idiosyncreant: cartoon avatar of blue eyed redhead with curly hair, underdyed with black (instaloli)
This is a rant that has been coming on for a while, because I've been binging on Lord of the Rings movie stuff after long abstinence, because my brother sent the family the Lego game for Christmas, and you know how it is with that little taste of an old addiction...

Anyway. Viewing it in a sort of post-LotR-dominant world is a little bittersweet.

Here's the thing: fans have gotten so jaded about it.

Yes, everyone has a right to gripe about the things left out. Whether there were inferiorities.
(For goodness sake, *I've* discovered that I've outgrown this vision of Faramir, and Strider's so hot I'm reluctant to leave that part of the movie behind...)
But fandom loves too well to hate a thing because it became popular with the mainstream, having gone outside the original fans (which is rot, my mother was in high school when these books were having their first revival of popularity, these fanchildren can get over it)

And it's so rank of privilege, in a way.

This movie was my Star Wars. I grew up watching movies with the toolset to create fantasy worlds from it's pioneering, but Lord of the Rings was the kind of awestruck experience that I think the first generation of Star Wars viewers felt in the theatre. There was an art to it, a skill to the mastery of new and old techniques, used to a whole other level. Suddenly, even what you could do with writing had to level up accordingly.

It was a masterpiece. John Howe and Alan Lee helped create a thematic realization of their whole bodies of work in fandom. Weta Workshop pushed the envelope for skill and artistry in both digital and physical design. Whole ranks of artists labored, some of them just to put together masses of chainmail, for years, that would hang right and be structured correctly.

And so maybe Peter Jackson has jumped the Phantom Menace shark with the Hobbit. My teen brothers love it, because it's the sprawling epic fantasy they are looking for, though the reason I love the Hobbit best of all books is because of the quiet threads of British humor and Bilbo's delightfully domestic outlook on these events of great moment. The man is an artist, like anyone, and can you imagine living with that over your head, as probably the greatest achievement of your life or at least the most notable? Who wouldn't go into a bit of sequel madness?

(And let's not even try to figure out how much studio politics must have gone into this incarnation, as well. Jackson got to produce LotR without any forces of expectations of a knowing public, and very little oversight from powers that be. That has no doubt changed a LOT.)

And you know what? I am SO SICK of feeling defensive because I fell in love with this movie, and gave it a piece of my heart I am never getting back.

Lord of the Rings was amazing.

So maybe Orlando Bloom, not so much.

And ten years from now, there'll be a more artsy rendition in which all the characters are less archetypical and more artsy, and I won't like it as well, but I'll give it a fair chance. But it'll be because PJ made it possible.

And no doubt some coming-of-age filmmaker who imprinted on that masterpiece will be doing something spectacular with innovations we can't even imagine.

sundry.

Oct. 1st, 2012 08:06 pm
idiosyncreant: cartoon avatar of blue eyed redhead with curly hair, underdyed with black (Default)
Today I managed to do everything, except write, which is next.

I'm not always writing what I *want* to be, right now (my novel is fighting, I think because I'm boring it) but at least getting to do something. Okay, not always writing what I THINK I should be. Not the same, eh?

I'm not doing good posting about my second round with The Artist's Way, because I already *talked* about that here, and I am stupidly averse to repeating myself. But I am at least rereading and refocusing with it, and feeling better all the time.

I put lemon oil on my temples for an essential oils video, and was reading the bit where she talks about artists needing to withdraw, and I said, "Feh with this, I'm going to go spin some TOP yarn" and put on my earphones and zoned out so hard I took them off later feeling like I'd napped or cried, rather than just sat and done fiber work.

I also read this poem/story today, and thought it was incredible:

Spark by Steve Taose, in Jabberwocky Magazine.

...I also, on my to-do list, got to read a great story by Ken Liu he's entering into a contest on the Codex Forum, which I can critique as a non-combatant participant. :gloat: It'll probably be MONTHS or even next year before you can read it. But I will take pity and let you know about it when that happens.


I am having growing-pains with this TOP yarn, not sure of myself because I'm not happy with the motley look of my past several, and am trying to find a way to make it look dynamic, and am holding myself to a certain standard.
But.
I think I'm going to figure it out.

idiosyncreant: cartoon avatar of blue eyed redhead with curly hair, underdyed with black (drinkdeep)


i dunno, I feel like there's a story here, so I am posting this.

Also, Avengers is for rent on iTunes, but it said it would be FOUR HOURS DOWNLOADING
for the love of Pete
I could probably find a pirate download that in half that time, translating from the Chinese
but at least I was downloading it to a computer no one's using today?

IT'S NOT EVEN HD
and these people tell me that computer doesn't run slow.


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