La-La Land Records' HOOK (2CD Expanded) Anticipation thread
#281
Posted 25 February 2012 - 12:10 PM
#282
Posted 25 February 2012 - 12:14 PM
At least, in my opinion.
#283
Posted 25 February 2012 - 12:30 PM
#284
Posted 25 February 2012 - 12:35 PM
I love it all. Wonderful escapist fantasy. Negative reaction to the movie by adults always sounds to jaded and cynical to me. But I'm biased because I've "believed" since I was 4.
It's not that I have anything against escapist fantasy or even children's movies, provided they are well made. Hell, I love E.T., still one of my favorite movies! But Hook... urrrgghhh! I now officially consider it Spielberg's weakest movie.
No wonder only 29% of critics have given the film a positive review according to Rotten Tomatoes.
By the way, anybody else find it a bit weird/distracting/amusing that Oskar Schindler's wife is also Peter Pan's wife? (They are both played by the same actress Caroline Goodall.)
#285
Posted 25 February 2012 - 12:43 PM
The best part of the movie is the beginning, before the movie shifts to Neverland (and even this isn't so great)!
At least, in my opinion.
The beginning is the most boring part. "I got to go to my son's baseball match. Blabediblabedibla..." "Daddy isn't coming to my baseball match. Blabediblabediblabedibla"... Baseball is boring. Who cares about baseball? Nobody understand the fucking rules!
I love it all. Wonderful escapist fantasy. Negative reaction to the movie by adults always sounds to jaded and cynical to me.
+1
#286
Posted 25 February 2012 - 12:46 PM
#287
Posted 25 February 2012 - 01:03 PM
#288
Posted 25 February 2012 - 01:05 PM
That latter scene was way better (and way better scored by John WIlliams too)!
#289
Posted 25 February 2012 - 01:11 PM
I love it all. Wonderful escapist fantasy. Negative reaction to the movie by adults always sounds to jaded and cynical to me.
It's called 'cognitive dissonance'. Most bad reviews for HOOK are sound and more than deserved. Even Spielberg agrees. But there's nothing wrong with loving shit, you know? My proud collection of EMMANUELLE soundtracks is the living proof!
#290
Posted 25 February 2012 - 01:12 PM
#291
Posted 25 February 2012 - 01:16 PM
Have you forgotten how to fly?
No.
#292
Posted 25 February 2012 - 01:37 PM
It's not that I have anything against escapist fantasy or even children's movies, provided they are well made.
If anything, Hook is a non-escapist take on the Pan story.
#293
Posted 25 February 2012 - 03:02 PM
I love it all. Wonderful escapist fantasy. Negative reaction to the movie by adults always sounds to jaded and cynical to me. But I'm biased because I've "believed" since I was 4.
I think it's honestly one of speliberg's best, and I think, regardless of what the critics said, it's a good movie. As it's not only my opinion, but everyone i've ever talked to loves it also.
#294
Posted 25 February 2012 - 03:03 PM
The beginning is the most boring part. "I got to go to my son's baseball match. Blabediblabedibla..." "Daddy isn't coming to my baseball match. Blabediblabediblabedibla"... Baseball is boring. Who cares about baseball? Nobody understand the fucking rules!
If you're a father and you love your child, it doesn't matter if he's in a teddy bear hugging contest. You show up and support him and be proud. Otherwise his fragile little mind doubts you love him regardless of how much money you throw at him on food, clothes, and shelter.
Besides, baseball is established early on as Jack's thing so Captain Hook can exploit it and turn him against his father. No other sport that American audiences will "get" would have the line "run home" to play with Jack's mind, or "stealing" to get its own mid-game pirate execution. And the deep ball bonking Peter on the head is pretty clever as a means to set him right on his path of self-realization: his own son knocks the badly needed sense into him.
I just find it awfully silly that Peter Pan returns from Neverland, settles in England, falls in love with Wendy's granddaughter......and moves to America. Seriously? I guess it's a result of casting Robin Williams as Peter and he didn't want to hold an English accent for the entire movie. Peter Pan growing old in America makes a little better sense in that regard than an American Robin Hood in England, but I digress.
