Articles tagged with fantasy

Most Rebootable 80s Franchise (Part 1) [Think Tank]

posted by Think Tank on Friday, June 5th, 2009 at 11:02am

Think Tank Eighties NightToday the Overthinking It staff tackles the pressing question of which 80s franchise they would most like to see revived, inspired by the upcoming Ghostbusters revival and by our general obsession with the decade of (many of) our births. By the way, Were You Aware that Beverly Hills Cop, Robocop, Short Circuit, Escape From New York, The Thing, Scanners, and Police Academy are ALL scheduled for sequels or remakes?  Truly, there is no new thing under the sun.

Read Part 1 today, and stay tuned for Part 2 tomorrow—and your chance to vote for the winner.

Conan, by Belinkie

conan1I always liked the Schwarzenegger Conan the Barbarian movie, but I didn’t truly get the awesomeness of Conan until I read Robert E. Howard’s original stories. Howard wrote pulp fiction during the Depression, for magazines like Weird Tales and Fight Stories. And when you read his stuff, you feel like a ten-year-old reading under the covers by flashlight. Here’s the beginning of an early Conan story, “The Frost Giant’s Daughter”:

The clangor of the swords had died away, the shouting of the slaughter was hushed; silence lay on the red-stained snow. The bleak pale sun that glittered so blindingly from the ice-fields and the snow-covered plains struck sheens of silver from rent corselet and broken blade, where the dead lay as they had fallen. The nerveless hand yet gripped the broken hilt; helmeted heads back-drawn in the death-throes, tilted red beards and golden beards grimly upward, as if in last invocation to Ymir the frost-giant, god of a warrior-race.

Goddamnit, Robert E. Howard, you are a magnificent bastard! I love the way this guy writes. He just goes for it, you know? A lot of people will dismiss this as pretentious cheese, and maybe it is. But it’s the most glorious pretentious cheese ever put to paper.

Now I’m not going to deny that the second Conan film, Conan the Destroyer, is pretty weak sauce. (For starters, the producers wanted the violence toned down to get a PG rating.) But the third film is already written, and by all accounts it is awesome. It’s by the screenwriter of the original, John Milius, and it’s called King Conan: Crown of Iron. The title alone makes me happy.

I’m just going to quote some of the awesomeness that this screenplay contains, as recorded in this script review. Here’s Conan, imparting some wisdom to his young son.

Fixing Pan’s Labyrinth

posted by mlawski on Wednesday, September 10th, 2008 at 8:59am

Pan’s Labyrinth, the gorgeous film by Guillermo del Toro, was on TV again the other day, and just seeing certain scenes brought all the feelings I had upon my first viewing flooding back.  I should say at the outset that it is easily one of the best fantasy films in recent memory.  Nevertheless, I left the theater with a niggling discomfort.  Where the discomfort came from I didn’t know.  Until now.

Big old spoilers after the jump.

The Nazgul = Epic Fail

posted by Matthew Belinkie on Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008 at 8:21am

At one point in The Return of the King, Gandalf tells Pippin:

Sauron has yet to reveal his deadliest servant. The one who will lead Mordor’s armies in war. The one they say no living man can kill. The Witch King of Angmar. You’ve met him before. He stabbed Frodo at Weathertop. He is the lord of the Nazgul, the greatest of the Nine.

And I thought to myself, “Oh, you mean that dude they chased away with a torch?”

Everyone in these movies talks about the Nazgul like they’re Jason, the Terminator, and Anton Chigurh rolled into one. As far as I can tell, they are pretty much useless. In fact, I think Sauron would have been better off sending a labradoodle, and I’m going to prove it.

Henry Rowentgardner vs. Lou Gehrig

posted by fenzel on Monday, February 4th, 2008 at 8:07am

WARNING: UNSURPRISING SPORTS MOVIE SPOILERS

COUNTERFACTUAL!!!

I have a secret for you. The kid in the picture is the greatest pitcher who ever lived.

In fact, breaking his arm made him a better pitcher. Tons better. Not practice, not genetics, not HGH, but a freak accident, breaking his arm.

What, you don’t believe me?