| Already talked about the miniseries in another post, but I really want to get a copy of it somewhere! It's wonderfully creepy. The music is dated, to be sure, but I like it that way, especially the "action sequence" wa-wa guitar! That music made Spender seem even *more* of a bad ass with a bee gun than he already was! The production value may have been low, but I thought the artistry of all the Martian props and buildings was superb. Very simple and very alien.
Trying real hard to be the shepherd.
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| Posts: 5 | Location: Minneapolis, MN USA | Registered: 02 May 2003 |
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| I received my uncut video copy in the mail yesterday and began watching it tonight. Paused after end of 2nd expedition. I think the version I had taped off the air in the '80s was butchered, so now I'm watching to see what was missing. (I saw the original broadcast over two decades ago.) I'm expecting the missing sequences to show up in the second or third parts. I'm not into the childish American obsession with special effects, so I can live with the defects of the production: earth clouds in the Martian sky, crummy spaceships traveling in outer space, etc. On the other hand, the visual quality of the cave where the Martian husband and wife live (1st expedition) is beautiful. The miniseries is a bit slow-moving at first by contemporary attention deficit disorder standards, but the human quality of it shines through, as does the poetry of Bradbury in the voice-overs. |
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| 3rd expedition is definitely the most interesting of the first part of the series,in particular, the philosophical conversations between Spender and Wilder. Spender gives a few memorable spiels: his mourning of the loss of an ancient yet superior civilization, his anger at the thuggish behavior of his fellow earthmen,his warning that the earth colonists will despoil Mars, and his characterization of Martian civilization, combining science, art, and religion, cooperating with nature, cultivating simplicity and "the enjoyment of pure being." Wilder is the only other intelligent earthman, but he only sees the implications after he kills Spender in self-defense. On earth Wilder innocently asked Spender "What's wrong with colonization?" On Mars he says that earthmen are like children to the Martians, but basically harmless. After he kills Spender he gets a glimpse of the ominous future.
From the preview of part 2, "The Settlers", I can already see that the tape I had before wqas of a badly butchered telecast. It looks like "The Fire Balloons" will be part of the story, missing from my tape. |
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| It would have been easy for advanced mathematicians and/or astronomers to predict the nearness of Mars at this period in history. Now-a-days one simply can use a consumer level computer program such as Starry Night Pro to project planetary distances.
I personally believe it was just a cool coincidence.
Can't say enough good things about such a talented writer. Has anyone seen a movie or television show which even came close to the quality of the written story? I have not. |
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| Actually I think Stephen King is constantly upstaged by adapted movies. The Shining (Kubrick version), It, The Green Mile. Heck, even The Night Flier was better on film. |
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| Bradbury considered the miniseries version boring, and Stephen King HATED the Kubrick version of "The Shining"--the ONLY film adaptation of any of his works, at least to that date, that he actively disliked, which is saying a lot considering how much of his writing was adapted for film and TV. He bought the rights back from Kubrick on condition that he never speak publicly of why he disliked Kubrick's version. Frankly, I thought the movie was brilliant in many respects. It inspired me to read the book, but once I had, I was glad I'd seen the movie first. It made too many changes which would have outraged a reader of the book. I was surprised in King's version of "The Shining" how well certain things worked, such as the hedge animals and the fire hose, which I thought would never be scary onscreen at all, particularly small screen. |
| Posts: 2694 | Location: Dayton, Washington, USA | Registered: 03 December 2001 |
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