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Author: hereticheretic Date: Mar 26, 2008 11:34
You have been dumped in the Glory Days of the Hollywood Studios (1930s
or therebouts) with the addresses of the the Idea People of the
studios in question, a set of proper ID/refernces to get you in the
door, and one of the following in the form of a bound Screenplay.
BTW, to give you a bit more motivation you have no money.
Black Lagoon
Avatar: the Last Airbender
Witch Hunter Robin
Girl Genius
Mahou Sensei Negima!
Heroes
Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha
Firefly
Neon Genesis Evangelion
The Terminator
Gargoyles
Ranma 1/2
Boondocks
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Author: Avoid normal situations.Avoid normal situations. Date: Apr 20, 2008 13:05
In rec.arts.sf.movies heretic yahoo.com> wrote:
[..]
> You have been dumped in the Glory Days of the Hollywood Studios (1930s
> or therebouts) with the addresses of the the Idea People of the
> studios in question, a set of proper ID/refernces to get you in the
> door, and one of the following in the form of a bound Screenplay.
[ animes and assorted other modern stuff, deleted ]
> Do you think you have a chance of selling _any_ of them? If so
> which ones?
I'd bet on _Ranma 1/2_. A man who changes into a woman when doused with
cold water is a concept that would fit right in in one of those light
fantasy/comedies that old Hollywood often did well (_Topper_, _The Ghost
and Mrs. Muir_, et al.).
--
alt.flame Special Forces
"The world is turning into a cesspool of imbeciles." -- Harlan Ellison
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Author: markmark Date: Apr 20, 2008 14:22
Avoid normal situations. wrote:
> In rec.arts.sf.movies heretic yahoo.com> wrote:
> [..]
>
>> You have been dumped in the Glory Days of the Hollywood Studios (1930s
>> or therebouts) with the addresses of the the Idea People of the
>> studios in question, a set of proper ID/refernces to get you in the
>> door, and one of the following in the form of a bound Screenplay.
>
> [ animes and assorted other modern stuff, deleted ]
>
>> Do you think you have a chance of selling _any_ of them? If so
>> which ones?
>
> I'd bet on _Ranma 1/2_. A man who changes into a woman when doused with
> cold water is a concept that would fit right in in one of those light
> fantasy/comedies that old Hollywood often did well (_Topper_, _The Ghost
> and Mrs. Muir_, et al.).
Anybody ever make a movie of Thorne Smith's Turnabout?
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Author: Dorothy J HeydtDorothy J Heydt Date: Apr 20, 2008 14:20
In article enews1.newsguy.com>,
Avoid normal situations. eskimo.com> wrote:
>In rec.arts.sf.movies heretic yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> [..]
>
>> You have been dumped in the Glory Days of the Hollywood Studios (1930s
>> or therebouts) with the addresses of the the Idea People of the
>> studios in question, a set of proper ID/refernces to get you in the
>> door, and one of the following in the form of a bound Screenplay.
>
> [ animes and assorted other modern stuff, deleted ]
>
>> Do you think you have a chance of selling _any_ of them? If so
>> which ones?
>
> I'd bet on _Ranma 1/2_. A man who changes into a woman when doused with
>cold water is a concept that would fit right in in one of those light
>fantasy/comedies that old Hollywood often did well (_Topper_, _The Ghost
>and Mrs. Muir_, et al.). ...
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Author: Ken ArromdeeKen Arromdee Date: Apr 23, 2008 13:44
In article enews1.newsguy.com>,
Avoid normal situations. eskimo.com> wrote:
> I'd bet on _Ranma 1/2_. A man who changes into a woman when doused with
>cold water is a concept that would fit right in in one of those light
>fantasy/comedies that old Hollywood often did well (_Topper_, _The Ghost
>and Mrs. Muir_, et al.).
A lot of Ranma is based on parodies and exaggerations of martial arts
movies and Japanese culture. Hollywood decades ago would care about and
understand neither of these.
