Young Frankenstein the 1970s Charley and the chocolate factory?
Now I remember. Lol sorry
Young Frankenstein the 1970s Charley and the chocolate factory?
Grandmaster
Mythic Scribe
IstariThe mutual relationship between human and canine goes back thousands and thousands of years and is one of the most natural, purest bonds humans can have. We have physically evolved along one another, side by side, for millenniums. The common theory is that ancient tribal humans took wolves and bred them for hunting. They helped us find food, and in return we gave them safety and a share of the meat.
My family is not a hunter-gatherer tribe, I was not a hunter, and he was not a wolf, but the bond he shared with our family was just as strong. He was an escape artist when he young, and a little bit of grouch when he got older. He wasn’t the cutest thing to ever exist and he wasn’t a fancy purebred. He was a scruffy little mutt. And he was our dog. And we were his humans.
I was just five years old and begging my parents to get me a dog for Christmas, even though we already had several pets, when he showed up at our grandparent’s door just before the holiday. He’d been with us for fifteen years since then, and during that time he’d seen other dogs come and go, been through three houses, and may or may not have impregnated neighbor dogs on a few occasion, He’d had a lot of lollipops to eat and squeaky toys to attack. He bit me a couple times. I believe, for a dog, that his years were good. And the mere fact that his years were good made them good for us. There was love and compassion between him and the family, and that is what any dog or human could ask for.
RIP Scrappy. He will be missed.
The mutual relationship between human and canine goes back thousands and thousands of years and is one of the most natural, purest bonds humans can have. We have physically evolved along one another, side by side, for millenniums. The common theory is that ancient tribal humans took wolves and bred them for hunting. They helped us find food, and in return we gave them safety and a share of the meat.
My family is not a hunter-gatherer tribe, I was not a hunter, and he was not a wolf, but the bond he shared with our family was just as strong. He was an escape artist when he young, and a little bit of grouch when he got older. He wasn’t the cutest thing to ever exist and he wasn’t a fancy purebred. He was a scruffy little mutt. And he was our dog. And we were his humans.
I was just five years old and begging my parents to get me a dog for Christmas, even though we already had several pets, when he showed up at our grandparent’s door just before the holiday. He’d been with us for fifteen years since then, and during that time he’d seen other dogs come and go, been through three houses, and may or may not have impregnated neighbor dogs on a few occasion, He’d had a lot of lollipops to eat and squeaky toys to attack. He bit me a couple times. I believe, for a dog, that his years were good. And the mere fact that his years were good made them good for us. There was love and compassion between him and the family, and that is what any dog or human could ask for.
RIP Scrappy. He will be missed.
IstariWell I don't suggest typing into google worst fantasy books. You come away thinking "is mine good enough? Please don't let me be on a list!" But anyway, I think those thoughts cloud all of us while writing, deep down. Normally they don't pester me though, but after reading why all those books are failures, I guess there was a prison riot and all the thoughts escaped and were able to run amok.
MystagogueYeah...I read lots of bad reviews for popular books. They're fun to read, but they also make me terrified deep down of committing the same crimes that the readers reviled in those books.
Yep. I do not want to publish a master piece, in my eyes, then become a punching bag for critics.
Today marks 100 years since the U.S. Marines were established. To those on MS who have served in the Marines, thank you for your service!
Charley and the chocolate factory?
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, 1971.
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was the godawful remake with Johnny Depp.
I don't think I saw the one with Johnny Depp.
Dark LordI pretty much hate remakes or adaptations that ignore the central nature of the source material. The Depp version of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory was a case in point. Also, the Ender's Game movie—despite having probably the ideal lead actor (and he did great; the script is what sucked), the movie failed so hard for me.
Dark LordAh, yes. Ender's Game. So much potential for a good movie but not even Han Solo himself could save it.
One of the worst adaptations from book to film is The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. They claim that Adams signed off on it but he died before it was finished.
The director and screenwriters had no respect for him.
I've read many positive comments about the Hitchhiker's movie. I thought I was the only one disappointed by it.
[Edit: Incidentally, I was referring to Asa Butterfield. Harrison Ford also was great for his role, but....man I could go on an on about how the script and directing ruined the movie.]
IstariMy mind has started toying around with my WIP again and I suddenly have enough questions discussion would alleviate to start 4 or 5 threads...but I don't think it's a good idea to post them all at once...