| Coma-man,
Several of Ray's short stories have been adapted to film. I used to work in an AV Library and made sure that we got several of them. Yes the Veldt has been done. The info I have shows that it was done in 1981, directed by Dianne Haak, is a Bernard Wilets production and released through Barr Films of Pasadena, CA. Check to see if your local library can get it through interlibrary loan. Our copy was on 16mm film but I bet that a VHS version was available also.
Among the other Bradbury films we had were The Flying Machine and Quest (based on Frost and Fire) |
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| My all time favorite story is the long rain. Although i love all of the other stories, this one seems to stay with me the most. I really enjoyed the story of the men that are kept in the rain, and the psychological effects they suffer from. Also, the ending was what really got to me. When he finds the sun dome and the rest of his team is dead, it is very sad yet somewhat ironic. |
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| Not to mention I hold every story in this book very very dear to me, but if pressed I would have to say Kaleidoscope is my favorite one. It tugs so deep at my heartstrings about the brevity and sheer beauty of life even amidst anguish and turmoil and hatred. The final culmination of each going their seperate ways and dying alone is symbolic of the death we all must finally face in the end alone to confront eternity and oblivion whatever that may bring. All of the arguments and banter were finally rendered meaningless in the face of this particular calamity. The end is particularly poignant as one spaceman heads back home to earth surrounded by a kaleidoscopic meteor shower of unspeakable beauty. As the mother and son walk along in the country twilight, they see the meteor/man flare and die out. Many, if not all of Bradbury's stories leave me astounded not only in awe of his superb skill of the lyrical metaphor but the weaving of each different story and how it seems to have an ending that is just perfect or belongs only to that one. I don't think I'm the only one who recognizes this.
She stood silently looking out into the great sallow distances of sea bottom, as if recalling something, her yellow eyes soft and moist...
rocketsummer@insightbb.com
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| Posts: 1397 | Location: Louisville, KY | Registered: 08 February 2006 |
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| It's a very difficult task to proclaim just one I-Man story as my favorite. Today, I will say that "The Other Foot" is my favorite. Tomorrow, I will probably say something different. The years get buried as I turn the pages and make my way through the novel of life. Yet, one story stays with me the most. One story stands out like a bookmark, waaaay back there towards the beginning. It's always visible, always accessible. "Marionnettes Inc." with its insights into marriage and the abrupt realization that comes with finding out that even a bad marriage is over, the feelings of abandonment and betrayal, and the scheming that goes into a well executed seperation. Coming from a broken home, THAT story stands out. ================================================
"Years from now we want to go into the pub and tell about the Terrible Conflagration up at the Place, do we not?"
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| Posts: 1010 | Location: Sacratomato, Cauliflower | Registered: 29 December 2003 |
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