Robin McKinley's Web Site .:. Robin McKinley's Blog

Robin McKinley

Official Web Forum

Home » Discussion Forums » Talk » Favorite Obscure Fairytale
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #1876 is a reply to message #1827 ] Wed, 22 October 2008 09:15 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Katherine  is currently offline Katherine
Messages: 72
Registered: October 2008
Location: Michigan, The States
Member
Maya wrote on Tue, 21 October 2008 21:09

(I'm sure I'm not the only one here who's read The Ordinary Princess by M.M. Kaye. I read it in third grade and have been hooked ever since.)


I LOVE this book! I remember finding it in the store when I was very young and being enthralled by the illustrations. After I'd wandered the entire store reading it while she shopped (Meijer--it's the original "groceries and everything else" store), my mother caved and bought it for me so I could finish it. Of course, it got left behind in one of our many moves but I found it again a couple of years ago and bought my own copy.

Another great book that's sort of a fairytale retelling, though perhaps more just pure fantasy, is Shadow Castle by Marion Cockrell. It's my all-time favorite book ever and whenever my copy went missing (which happened rather a lot), I'd almost immediately come across another copy at a garage sale or thrift store. I HIGHLY recommend it. It was my first fantasy "girls who DO things" book and the reason I love the name Lucy.


Every day for the next year, I'm taking and posting at least one picture. Stop by and take a look!

http://project365lummox.blogspot.com
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #1877 is a reply to message #1620 ] Wed, 22 October 2008 09:19 Go to previous messageGo to next message
scosborne  is currently offline scosborne
Messages: 56
Registered: October 2008
Location: Nova Scotia
Member

Reading Angel wrote on Sat, 18 October 2008 21:39

I really need to read Till We Have Faces some time when I'm not sick-to-death and lying on the bed doing nothing... People always talk about it and I think "I've read it twice, how do I not remember any of the details?" Is it incredibly vague and dream-like for anyone else or is it because of how very sick I was both times I attempted it?


I agree. I was in Cyprus in April (not for a resort vacation), and we went to a museum near the heart of the island's cult of Aphrodite - and I saw the Aphrodite idol that Lewis describes in the book. I have never had trouble understanding how people could worship a carved figure - but I was standing in front of a big, black rock that was once a goddess. It had so much more imaginative heft to it because it was dark and quiet and faceless.
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #1885 is a reply to message #1877 ] Wed, 22 October 2008 10:51 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Reading Angel  is currently offline Reading Angel
Messages: 179
Registered: October 2008
Location: Here
Senior Member

Alright, now I know I was really out of it when I read it - I don't recall there being an idol mentioned at all, much less described...


"The center of every man's existence is a dream. Death, disease, insanity, are merely material accidents, like a toothache or a twisted ankle. That these brutal forces always besiege and often capture the citadel does not prove that they are the citadel."
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #1886 is a reply to message #1531 ] Wed, 22 October 2008 10:52 Go to previous messageGo to next message
scarhandpiper  is currently offline scarhandpiper
Messages: 95
Registered: October 2008
Location: Utah
Member

The Enchanted Forest Chronicles incorporate almost all the traditional fairy tales, have a heroine who can look out for herself, thankyouverymuch, and have been my favorites for a long time.

But my favorite Traditionals are The Ugly Duckling, the Twelve Dancing Princesses, and the Brave Little Tailor.


