Who's seen it?
Saw it last night. I count myself a fan of the books, and I found the movie disappointing. Gorgeous, gorgeous, gorgeous to look at -- I could have looked at it all night. Well-acted, unsurprisingly.
But that had to have been one of the worst screenplays I've ever seen for a film of this scale and cost (it wrests that title fro the first Harry Potter, with which it shares a number of flaws). I'll leave aside the gutting of the books' attack on organized religion; I get why that was necessary. But at least one sequence made absolutely no sense unless you had read the books, and much of the dialogue might as well have been accommpanied by a flashing subtitle reading "Exposition!" Screenwritting 101, folks: When a character we haven't seen before enters a scene in a dramatic and improbable fashion, dressed exotically and holding a weapon, the first words out of the protagonist's mouth should never, ever, ever be "who are you?"
Shame, really.
Saw it last night. I count myself a fan of the books, and I found the movie disappointing. Gorgeous, gorgeous, gorgeous to look at -- I could have looked at it all night. Well-acted, unsurprisingly.
But that had to have been one of the worst screenplays I've ever seen for a film of this scale and cost (it wrests that title fro the first Harry Potter, with which it shares a number of flaws). I'll leave aside the gutting of the books' attack on organized religion; I get why that was necessary. But at least one sequence made absolutely no sense unless you had read the books, and much of the dialogue might as well have been accommpanied by a flashing subtitle reading "Exposition!" Screenwritting 101, folks: When a character we haven't seen before enters a scene in a dramatic and improbable fashion, dressed exotically and holding a weapon, the first words out of the protagonist's mouth should never, ever, ever be "who are you?"
Shame, really.
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