The words philnic quotes are part of the never filmed screen finale Ray Bradbury wrote for MGM. It is included as "King Of Kings A Screen Finale" in Bradbury's A Chapbook for Burnt-Out Priests, Rabbis and Ministers.
30 December 2014, 07:43 AM
philnic
Thanks, Linnl - I don't have that chapbook, and had forgotten that there is some KING OF KINGS material in there.
As I understand it, Ray was contracted to write narration only, but took it upon himself to also write some new scenes. His whole script of narration, scene directions and dialogue runs to about 12 pages. The film's producers weren't at all interested in re-shooting, so just took some of Ray's narration.
Originally posted by philnic: As I understand it, Ray was contracted to write narration only, but took it upon himself to also write some new scenes. His whole script of narration, scene directions and dialogue runs to about 12 pages. The film's producers weren't at all interested in re-shooting, so just took some of Ray's narration.
Would certainly like to see this presented in future volumes of THE NEW RAY BRADBURY REVIEW. I recall at one point there was to be a volume with the theme of Ray Bradbury and Religion.
By the way A Chapbook for Burnt-Out Priests, Rabbis and Ministers lacked a contents page, so here are its contents:
Page 7 Preface
Page 11 They Have Not Seen The Stars poem
Page 15 Shaw! from "GBS Mark V"
Page 17 We Are The Reliquaries Of Lost Time poem
Page 21 Of What Is Past, Or Passing, Or To Come poem
Page 23 The First Book Of Dichotomy, The Second Book Of Symbiosis poem
Page 29 If Only We Had Taller Been poem
Page 33 Leviathan '99 Act one, Scene III excerpt ~ Leviathan '99
Page 35 Come Whisper Me A Promise poem
Page 39 Thoughts On Visiting The Main Rocket Assembly Building At Cape Canaveral For The First Time poem
Page 45 Old Ahab's Friend, And Friend To Noah, Speaks His Piece poem
Page 53 They Have Cut Off The Heads In The Paintings poem
Page 55 From Death, The Brightest Seed poem
Page 57 Of What Is Past, Or Passing Or to Come II poem
Page 59 Troy poem
Page 63 That Woman On The Lawn poem
Page 67 The Supper After The Last Supper poem
Page 71 If Man Is Dead, Then God Is Slain poem
Page 77 Eccentrics Must Truly Have Loved God, They Made So Many Of Him poem
Page 79 Gerard Manley Hopkins poem
Page 81 Has Anyone Ever Seen Anyone Reading In The Christian Science Reading Rooms poem
Page 85 What I Do Is Me--For That I Came For Gerard Manley Hopkins poem
Page 89 I Carry Always the Invisible poem
Page 91 Because Of All Those Maggot Bites poem
Page 95 Chritsus Apollo A Cantata Celebrating the Eighth Day Of Creation And The Promise Of The Ninth
Page 111 King Of Kings A Screen Finale
Page 119 Goodbye Means God Be With You short story
Page 127 Joy Is The Grace We Say To God poem
Page 129 God Blows The Whistle poem
Page 133 Go Not With Ruins In Your Mind poem
Page 137 God Is A Child; Put Toys In The Tomb poem
Page 141 God Is A Chimney Sweep poem
Page 145 We Are The Carpenters Of An Invisible Cathedral poem
Page 147 Part One: The Reasons Why We Should Go Into Space essay
Page 157 Part Two: Blueprints For Light-And-Sound At Canaveral; How To Do It essay
Page 163 Which Shall It Be? Holiday Greetings 1998 From Maggie And Ray Bradbury poem
Page 165 I Live By The Invisible Holiday Greetings 1999 From Maggie And Ray Bradbury poem
Page169 G. B. S. : Refurbishing The Tin Woodman; Science Fiction With A Heart, A Brain, And The Nerve! essay
John King Tarpinian You know what you are, Mr. Bradbury? ... You are a poet! -- Aldous Huxley
03 February 2015, 03:10 PM
dandelion
For some reason I really like this silly sad Super Bowl shark!
08 February 2015, 09:36 PM
dandelion
In the 1944 film National Velvet, based on the 1935 book by Enid Bagnold, a story appears about a horse named Moifaa swimming from a shipwreck and being rescued from an island. This story IS in the original book, pages 205-206 of the Dover Children's Classics paperback edition and pages 173-175 of the 1985 hardcover Golden Anniversary Edition from William Morrow and Co. Donald hysterically insists the horse died on the island when in fact he was rescued and survived to win the Grand National.