Scar

"People think that stories are shaped by people. In fact, it's the other way around."
T.P.
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #1907 is a reply to message #1886 ] Wed, 22 October 2008 15:39 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Akai  is currently offline Akai
Messages: 76
Registered: October 2008
Location: Seattle, WA
Member
Yes! The Enchanted Forest Chronicles are still some of my favorite books. Morwen is the best witch ever. =D

I'm not sure if it's a fairytale, but does anyone remember "Mr. Nobody" from the Tall Book of Make-believe? I always loved him, and I did blame him when I broke things as a child.


self respect: the secure feeling that no one, as yet, is suspicious.
--H.L. Mencken
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #1910 is a reply to message #1877 ] Wed, 22 October 2008 17:34 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Melissa Mead  is currently offline Melissa Mead
Messages: 990
Registered: October 2008
Location: Albany, NY, USA
Senior Member
[quote

I agree. I was in Cyprus in April (not for a resort vacation), and we went to a museum near the heart of the island's cult of Aphrodite - and I saw the Aphrodite idol that Lewis describes in the book. I have never had trouble understanding how people could worship a carved figure - but I was standing in front of a big, black rock that was once a goddess. It had so much more imaginative heft to it because it was dark and quiet and faceless.[/quote]

I never knew that was real!


Member of Carpe Libris: http://carpelibris.wordpress.com/
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #1937 is a reply to message #1907 ] Wed, 22 October 2008 21:01 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Maya  is currently offline Maya
Messages: 30
Registered: October 2008
Location: Michigan
Member
Akai wrote on Wed, 22 October 2008 15:39

Yes! The Enchanted Forest Chronicles are still some of my favorite books. Morwen is the best witch ever. =D

I'm not sure if it's a fairytale, but does anyone remember "Mr. Nobody" from the Tall Book of Make-believe? I always loved him, and I did blame him when I broke things as a child.


I have "Mr. Nobody" in a collection of children's poetry.... which I got well after the age of breaking things.

One of these days I'm going to have to buy a set of hardcover Enchanted Forest Chronicles (and probably the Book of Enchantments), because my paperbacks really will not stand much more abuse. Maybe I can find some with those lovely Trina Schart Hyman covers....
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #1948 is a reply to message #1531 ] Wed, 22 October 2008 21:14 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Julia  is currently offline Julia
Messages: 531
Registered: October 2008
Location: Library School
Senior Member
Ooh! A fun, and very informative, fairy-tale website!
http://www.surlalunefairytales.com/

I agree about East. And I LOVE the Enchanted Forest chronicles.

And for those of you who like " The Goose Girl", I presume you know about Shanon Hale's novel of the same name???
VERY good book.

Smile
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #1966 is a reply to message #1531 ] Wed, 22 October 2008 23:25 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Charismitaine  is currently offline Charismitaine
Messages: 110
Registered: October 2008
Location: Texas
Senior Member

I love the Enchanted Forest Chronicles! I still occasionally giggle to myself for no reason, and people will say "Charis, what's so funny?" "Teddy bears! Pink teddy bears!" "...What?" "On the flying carpet! Teehee!" "Whatever, Charis."
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #1967 is a reply to message #1910 ] Wed, 22 October 2008 23:38 Go to previous messageGo to next message
scosborne  is currently offline scosborne
Messages: 56
Registered: October 2008
Location: Nova Scotia
Member

Reading Angel wrote on Wed, 22 October 2008 11:51

I don't recall there being an idol mentioned at all, much less described...


Melissa Mead wrote on Wed, 22 October 2008 18:34


I never knew that was real!


I just went back to my copy of the book to see if my first impression of the stone was correct - Lewis calls Ungit "a black stone without head or hands or face, and a very strong goddess" and she is a pre-Aphrodite, as this idol in Cyprus was. I didn't make my way all through TWHF again, but I remember there are many similarities between how this idol was worshipped and how Lewis describes Ungit's worship. Here's a photo that I took (before I realized we weren't supposed to take pictures, oops!) of the stone:

http://i116.photobucket.com/albums/o10/scosborne/Cyprusidoltourist.jpg

Sorry if this is a little OT. Smile
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #1986 is a reply to message #1967 ] Thu, 23 October 2008 06:43 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Melissa Mead  is currently offline Melissa Mead
Messages: 990
Registered: October 2008
Location: Albany, NY, USA
Senior Member
Oh wow. Thanks!


