Friday, August 24, 2007

The Princes Bride and Stardust

There have been many reviews of Stardust comparing it to The Princess Bride. While I think the comparison is valid, it is less because the movies are terribly alike, and more because they are of the same genre. Off the top of my head, they are the only two movies I can think of in that genre. For the sake of continuing to talk about this genre, I'm going to start refering to it as Fairy Tale, but there is a distinct possibility that that name will turn out to be a misnomer as more movies are made in the genre.

Before defining what this genre is, I'm going to explore what other genres have in common that differentiates this one from them, because I've begged the question by naming the new genre Fairy Tale. Surely, I hear you cry, there are tons of movies in the Fairy Tale genre. I say that there are tons of movies based on fairy tales that have been made in other genres. Whenever Hollywood makes a movie from an existing story, they do so in one of the genres they are comfortable with. It is a pretty solid rule that when a story is made into a movie, some elements will have to be dropped to make it fit into a two hour movie. Which elements are cut will depend on the genre in which the movie is being made. If we're making a romance, we'll tend to drop action sequences. If we're making a thriller, we tend to drop comic interludes. And so forth.

What distinguishes Stardust and The Princess Bride is that they are made in the genre of Fairy Tale, with all of their elements intact. Cuts have certainly been made, but they are not categorical cuts, but primarily ones of duration and detail. They contain all of the elements of their respective base stories, not sacrificing them for a genre. It is entirely possible that other movies will be made with all of their elements included, if truncated. If some of them fall out side the fairy tale classification, I'll have to change the name of the genre, until then, I'm sticking with Fairy Tale.

I think that being part of this genre is a large part of what will help these movies endure as classics. Being fairy tales makes them timeless, but being complete will make them stable.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

The Puppini Sisters

They've got the old sound down pat, and do some unexpected covers that remind me of Nouvelle Vague. You can grab them at iTunes:

Friday, August 03, 2007

Bridges and Safety

I heard this morning that the Governor of Minnesota has called for an emergency inspection of all bridges in the state with the same structure as the one that collapsed.

I may well be missing something here, but my understanding is that there is already a national bridge inspection database, which rated the collapsed bridge as unsafe in 1990. We don't need an emergency inspection sweep, we need to do something about the bridges which have already been inspected and rated unsafe.

It was said that the unsafe rating was not significant because there were 77,000 other bridges with the same rating in the country. To me, this seems like saying that DUI related deaths are not significant because there are hundreds of them every year. The fact that there are lots of a bad thing does not make the thing better. Maybe I'm just missing the logic here.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Name That Tune

Michael Stackpole has refered to the relationship between authors and readers as an ongoing game of Name That Tune. That the reader is constantly thinking, "Oh, I know how this ends," and it is the author's responsibility to say "No, you don't." If the author is right, and the reader gets to the end thinking, "I see how we got here, and it makes perfect sense, but I never saw it coming," the author has succeeded. If the reader was right, they're unlikely to ever read that author again.

I'm inclined to think that Michael is right, at least most of the time. I know it's been true for the books I have enjoyed the most. There have been a couple of cases of books that were very predictable that I enjoyed immensely, but they have tended toward cliché books which are a literary equivalent of B-movies. Immensely fun, but not high art.