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01-22-2011, 09:39 AM | #16 | |
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The book is very good, at least Book 1, and the BBC TV mini-series version is rather decent, but the radio play is the original version and clearly the best. |
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01-22-2011, 12:35 PM | #17 | |||
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I've read HHGG before, but it was more than 10 years ago. I knew I enjoyed it back then, so I was more than willing to give it another go.
Personally I love the humor in it, but then I've always been a fan of the British style of humor, and I knew pretty much all of the references in the book (like why Ford Prefect is a funny choice, what a zebra crossing is, and so on). But what really stood out to me this time around - and obviously would not have last time - is how many parallels you can draw between The Hitchhiker's Guide (the book within the novel) and Wikipedia. Quote:
Or maybe this passage which, while not directly applicable to Wikipedia, certainly seems to be in the same spirit, as to how it treats popular topics compared to the way a regular encyclopedia would. Quote:
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The other new thing this time around is that Marvin's lines were all read by Alan Rickman in my head. |
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01-22-2011, 12:40 PM | #18 |
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Cray... great points. The HHGTTG was certainly the first eBook Reader and WikiPedia all rolled into one. I wonder if the founders of WikiPedia took any guidance from HHG or perhaps even got the idea for it from HHG.
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01-22-2011, 12:58 PM | #19 | |
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01-22-2011, 05:36 PM | #20 |
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01-22-2011, 05:40 PM | #21 |
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01-22-2011, 05:44 PM | #22 |
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The TV mini-series was pretty good. But yes, the movie was not all that good. What was very good was the radio dramas. They are excellent. If you can find them, I suggest getting them and having a listen.
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01-22-2011, 05:46 PM | #23 | |
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01-22-2011, 05:48 PM | #24 |
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DON'T PANIC!
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01-22-2011, 05:50 PM | #25 |
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I loved the TV Series even more than I like the Radio Series and loved the books. All part of my early years. Then I moved to London to work in a tech company in Islington and was surprised to see signs for the local estate agents ("realtors"? in the US)...
http://www.hotblackdesiato.co.uk/ "Hotblack Desiato". If you haven't read The Restaurant at the End of the Universe that may not mean much but if you have he plays in Disaster Area. Douglas lived in Islington. Strangely I now live near Liff (see The Meaning of Liff) |
01-23-2011, 10:33 AM | #26 | |
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1rNjga5z7hw and no-one does bleak humour quite as well as the British (and Arrested Development, of course) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A7Uc2...eature=related Anywho, back to the topic at hand: my favourite version of the Hitchhiker's is the Radio Scripts that they published a few years ago. The descriptions of the noises they were aiming for are often as funny as the dialogue. Last edited by Hatgirl; 01-23-2011 at 10:40 AM. |
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01-23-2011, 10:43 AM | #27 | |
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This is one of my favourite things about the whole series. The whole "apocryphal, or at least wildly inaccurate" quote applies almost as much to the book as it does to "The Book" (or Wikipedia for that matter). In the introduction to a hardback compilation of the first four books (which I have sadly now lost), Douglas Adams addressed some of the issues over which version was correct (TV, radio or book) - I think he essentially said they were all correct He also mentioned a couple of little things he included in the book. He asked Hotblack Desiato if he could use their name as he liked it so much, then after the book was published, fans complained to the estate agent that they had stolen the name from the book, and wouldn't believe it was the other way round. The other little bit, I believe is that the number he gave for Trillian's flat (and the probability of being rescued after being pushed out of an airlock) was actually the phone number of a flat he lived in in London. I think there were a few more bits and pieces, but they are the ones that really stick out in my mind. I love the books, have probably read them all three or four times, and I think my favourite character is Marvin. Fits in perfectly with the BBC Radio 4 sense of humour (and the British one for that matter). My favourite aspect of the book is probably the random, one-off moments (that sometimes receive a reprise later on - stand-up comedian style) that will usually progress the story a little, but not always (for example the fjords, the girl in the cafe who I wish had remained a one-off, being dead for a year for tax purposes, and of course, the terrible pain in all the diodes down my left-hand side). All in all, the combination of humour and a silly, and sometimes little adhered to, plot make the first book in the series (and indeed the whole series) one of my favourite ever, and one that I periodically re-read and pick up something new. I would recommend it to anyone. |
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01-23-2011, 10:44 AM | #28 | |
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Best to worst: Radio Books TV Show Movie In that order. The worst part of the movie, outside of all the changes from what went before, was that it made Marvin look Disney-cute. The clunker from the TV show wasn't how I pictured Marvin, either, but it was far closer than the movie version. |
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01-23-2011, 10:56 AM | #29 |
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01-23-2011, 11:06 AM | #30 | |
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Last edited by HarryT; 01-23-2011 at 11:08 AM. |
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