Member of Carpe Libris: http://carpelibris.wordpress.com/
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2013 is a reply to message #1531 ] Thu, 23 October 2008 15:38 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Akai  is currently offline Akai
Messages: 76
Registered: October 2008
Location: Seattle, WA
Member
Charis, don't feel bad. Every now and then I pull things like "but I liked being green, and it was fun having monkey paws" (Book of Enchantments, 64 Curses of Calif Arsendad [probably butchered that] ) and no one gets it but me (and my sister when she's around).

Maya, you totally missed out on a great scapegoat then. Mr. Nobody was perfect. Wink

Did anyone else ever read the Moon's Revenge? A seventh son of a seventh son wants to be the best fiddler ever, so he throws his shoes at the moon for a week. The moon grants his wish, but is angry that the shoes marred his face, and curses the child's sister to be mute forever. He's not worried because he has no sister...until his mom gives birth to a little girl who never cries.

[Updated on: Thu, 23 October 2008 15:39]


self respect: the secure feeling that no one, as yet, is suspicious.
--H.L. Mencken
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2025 is a reply to message #1531 ] Thu, 23 October 2008 16:54 Go to previous messageGo to next message
ssshunt  is currently offline ssshunt
Messages: 746
Registered: October 2008
Location: Salt Lake City, Utah
Senior Member

scosborne--thank you for that photo! The idol looks so much like I'd pictured it--scary! And wonderful. And remember how most of the women still--at least the poor ones did--worship Ungit even though they brought in a fancy new Aphrodite? I always loved that part in the book.


"And by the way you look fantastic in your boots of Chinese plastic."
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2158 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sat, 25 October 2008 11:15 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Laura  is currently offline Laura
Messages: 196
Registered: October 2008
Location: Midwestern USA
Senior Member
So, all the talk about Till We Have Faces got me so curious that I requested it from the library, only to realize when it arrived that I had accidentally reserved the large print edition. So we'll see if I can hold it really far away from my face...or I may just have to return it and request it again, being much more careful about which title I click on. Argh.


Known on both Ravelry and LibraryThing as thelorelei.
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2185 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sat, 25 October 2008 16:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
ssshunt  is currently offline ssshunt
Messages: 746
Registered: October 2008
Location: Salt Lake City, Utah
Senior Member

Heh.

I hope you like it.


"And by the way you look fantastic in your boots of Chinese plastic."
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2247 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sat, 25 October 2008 22:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Erika in Colorado  is currently offline Erika in Colorado
Messages: 226
Registered: October 2008
Location: Colorado
Senior Member
Does anyone know the movie from the 80's by the name of Ladyhawk? It had Matthew Broderick, Michelle Pfifer, and Rutger Hauer (probably spelled all their names wrong). It's about a couple who was in love and then cursed by a priest who loved the girl also; at night, he was a wolf and she was a human, while by day, she was a hawk and he was a human (cursed so they would never quite see eachother again until there was a day w/o a night and a night w/o a day).

This really sounds like a fairytale to me, but I don't know if it is one. Does anyone know?


Erika in Colorado

"A person who's happy will make others happy; a person who has courage and faith will never die in misery!" -Anne Frank
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2261 is a reply to message #2247 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 00:13 Go to previous messageGo to next message
jmeadows  is currently offline jmeadows
Messages: 3149
Registered: September 2008
Location: Virginia, USA
Senior Member
[Moderator]

Erika in Colorado wrote on Sat, 25 October 2008 22:53

Does anyone know the movie from the 80's by the name of Ladyhawk?


I know the movie, but I don't know if it was a fairy tale or not. (Doesn't sound like one I've ever heard, but I'm not as knowledgeable about fairy tales as I wish I was.)

