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John Carter of Mars - is it worth taking a look at, (Original Post) hedgehog Feb 2012 OP
The books are still a lot of fun DavidDvorkin Feb 2012 #1
Super fluffy quakerboy Feb 2012 #2
Yes - I read them back in grade school in the early 60s PufPuf23 Feb 2012 #3
Fluff for teenage boys. Odin2005 Feb 2012 #4
Adolescent Boys like me.. Ichingcarpenter Mar 2012 #5
I've heard that the movie is great eye candy but not very hefty in terms of plot or story semillama Mar 2012 #6
Michael Chabon screenplay? getting old in mke Mar 2012 #7
Look at Project Gutenberg re: ERB and Mars - March 13, 2012 PufPuf23 Mar 2012 #8
Reading it on my Kindle right now. Codeine Mar 2012 #9
I don't know about the books, but the movie is fantastic! hedgehog Mar 2012 #10
I thought the acting was a bit wooden. Odin2005 Mar 2012 #11
I enjoyed it too sonias Apr 2012 #12

PufPuf23

(9,282 posts)
3. Yes - I read them back in grade school in the early 60s
Thu Feb 9, 2012, 07:27 PM
Feb 2012

Last edited Wed Dec 5, 2012, 02:40 PM - Edit history (1)

but gathered up all but Chessman of Mars (of the eleven) at used book stores in the 90s

They are on a small bookshelf in a spare bedroom with all 29 Jim Thompson (weird crime noire like the Getaway and The Grifters and Pop 1280 etc) novels and other oddities (Vonnegut's Player Piano published as Utopia-40 in England, Kilgore Trout's Venus on a Half Shell, old Ursula Lequin, etc).

Started reading The Princess of Mars for the 1st time in 40 years because of your post and found great escapism and adult writing.

I liked The Mars books much better than Tarzan by ERB.

ERB and Bradbury's Martian Chronicles and Ace doubles are my childhood memories of science fiction.

Ichingcarpenter

(36,988 posts)
5. Adolescent Boys like me..
Wed Mar 7, 2012, 07:27 AM
Mar 2012

My reading level improved from 5.2 to ,6.4 after I got captured by the sexy covers by Frank Frazetta of the paperbacks of the series. yes it was fluff


Carl Sagen loved them too growing up

semillama

(4,583 posts)
6. I've heard that the movie is great eye candy but not very hefty in terms of plot or story
Thu Mar 8, 2012, 02:13 PM
Mar 2012

Also, very long.

Might have to sneak out to see it by myself, since really I just want to see Barsoom up on the screen and frankly don't need it to be a great film.

getting old in mke

(813 posts)
7. Michael Chabon screenplay?
Fri Mar 9, 2012, 10:14 AM
Mar 2012

David Brin posted yesterday: "Let me be plain. I don’t care what the critics say. If Chabon scripted John Carter, I am going to run out and watch John Carter. With ears as wide open as my eyes. "

PufPuf23

(9,282 posts)
8. Look at Project Gutenberg re: ERB and Mars - March 13, 2012
Tue Mar 13, 2012, 10:51 PM
Mar 2012

Top 100 EBooks yesterday

1.A Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs (2179)
2.The Kama Sutra of Vatsyayana by Vatsyayana (791)
3.The Gods of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs (675)
4.The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (655)
5.Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain (646)
6.Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen (619)
7.The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (614)
8.Grimm's Fairy Tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm (588)
9.Novelas Cortas by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón (528)
10.Warlord of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs (524)
11.English Literature by William J. Long (518)
12.Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka (507)
13.Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll (487)
14.How to Analyze People on Sight by Elsie Lincoln Benedict and Ralph Paine Benedict (485)
15.Thuvia, Maid of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs (468)
16.Ulysses by James Joyce (420)
17.The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 03 (419)
18.Frankenstein by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (411)
19.Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman (388)
20.The Chessmen of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs (376)
21.Creation Myths of Primitive America by Jeremiah Curtin (353)
22.Great Expectations by Charles Dickens (341)
23.The Gods of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs (335)



