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[personal profile] the_benj
Happy Birthday, [livejournal.com profile] malinari86!




I've had the car window replaced. They were really very good: I got out of there in an hour and it was only $155, which is about $200 less than last time this happened.

I got called in to work unexpectedly, yesterday. That was good.

Did a little more present shopping. I still have a little more to do, but not much.

Today, I've done very little of the things I'd intended.
I have finished reading Paycheck and started reading the Man who japed, though.
And ate cashews.
And done stuff online.
So it hasn't been a complete loss.

Tomorrow:
Work, then James' ([livejournal.com profile] sim_james) Ghostwalk campaign in the evening.

Date: 2005-12-16 12:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deonon.livejournal.com
I find the whole industry of converting Philip K. Dick short-stories and novels to film quite interesting. There has been a few commercial and critical successes (Total Recall as commercial, Blade Runner as critical, Minority Report straddling the gap (imo)). There are also a few bombs we don't really hear about, as well ("Screamers" and "Imposter").

Still, the modus operandi seems to be: take one or more elements from the short story, some of the names, then throw the rest away.

I guess a film is like a short-story: one good idea is all you need to hang both of them on.

Date: 2005-12-16 12:45 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thebenj.livejournal.com
Of the big three you mention above, I've only read the original of one, Do androids dream of electric sheep?. Given the critical and artistic acclaim which Blade runner has garnered, I was surprised at just how staggeringly different the two are. The exploration of themes is vastly disparate.

Yes, definitely interesting how his work gets converted.

Date: 2005-12-16 12:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deonon.livejournal.com
Yes, that's the thing that interested me most about Blade Runner/Do Androids... They are the closest in plot, but as you say, the themes are so different between the book and the film.

I'm looking forward to "A Scanner Darkly" which is one of the Dick films due out in 2006. From the trailer and reviews it seems similar plotwise, but it will be interesting to see whether it carries the underlying message of the novel.

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