| I'm currently reading The Vacation from The Machineries OF Joy. It just hit me very powerfully this morning when I was reading an excerpt in between thunderstorms. The story itself had a very movielike feel to it and also very surreal, which most of his storie's do. Just the whole description before and during the arrival of the people in the story on that weird little handcar on the train tracks was so out of kilter that it struck me very powerfully. I wonder sometimes if Mr. Bradbury did actually sample a taste of Mr. Huxley's elixer after all. Some things are better left unsaid. The reason I wonder about this, is that his writing strikes a powerful chord within me that is almost paralelled by how I felt when I sampled that very elixer. Another way to put it is that Ray's writing makes me feel similiar to the strange feeling you'd get watching those stop motion pictures of plants and flowers growing quickly right before your eyes that they used to show in school as a child. Or those close up shots of frogs chirpping or laying eggs in a pond, also that they used to show. He's so unlike any other author, I think at conveying the truly strange and bizarre but at the same time, the joy and the wonderful.
Onward to Mars!
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| Posts: 318 | Location: Louisville, KY United States | Registered: 27 February 2006 |
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| How about Tim Burton? Big Fish is a perfect example of how Tim could take the quirky fantasy of Ray Bradbury and make it believable and emotionally impacting. I think he could take it seriously enough and have fun with it enough that he could succeed where so many others have failed at putting Bradbury on film. |
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| Just watched Hugo after reading the account of the disastrous handling of Something Wicked This Way Comes thinking all the way through, if only Martin Scorsese could have directed that! (With Jonathan Pryce still as Mr. Dark, of course--the rest of the movie would have to be recast.) |
| Posts: 7332 | Location: Dayton, Washington, USA | Registered: 03 December 2001 |
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