--
Ken Arromdee / arromdee_AT_rahul.net / http://www.rahul.net/arromdee
"In a superhero story, Superman jumps off buildings and flies. In a realistic
story, Superman doesn't jump off buildings and can't fly. Deconstruction is
writing a story where Superman can't fly but he still jumps off of buildings."
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Author: Dorothy J HeydtDorothy J Heydt Date: Apr 23, 2008 14:20
In article blue.rahul.net>,
Ken Arromdee green.rahul.net> wrote:
>In article enews1.newsguy.com>,
>Avoid normal situations. eskimo.com> wrote:
>> I'd bet on _Ranma 1/2_. A man who changes into a woman when doused with
>>cold water is a concept that would fit right in in one of those light
>>fantasy/comedies that old Hollywood often did well (_Topper_, _The Ghost
>>and Mrs. Muir_, et al.).
>
>A lot of Ranma is based on parodies and exaggerations of martial arts
>movies and Japanese culture. Hollywood decades ago would care about and
>understand neither of these.
True, and it would have to be modified somewhat.
Perhaps a Western, with a tomboy cowgirl who can out-ride and
out-rope all the boys? A collection of shape-changing pools
somewhere out in the lone prairee, found and lost _ad libitum_
like ghostly gold mines, would fit right in.
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Author: marklungomarklungo Date: Apr 27, 2008 12:01
So, would any of these concepts have succeeded in 1930s Hollywood?
(Disclaimer: I haven't actually seen/read all these concepts, but I
think I know enough about them to answer the question.)
> Black Lagoon
Given the popularity of both gangsters and pirates, it might have
worked in the 30s (albeit with a lot of retooling).
> Avatar: the Last Airbender
Martial arts weren't that popular then.
> Witch Hunter Robin
Maybe; horror was popular in the 30s.
> Girl Genius
It's similar enough to the pulp fiction of the time that it might have
had a chance.
> Mahou Sensei Negima!
Fantasy wasn't popular then.
'
> Heroes
Maybe, considering that superheroes were just emerging then, but would
the special effects of the day been able to do the concept justice?
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Author: Lee RatnerLee Ratner Date: Apr 27, 2008 13:36
On Mar 26, 2:34Â pm, heretic yahoo.com> wrote:
> You have been dumped in the Glory Days of the Hollywood Studios (1930s
> or therebouts) with the addresses of the the Idea People of the
> studios in question, a set of proper ID/refernces to get you in the
> door, and one of the following in the form of a bound Screenplay.
>
> BTW, to give you a bit more motivation you have no money.
>
> Â Â Black Lagoon
This could work but you need to get rid of the violent nuns.
> Â Â Avatar: the Last Airbender
This will not work unless it is really re-tooled. You need
to de-Asian it and make it Western. Even then, most of the audience
will not have a base to act as a reference for getting it.
> Â Â Witch Hunter Robin
> Â Â Girl Genius
These two could work without much retooling.
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Author: mike webermike weber Date: Apr 27, 2008 14:38
On Sun, 27 Apr 2008 12:01:45 -0700 (PDT), marklungo
care2.com> wrote:
>> Heroes
>
>Maybe, considering that superheroes were just emerging then, but would
>the special effects of the day been able to do the concept justice?
>
Ah, but we/they didn't know any better, did they/we?
I remember being absolutely satisfied with the FX in the "AUperman"
teevee series (of course, i was five or six at the time) and blown
away by some of Harryhausen's stop-motion and George Pal stuff like
"War of the Worlds" (which is still superior top the Spielberg remake,
BTW).
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Author: Paul CiszekPaul Ciszek Date: Apr 27, 2008 22:49
>
>> Firefly
>
>Probably not. Most 30s sci-fi was strictly in the Flash Gordon/Buck
>Rogers mode.
But westerns were also popular.
--
Please reply to: | President Bush is promoting Peace and Democracy
pciszek at panix dot com | in the Middle East by selling Weapons to the
Autoreply is disabled | King of Saudi Arabia.
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