The TV show Charmed borrowed that plot for one of their episodes. One of the characters said, "Haven't I seen this movie?" or something. Smile


Smooshes!
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2266 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 00:27 Go to previous messageGo to next message
ssshunt  is currently offline ssshunt
Messages: 746
Registered: October 2008
Location: Salt Lake City, Utah
Senior Member

I loved "Ladyhawk" when it first came out. It was my favorite movie for a long time. Though Matthew Broderick wasn't that great (what an accent!).

[Updated on: Sun, 26 October 2008 00:28]


"And by the way you look fantastic in your boots of Chinese plastic."
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2278 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 01:32 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Reading Angel  is currently offline Reading Angel
Messages: 179
Registered: October 2008
Location: Here
Senior Member

I love Ladyhawke! And you're right, it is very much a fairytale story... I have no idea if it actually is one, though.

[Updated on: Sun, 26 October 2008 01:32]


"The center of every man's existence is a dream. Death, disease, insanity, are merely material accidents, like a toothache or a twisted ankle. That these brutal forces always besiege and often capture the citadel does not prove that they are the citadel."
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2294 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 08:02 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Susan from Athens  is currently offline Susan from Athens
Messages: 817
Registered: October 2008
Location: Athens, Greece
Senior Member
I loved Ladyhawke too! Although seeing it now, that eighties Alan Parsons Project Music is a bit out of whack. I don't think it was a fairy tale. The scriptwriter is also credited with story, and that usually doesn't happen with fairy tales - I think. Of course it could just mean he added in the Matthew Broderick character as light relief. Who knows?


“I have always imagined heaven to be a kind of library.” –Jorge Luis Borges
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2314 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 12:59 Go to previous messageGo to next message
holmes44  is currently offline holmes44
Messages: 706
Registered: October 2008
Location: Sutton,Quebec
Senior Member

i love ladyhawk too and i have it on vhs tape. i watch it once a year.


Bonnie Holmes the faster ahead I go, the more behind I get
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2332 is a reply to message #2247 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 14:24 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Black Bear  is currently offline Black Bear
Messages: 3216
Registered: September 2008
Location: Indianapolis, IN USA
Senior Member
[Moderator]
Ladyhawke was so far as I know originally conceived as a film. Joan D. Vinge wrote the novelization, which was not bad as I recall. Hands down my favorite Sword-and-Sorcery movie. Smile


"The time is always right to do what's right."--MLK Jr.
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2342 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 15:36 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Katherine  is currently offline Katherine
Messages: 72
Registered: October 2008
Location: Michigan, The States
Member
I LOVE Ladyhawke!! Though I really wish they would do a new version and rescore it. I thought the music was awful and dated when it came out much less 17 years down the road. (Or however long). It's really a most beautifully made film, though. That's when I fell in love with Rutger Hauer, Michelle Pfeiffer has never been more luminously beautiful, and...oh, raptors and Andalusians and black wolves, oh, my. *happy swoon*


Every day for the next year, I'm taking and posting at least one picture. Stop by and take a look!

http://project365lummox.blogspot.com
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2351 is a reply to message #2342 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 16:21 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Black Bear  is currently offline Black Bear
Messages: 3216
Registered: September 2008
Location: Indianapolis, IN USA
Senior Member
[Moderator]
Katherine wrote on Sun, 26 October 2008 15:36

I LOVE Ladyhawke!! Though I really wish they would do a new version and rescore it. I thought the music was awful and dated when it came out much less 17 years down the road. (Or however long). It's really a most beautifully made film, though. That's when I fell in love with Rutger Hauer, Michelle Pfeiffer has never been more luminously beautiful, and...oh, raptors and Andalusians and black wolves, oh, my. *happy swoon*



Them's fightin' words there Katherine! Smile I love that score, bought it on CD and it's still some of my favorite long-car-trip music. But I've always been a fan of Alan Parsons Project.... it's not for everyone, for sure! I know a lot of folks who feel the same way about it. Probably more who dislike it than like it, come to think of it...

