reading Milligans 4 book trilogy, bloody embarrassing.Stupidity kills. Absolute stupidity kills absolutely.
-
2nd May 2005, 10:09 AM #4
Zed,
I heard Stephen Fry is the voice of book in the movie. Maybe he just sounds the same to you because he's a pom
Looking forward to seeing it myself. I'm a bit of a fan of Martin Freeman from The Office. The movie has to be better than the TV version, which even Adams admitted was utter crap."I don't practice what I preach because I'm not the kind of person I'm preaching to."
-
2nd May 2005, 05:47 PM #5
-
2nd May 2005, 11:24 PM #6
This really has me confused. I'd like to believe nice things about this movie, but it was recommended by ZED :eek: :eek: :eek:
Dammit. It must be good.
Anyone want to volunteer to go see it with me? :eek:
Cheers
Richard
-
2nd May 2005, 11:28 PM #7
Let's do a hijack.
Where did you first read Hitch hiker's guide to the Galaxy?
I read mine in a the car park of my sister's block of flats in Queenbeyan years ago. She'd given it to me for a birthday present and I'd driven up from Squidley. I read it in the car park, in my MG, while waiting for her to come home from wherever she was (with the ratbag who became and still is my brother in law). First time I've ever read a book in a car park and wished the person I was waiting for would be late enough for me to finish the book - she was
Cheers
Richard
-
2nd May 2005, 11:42 PM #8
I listened to the record first. Just loved it. Went out and bought the books the next day. 1982 from memory. The 80's were a little fuzzy.
Photo Gallery
-
2nd May 2005, 11:58 PM #9
Listened to it on radio (and recorded it, still got the hand drawn covers I made) 2JJJ in '78 or '79.
Mick"If you need a machine today and don't buy it,
tomorrow you will have paid for it and not have it."
- Henry Ford 1938
-
3rd May 2005, 08:01 AM #10
I honestly cannot remember where or when I read any of the series but I do recall the BBC series, I particulary liked the narration, the galactic police suicide courtesy of Marvin and the glasses that prevented anyone seeing anything that was likely to create fear.
Looking forward to another DVD for my collection.
Such a superb series there was not even a single reference to catsStupidity kills. Absolute stupidity kills absolutely.
-
3rd May 2005, 08:55 AM #11
I read it while in Year 12 at High School. It supplanted Monty Python as the source of the most quotable quotes for the rest of the year.
"I don't practice what I preach because I'm not the kind of person I'm preaching to."
-
3rd May 2005, 09:01 AM #12
I first read it I dont know when way back in the eary eightys in my misspent youth, and periodically read it again and again. the day I got vol 1,2,3 in one volume was a happy day for me. I read it whislt on jury duty during breaks and it saved me from madness (AGAIN!).
My only critisizm is that douglas died too young and the end of the HHGTTG ended a tad poorly in book 5 (in the cafe in new york ??)... why didnt zaphod get a reprise ????
I particularly liked the matresses of squashonellius (?) delta that floolooped and fallollopped in thier marshy boggy way.
I have to go now... I have a pain in the diodes down my left hand side...Zed
-
3rd May 2005, 09:08 AM #13Originally Posted by ZedStupidity kills. Absolute stupidity kills absolutely.
-
3rd May 2005, 10:12 AM #14Originally Posted by journeyman Mick
The radio serial was vastly superior to the TV show too.
-
3rd May 2005, 10:32 AM #15Shewhoputsupwithawoodie
- Join Date
- Apr 2005
- Location
- Perth
- Posts
- 45
Much to my dads horror I watched the TV series. Which he soon started watching with me. Never missed a episode. Cant wait to see the movie.
Bookmarks