Boccs
Boccs t1_j2cgulw wrote
Reply to comment by temporarysecretary17 in TIL Frankenstein did not have a hunchback assistant called Igor in either Mary Shelley's novel or the original Universal and Hammer films. The character is a pastiche of multiple characters across several movies. by BringsHomeBones
I mean that could be said of any version of Jekyll and Hyde. They've seen the personality monster so many times that's not going to draw any more people than running it accurately to the book would.
Boccs t1_j2cckyz wrote
Reply to comment by temporarysecretary17 in TIL Frankenstein did not have a hunchback assistant called Igor in either Mary Shelley's novel or the original Universal and Hammer films. The character is a pastiche of multiple characters across several movies. by BringsHomeBones
At this juncture I'd argue a faithful adaptation would actually be more surprising to general audiences. Most people these days associate the story with the personality disorder interpretation, so sticking to the original story would probably throw a lot of people for a loop.
Boccs t1_j2bzt5s wrote
Reply to comment by TommyBoy825 in TIL Frankenstein did not have a hunchback assistant called Igor in either Mary Shelley's novel or the original Universal and Hammer films. The character is a pastiche of multiple characters across several movies. by BringsHomeBones
Terry Pratchett's everythings are a lot more interesting. The man had an unparalleled gift for taking tropes and cliches and turning them so far on their head that it makes you wonder how we never saw them in that light to begin with.
Boccs t1_j2bzno3 wrote
Reply to comment by opiate_lifer in TIL Frankenstein did not have a hunchback assistant called Igor in either Mary Shelley's novel or the original Universal and Hammer films. The character is a pastiche of multiple characters across several movies. by BringsHomeBones
Right up there with the adaptation of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in terms of "missing the point of the book" since in the book Jekyll's serum didn't do anything to his personality at all, only temporarily changed his appearance. It's just under the safety of anonymity Dr. Jekyll was allowed to do all the awful hedonistic shit he wanted to do normally but couldn't because it would damage his reputation as a proper Victorian gentleman. No personality disorders, no change of mentality, just a guy who found out how to be an asshole without people knowing it was him.
Meanwhile 90% of movies make it a magic potion that alters his psyche and body to make them two separate entities fighting for control like a less green Incredible Hulk.
Boccs t1_j0u0tbv wrote
Reply to this girl by digitalmascot
Reminds me of Internet lol Internet
Boccs t1_jcu8xv0 wrote
Reply to The Promise We Made at Sunset/夕阳下许下的承诺 by Meowmarlade
I mean as far as I know the sun looks exactly like that. Not like I can look at it without going blind and experiencing extreme pain.