"Goliath" is actually a Friesian horse rather than Andalusian. (I went to an event once which included a demonstration by the Friesian Horse Society of America, or something along those lines, and they made QUITE a big deal of the famous movie star Friesians...) Gorgeous beasts! Smile


"The time is always right to do what's right."--MLK Jr.
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2354 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 17:02 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Charismitaine  is currently offline Charismitaine
Messages: 110
Registered: October 2008
Location: Texas
Senior Member

Yay Ladyhawke! I believe that it is loosely based on an Italian legend, but only very loosely....

The music is wacky, but I do love Alan Parsons Project--and the wacky music is part of the deal with the older fantasy movies that I love so dearly (Labyrinth! how do I love thee! random songs and bizarre sexual tension and deeply awkward pants and all!). It just wouldn't be the same without it!
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2372 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 19:20 Go to previous messageGo to next message
ssshunt  is currently offline ssshunt
Messages: 746
Registered: October 2008
Location: Salt Lake City, Utah
Senior Member

Babe, David Bowie ALWAYS wear awkward pants.


"And by the way you look fantastic in your boots of Chinese plastic."
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2397 is a reply to message #2354 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 21:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Black Bear  is currently offline Black Bear
Messages: 3216
Registered: September 2008
Location: Indianapolis, IN USA
Senior Member
[Moderator]
Charismitaine wrote on Sun, 26 October 2008 17:02

Yay Ladyhawke! I believe that it is loosely based on an Italian legend, but only very loosely....

The music is wacky, but I do love Alan Parsons Project--and the wacky music is part of the deal with the older fantasy movies that I love so dearly (Labyrinth! how do I love thee! random songs and bizarre sexual tension and deeply awkward pants and all!). It just wouldn't be the same without it!



Ohhhh Labyrinth! That's in my top 5 S&S movies as well. We watched it at work a few months ago, and as soon as Bowie came on, one of my young coworkers (who hadn't seen it before) let out an involuntary "Oh my GOD!" when she saw his....er...pants.


"The time is always right to do what's right."--MLK Jr.
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2418 is a reply to message #2397 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 23:37 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Akai  is currently offline Akai
Messages: 76
Registered: October 2008
Location: Seattle, WA
Member
Black Bear wrote on Sun, 26 October 2008 18:30

as soon as Bowie came on, one of my young coworkers (who hadn't seen it before) let out an involuntary "Oh my GOD!" when she saw his....er...pants.


Those pants scarred (and scared) me as a child.... still love the movie, though, once I overcame the fear.

[Updated on: Sun, 26 October 2008 23:38]


self respect: the secure feeling that no one, as yet, is suspicious.
--H.L. Mencken
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2419 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 23:45 Go to previous messageGo to next message
L.R.K.  is currently offline L.R.K.
Messages: 1080
Registered: October 2008
Location: Sweden
Senior Member
We saw Ladyhawke fairly recently (I'd taped it) and I liked it - didn't like the music, though!

My favourite fantasy film from the '80:s is - beyond any doubt, (I adore, adore it) - is The Princess Bride! Smile


Why, I feel all thin, sort of stretched, if you know what I mean, like butter that has been scraped over too much bread.
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2420 is a reply to message #1531 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 23:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Akai  is currently offline Akai
Messages: 76
Registered: October 2008
Location: Seattle, WA
Member
That's because it's amazing.

What is there in the movie that isn't to love: Sick kid being read to by grandpa? good. Giants teamed up with vertically challenged people with large vocabularies? Good. Sailing? good. Pirates? good. Miracles and resurrections? good! big rats? good. Witty repartee during fencing matches between masters? Great! The bad guy proving just how cowardly he is... priceless. That's why over a generation of people have been raised on The Princess Bride.

Ok, I'm done extolling it's awesomeness now. (Oh, and I forgot to mention True Love, which doesn't happen every day.)