Top 100 Authors yesterday

1.Burroughs, Edgar Rice (6170)
2.Doyle, Arthur Conan, Sir (3095)
3.Twain, Mark (2471)
4.Dickens, Charles (2323)
5.Austen, Jane (1726)
6.Shakespeare, William (1687)
7.Poe, Edgar Allan (1187)
8.Carroll, Lewis (1117)
9.Verne, Jules (1080)
10.Wilde, Oscar (1049)
11.Burton, Richard Francis, Sir (1019)
12.Wells, H. G. (Herbert George) (945)
13.Tolstoy, Leo, graf (845)
14.Kafka, Franz (844)
15.Grimm, Wilhelm (844)
16.Grimm, Jacob (844)
17.Vatsyayana (817)
18.Bhide, Shivaram Parashuram (791)
19.Indrajit, Bhagavanlal (791)
20.Joyce, James (789)
21.Wodehouse, P. G. (Pelham Grenville) (782)
22.Plato (780)
23.Dumas, Alexandre (740)
24.Stevenson, Robert Louis (724)
25.Dostoyevsky, Fyodor (684)

http://www.gutenberg.org/browse/scores/top

hedgehog

(36,286 posts)
10. I don't know about the books, but the movie is fantastic!
Mon Mar 19, 2012, 10:40 AM
Mar 2012

I think it is getting poor reviews because of its complexity. You can't relax for a minute or you're going to miss something.

sonias

(18,063 posts)
12. I enjoyed it too
Mon Apr 2, 2012, 05:41 PM
Apr 2012

Caught it this weekend. After I saw the film I searched around for a review that would reaffirm my view. I know it's not getting a lot of positive reviews, but I found one I really liked. This is the one that got it close for me.

Christopher Orr - The Atlantic 3/9/12
The Hokey Fun of 'John Carter'

You can take the boy out of Pixar, but can you take Pixar out of the boy? That question was raised last year by Mission: Impossible-Ghost Protocol and now by John Carter, the first two big live-action films to be directed by members of Pixar's enviable stable of writer/producer/directors. The provisional answer, I'm happy to report, is no—or at least, not entirely.

The Pixarian in question this time is Andrew Stanton, who, in addition to directing Finding Nemo and Wall-E, essentially served as the studio's in-house screenwriter on its first five films, and has played some role (executive producer, voice actor) in every Pixar film save Cars 2. As a movie, John Carter is not near the level of Stanton's Pixar work—but then, how could it be? The studio's magic is in large part the result of its collaborative ethos and the animators' freedom from the demands of a live-action shooting schedule. Still, the modest charms of John Carter are another reminder that Pixar's success is due not merely to a triumph of process, but to a collection of exceptional individual filmmakers.

The plot is not a selling point. But the film understands that, at the end of the day, we are there to have fun. The first installment of the John Carter saga, upon which the movie is loosely based, was penned by Edgar Rice Burroughs (of Tarzan fame) 100 years ago. Entitled Under the Moons of Mars when it was first published serially, and retitled A Princess of Mars when it was later released as a novel, it is an ur-text of modern genre fiction—pulp, science, fantasy, and superhero—an important forebear not only of Superman but of Brave New World as well. It is, however, by any objective measure, an awful book: inert in style, haphazard in plot, and woefully, annihilatingly devoid of humor. Given such source material, Stanton's John Carter might easily have been the kind of glum, tooth-clenchingly self-serious "entertainment" of which we have seen so much in recent years.

But it's not. Rather, Stanton embraces the inescapable ridiculousness of his premise and adds several additional doses of likable whimsy.


I certainly wasn't expecting a LoTR kind of presentation, so I felt like I got what I paid for. Good entertainment for my money.

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