(According to this http://www.grand-national.net/moifaa.htm, Moifaa was a real horse which won the Grand National in 1904, but it was not he but another horse in the same race which was one of two horses to survive a 1901 shipwreck, not near Ireland as the book says but off the Cape of Good Hope, closer to the site of the wreck in The Black Stallion. The movie National Velvet does not give a location for the wreck.)
So possibly both Enid Bagnold and Walter Farley were inspired in their books by the same true horse shipwreck survival story, but...isn't it just a BIT WEIRD and STRANGE that: --In the book, Velvet Brown tells the story to her brother Donald, saying she heard it from Mi Taylor. --In the movie, Mi Taylor, played by Mickey Rooney, tells the story directly to Donald. --In the book story, some fishermen see the horse, but leave, frightened, and someone else rescues the horse. In the movie, fishermen rescue the horse. --35 years later, Mickey Rooney appeared in the film The Black Stallion, with a plot identical to this story--a horse is shipwrecked, swims to an island, is rescued by fisherman, and goes on to win a big race--and aren't National Velvet and the Black Stallion movies the ONLY horse movies in which Mickey Rooney EVER appeared? Am I the only one EVER to notice this and find it all just a bit odd? This message has been edited. Last edited by: dandelion,
15 February 2015, 06:41 PM
jkt
In this evenings All Things Considered Neil Gaiman is interviewed about his new anthology. Ray is mentioned.
Ray Bradbury wrote the introduction to Sturgeon's first collection Without Sorcery.
*********************
At the BBCRadio4 there are 5 days left to listen to a radio drama adaptation of Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00vs0f0This message has been edited. Last edited by: Linnl,
04 March 2015, 12:33 AM
dandelion
My freshman year in high school I attended a private school in the D. C. area with an interesting program: we went to work on Wednesdays to learn about the "real world." Many, but not all, of the workplaces were elementary and Jr. High Schools. The one where I worked was in Falls Church, Virginia, but there were many others, that is, with about 300 in our school, if even half the workplaces were schools and ten people worked per school we could have been going to at least 15 different schools, so I can't say exactly where this took place. This would have been way towards the end of the school year.
In drama class one girl told of knowing a boy who was being made much of at school, greeted with such remarks as, "How's the movie star?" When the teacher asked in what film he appeared, she said, "Star Wars." The teacher asked what the boy did in Star Wars and the girl said it was some scene with a kid whose mom was somehow mistreating him. The teacher said there was no such scene in the film. Not only did I find there wasn't (when I finally saw it sometime later) but I read the novelization which also contained no such scene. It's also not listed here: http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki...s_cut_from_Star_Wars and the only scenes in the U. S. were filmed in Arizona and California, not Virginia. Perhaps the boy appeared in some other movie and the girl got the title wrong, but honestly how do you get wrong a title like Star Wars? This was the first time I ever heard it and I never forgot it!
This boy would have been attending about grades 3-5 in the D. C. area in May of 1977, in other words, he was at least four grades behind me. Brian Williams was three grades ahead of me so not him.
I am forced to conclude the boy heard some Star Wars publicity and simply invented this story for the attention, knowing he could always tell classmates his scene was cut. Since I didn't return to the school the next year I never reconnected with the girl to learn what if anything came of it...just an interesting little memory of the first time I heard of Star Wars. Incidentally when I went to see it in the theater, the line went clear down the block and around the corner, with so many people we were afraid we wouldn't be seated, but the line moved quickly and somehow we got in.
20 March 2015, 03:17 PM
dandelion
Has anyone seen this suspicious character who has invaded the children's department of Barnes and Noble stores across the country? All I can think of is the predatory "Fox" who takes over the small local bookstore in You've Got Mail. No one can identify him and I suspect a sinister plot of the deepest implications leading to the highest levels of alien intelligence. If you know anything, please report! Society's safety could depend on it!This message has been edited. Last edited by: dandelion,
27 April 2015, 04:09 PM
jkt
Tonight's Antique Roadshow, taking place from Santa Clara, CA, is featuring "Ray Bradbury Archives." At least it is showing in Los Angeles this evening. This is a new episode. Check your local listings.This message has been edited. Last edited by: jkt,
John King Tarpinian You know what you are, Mr. Bradbury? ... You are a poet! -- Aldous Huxley
27 April 2015, 07:30 PM
Doug Spaulding
quote:
Originally posted by jkt: Tonight's Antique Roadshow, taking place from Santa Clara, CA, is featuring "Ray Bradbury Archives." At least it is showing in Los Angeles this evening. This is a new episode. Check your local listings.
And if you don't have a local listing, click here.