[Updated on: Sun, 26 October 2008 23:58]


self respect: the secure feeling that no one, as yet, is suspicious.
--H.L. Mencken
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2421 is a reply to message #2419 ] Sun, 26 October 2008 23:57 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Julia  is currently offline Julia
Messages: 531
Registered: October 2008
Location: Library School
Senior Member
L.R.K. wrote on Sun, 26 October 2008 23:45


My favourite fantasy film from the '80:s is - beyond any doubt, (I adore, adore it) - is The Princess Bride! Smile



You have read the book... right?!?!?!?
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2425 is a reply to message #2421 ] Mon, 27 October 2008 00:12 Go to previous messageGo to next message
L.R.K.  is currently offline L.R.K.
Messages: 1080
Registered: October 2008
Location: Sweden
Senior Member
Julia wrote on Mon, 27 October 2008 04:57

L.R.K. wrote on Sun, 26 October 2008 23:45


My favourite fantasy film from the '80:s is - beyond any doubt, (I adore, adore it) - is The Princess Bride! Smile



You have read the book... right?!?!?!?


Yes. Smile

My edition is the 25th anniversary edition - and ends with an "explanation"/extract? from "Buttercup's Baby" - is this an actual book, do you know?

And Akai - what a lovely description of The Princess Bride! So true! Smile


Why, I feel all thin, sort of stretched, if you know what I mean, like butter that has been scraped over too much bread.
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2430 is a reply to message #2425 ] Mon, 27 October 2008 00:26 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Julia  is currently offline Julia
Messages: 531
Registered: October 2008
Location: Library School
Senior Member
L.R.K. wrote on Mon, 27 October 2008 00:12


Yes. Smile


oh good. I was sure that you must have done, but felt that I needed to ask, just in case.

Quote:


My edition is the 25th anniversary edition - and ends with an "explanation"/extract? from "Buttercup's Baby" - is this an actual book, do you know?


Mine is the same edition. I don't believe that "Buttercup's Baby" is an actual thing... I remember reading something about it somewhere though. Hm. I'll just wander off to Google and check.
[this is taking longer than I thought. I'll post this and come back when/ if I find anything...]

Smile

Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2431 is a reply to message #2430 ] Mon, 27 October 2008 00:40 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Mori-neko  is currently offline Mori-neko
Messages: 365
Registered: October 2008
Location: Corvallis, OR
Senior Member

Julia wrote on Mon, 27 October 2008 00:26

L.R.K. wrote on Mon, 27 October 2008 00:12


Yes. Smile


oh good. I was sure that you must have done, but felt that I needed to ask, just in case.

Quote:


My edition is the 25th anniversary edition - and ends with an "explanation"/extract? from "Buttercup's Baby" - is this an actual book, do you know?


Mine is the same edition. I don't believe that "Buttercup's Baby" is an actual thing... I remember reading something about it somewhere though. Hm. I'll just wander off to Google and check.
[this is taking longer than I thought. I'll post this and come back when/ if I find anything...]

Smile




I don't -think- it is. I tried to find the unabridged version once, before I found that William Goldman just wrote it... I was very sad. I want to know the inbetween bits!
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2437 is a reply to message #1531 ] Mon, 27 October 2008 01:19 Go to previous messageGo to next message
ssshunt  is currently offline ssshunt
Messages: 746
Registered: October 2008
Location: Salt Lake City, Utah
Senior Member

I used to fence and the sword scenes in The Princess Bride are so good--but they're also very funny if you know what to look for. I mean besides all the regular fun (I am not left-handed!) The fencing itself is spectacular and based on real moves, but they tweaked that scene just enough to be almost a mockery of real fencing in some places--and get it perfect in other places. Really amazing.