@Wojo: stop being facetious.
#295
Posted 25 February 2012 - 03:31 PM
I love it all. Wonderful escapist fantasy. Negative reaction to the movie by adults always sounds to jaded and cynical to me. But I'm biased because I've "believed" since I was 4.
This is exactly what I say about the Star Wars Prequels.
#296
Posted 25 February 2012 - 03:52 PM
*In b4 but they sucked and raped my childhood*
#297
Posted 25 February 2012 - 04:09 PM
I think it's honestly one of speliberg's best, and I think, regardless of what the critics said, it's a good movie. As it's not only my opinion, but everyone i've ever talked to loves it also.
After medication, i suppose.
#298
Posted 25 February 2012 - 04:17 PM
Izena duen guztia omen da.
#299
Posted 25 February 2012 - 05:03 PM
#301
Posted 25 February 2012 - 06:00 PM
After medication, i suppose.I think it's honestly one of speliberg's best, and I think, regardless of what the critics said, it's a good movie. As it's not only my opinion, but everyone i've ever talked to loves it also.
+1
Never was a fan of the movie, nor will I ever be...
Music Muse Reviews: "Escape From Tomorrow by Abel Korzeniowski
#302
Posted 25 February 2012 - 06:31 PM
I watched Hook again today after about 10 years since the last time I saw it. Surprisingly, I like it better as an adult than I did as a child or a young person. There was something about Peter Banning's struggle with work/life balance that seems more relevant to me now in a general sense. I also liked the portrayal of Banning's life in the US as grounded, work-focused and almost neo-realist, but the moment the film shifts to the UK, the film becomes a fantasy as if London represents some whimsical old-world nostalgia. I suppose this is part of why some critics think the film is disjointed, but I always attributed that criticism to the fact that the moment Dustin Hoffman appears, we lose interest in Peter's story of self-discovery (whether real of imagined, he still becomes a better man at the end), because Hoffman chews up every scene he's in, even Robin Williams can't keep up because he's playing what could arguably be the most "normal" role of his career at that point.
I actually find it remarkable how restrained Williams is early on in the film. Even after his character shift he never goes into his usual manic comedic shtick.
- Patrick Bateman on the Maestro
#303
Posted 25 February 2012 - 06:48 PM
#304
Posted 25 February 2012 - 06:59 PM
It's too bad Kevin Kline, who they originally cast as Peter, had to back out because the movie Soapdish was taking too long to film. I think he would have played the part better.
I love SOAPDISH, but it would have been interesting how Kline's presence would have changed the tone of the movie. Williams was a good choice, but in many scenes he's playing a Bob Hope-type character who is stranded in a psychedelic ROAD TO NEVERLAND picture and then rapidly switches gears to play one of Spielberg's awful 'emotional' scenes which feel like especially revolting tv...those even John Gielgud (or Kline) couldn't have saved and that's saying a lot.
#305
Posted 25 February 2012 - 11:43 PM
No way, Robin Williams was perfect!
+1
#307
Posted 26 February 2012 - 01:42 AM
@Wojo: stop being facetious.
#308
Posted 26 February 2012 - 02:03 AM
#309
Posted 26 February 2012 - 02:49 AM
Who's this John Williams fellow?
@Wojo: stop being facetious.
#310
Posted 26 February 2012 - 10:49 PM
And baseball is the best sport ever!!! LOL
#311
Posted 26 February 2012 - 10:53 PM
The reason I want this album is not so much for expansions, but for improved sound quality which was quite weak on the OST.
Karol
#313
Posted 26 February 2012 - 11:16 PM
John Williams sucks, he doesn't write with a quill pen, there is no emotion in pencil music ! Purcell is the man !Among all the things I have done in my short and pitiful life, becoming an inside joke on JWFAN is the one I'm the least proud of.
#314
Posted 26 February 2012 - 11:35 PM
The nursery cue is actually really badass in the film with the sound effects of the sea and pirate ship.
#315
Posted 27 February 2012 - 06:37 AM
I LOVE the cover art!!!!!!!!!!!
Robin Williams looks like he's on meth. Other than it's nice.
#317
Posted 27 February 2012 - 11:50 AM
I love it all. Wonderful escapist fantasy. Negative reaction to the movie by adults always sounds to jaded and cynical to me. But I'm biased because I've "believed" since I was 4.
This is exactly what I say about the Star Wars Prequels.
Everyone has his/her own truly all-time favourites and we all stand up to defend and protect them from what we think is unfair negative criticism, particularly when it comes to problematic pieces like Hook.
I saw the film when I was 13 and of course I liked it for what it was. But later on I began to see its own limits and I understood why this is a problematic movie. On the paper, it was the perfect Spielberg film, full of themes and motifs dear to the director. It could have been really a landmark for his career at that time, because the potential was to realize a painfully take on the loss of innocence and childhood. The problem of the film lies in a script that doesn't spend enough time to make us believe that Peter Banning/Pan can actually become a child again. I think the pivotal moment when Pan finally finds his "happy thought" (i.e. being a father) is absolutely wrong. Banning can become Pan again and fight Hook back only if becoming a true child again and rediscovering his true inner self, hence I would have had him transforming again into a real child (I agree it wouldn't have been easy in terms of suspension of disbelief, btw). The deep nature of James Barrie's original story was to stop the time and make childhood an endless state, so Spielberg should have had the guts to make us see a true Peter Pan without putting an adult into ridiculous tights and hairdo, but casting a real child for that segment of the film. Then, when he realizes that he can't be a child again forever and must return to his adult self because has a family and two kids, the moment would have been infinitely more painful.
However Spielberg already did a movie like that. It's called Empire of the Sun.
"Let me say, however, there is no "next" John Williams. Sadly, he is unique--- a figure who simultaneously embodies and transcends the music of all the masters of film music who preceded him (much like Brahms and Wagner of the Romantic era). He comes from a time when the craft of music in film was still one of the ear, heart and mind. Today, sadly, the craft is largely technical. Most composers do not conceive their music "inwardly" but rather at the computer--- and with rather limited skills, musically, at that. The inner spirit knows no boundaries--- our plastic abilities, sadly, do. John is a man of spirit, heart, intellect and soaring music." -- Conrad Pope about John Williams
#318
Posted 27 February 2012 - 01:54 PM
The problem of the film lies in a script that doesn't spend enough time to make us believe that Peter Banning/Pan can actually become a child again. I think the pivotal moment when Pan finally finds his "happy thought" (i.e. being a father) is absolutely wrong. Banning can become Pan again and fight Hook back only if becoming a true child again and rediscovering his true inner self, hence I would have had him transforming again into a real child (I agree it wouldn't have been easy in terms of suspension of disbelief, btw).
Or it would be necessary to see how the transformation into Pan affects Banning's real life. Spielberg only offers lame patronizing speeches.
#319
Posted 27 February 2012 - 11:23 PM
when [Pan] realizes that he can't be a child again forever and must return to his adult self because has a family and two kids, the moment would have been infinitely more painful.
The closest that the movie came to that is when Peter Pan celebrates the disappearance of Hook into the stuffed crocodile with as much glee and delight as any of the other [surviving] Lost Boys, and his two children stand by looking solemn, like "can we go now?"
@Wojo: stop being facetious.
#320
Posted 05 March 2012 - 03:21 AM
This continuous track (but indexed) of pure film score glory:
5. The Ultimate War: To War** 9:45
6. The Ultimate War: The Death Of Rufio* 2:36
7. The Ultimate War: Sword Fight* 5:32
* Previously unreleased
** Contains previously unreleased material
Wonderful. Intrada probably would have put that as one long track.
Then they would have to change it to this because that is the way Mr. Williams wanted it.
MV
1. Nightwatch/Killer By Night - Johnny Williams and Quincy Jones 2. Diamond Head/Gone with the Wave - Johnny Williams/Lalo Schifrin 3. Mass - Leonard Bernstein 4. Bernstein with the New York Philharmonic - Leonard Bernstein
Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: La-La Land, Hook
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