"And by the way you look fantastic in your boots of Chinese plastic."
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2443 is a reply to message #2437 ] Mon, 27 October 2008 01:48 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Mori-neko  is currently offline Mori-neko
Messages: 365
Registered: October 2008
Location: Corvallis, OR
Senior Member

I fenced as well. Would still, if I had somewhere to do it. And yeah, doing that made Princess Bride even more fun to watch. Also a favorite film, here. ^^
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2467 is a reply to message #2351 ] Mon, 27 October 2008 09:07 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Katherine  is currently offline Katherine
Messages: 72
Registered: October 2008
Location: Michigan, The States
Member
Black Bear wrote on Sun, 26 October 2008 16:21
"Goliath" is actually a [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friesian_horse

Friesian[/url] horse rather than Andalusian. (I went to an event once which included a demonstration by the Friesian Horse Society of America, or something along those lines, and they made QUITE a big deal of the famous movie star Friesians...) Gorgeous beasts! Smile


Argh! That's what I MEANT, dang it. It even felt wrong when I was typing it, but... *sigh* I know. I used to have posters of Friesians hanging on my bedroom wall. Brain fart.

I'm glad you enjoyed the score, though! I won't fight with you. Very Happy I will differ with you, but I won't fight.


Every day for the next year, I'm taking and posting at least one picture. Stop by and take a look!

http://project365lummox.blogspot.com
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2470 is a reply to message #2437 ] Mon, 27 October 2008 09:19 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Susan from Athens  is currently offline Susan from Athens
Messages: 817
Registered: October 2008
Location: Athens, Greece
Senior Member
ssshunt wrote on Mon, 27 October 2008 07:19

I used to fence and the sword scenes in The Princess Bride are so good--but they're also very funny if you know what to look for. I mean besides all the regular fun (I am not left-handed!) The fencing itself is spectacular and based on real moves, but they tweaked that scene just enough to be almost a mockery of real fencing in some places--and get it perfect in other places. Really amazing.


I almost made my tag line: "My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die!" but I felt it might be a tad obscure and nobody would get it. Obviously I was thinking of the wrong crowd.

Princess Bride Rules.

[Updated on: Mon, 27 October 2008 09:20]


“I have always imagined heaven to be a kind of library.” –Jorge Luis Borges
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2473 is a reply to message #2470 ] Mon, 27 October 2008 09:33 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Laura  is currently offline Laura
Messages: 196
Registered: October 2008
Location: Midwestern USA
Senior Member
Susan, I've never met anyone that doesn't know that line! You're in safe hands with us...


Known on both Ravelry and LibraryThing as thelorelei.
Re: Favorite Obscure Fairytale [message #2475 is a reply to message #2473 ] Mon, 27 October 2008 10:29 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Mori-neko  is currently offline Mori-neko
Messages: 365
Registered: October 2008
Location: Corvallis, OR
Senior Member

So my local Rocky Horror Picture Show used to have a gap in the tape, right when Frank N Furter gets shot by the creepy butler dude whose name I can't remember. I'm not sure what the story behind it was, but it had spliced in a few seconds of black with the text, "Scott fucked up". To which the callback was, "Thanks, Scott!"

So, the showing before they got a new copy of the movie, that black tape got replaced with the classic scene between Count Rugen and Inigo Montoya. And the shadow actors playing the butler-dude and Rocky smoothly transition from RHPS to Princess Bride. Only the guy playing Rocky/Inigo is easily beating butlerdude/Rugen, because the latter actor had apparently NEVER SEEN THE MOVIE. So,Rocky keeps doing "Hello, my name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die." followed with, "But YOU didn't see the movie!" *bats sword aside and advances*.

Of course, the audience is quoting it right along with the actor. It was one of the most hilarious nights I've ever had doing RHPS.
Previous Topic:Global Party
Next Topic:Now look what she's done!
Goto Forum:
  


Current Time: Wed May 22 20:34:50 EDT 2013

Total time taken to generate the page: 0.05104 seconds
.:: Contact :: Home ::.

Powered by: FUDforum.
Copyright © FUD Forum Bulletin Board Software