Apr. 20th, 2009

RAGE

Apr. 20th, 2009 12:20 am
jmtorres: (cusack)
I just went from being heart-warmed to being infuriated in three point one four seconds flat.

I watched this movie called Martian Child in which John Cusack plays a believably eccentric science fiction writer ("So instead of becoming a well-adjusted normal person, I became a sort of successful, deranged person. And I don't know which is better but it doesn't really matter because you don't get to choose," is one of the early lines, which is really so very true about being, well, any kind of fiction writer, I think). This writer adopts a kid who believes he's from Mars, and they have all sorts of touching life lessons about what it means to be human and how really, not going to float away, you are my son forever and ever.

It's sweet.

In the credits I saw it was based on a book by David Gerrold. I know David Gerrold's name, I recognize him as the guy who wrote that old Star Trek episode "The Trouble with Tribbles," I have a book on writing that he wrote that is full of the kind of that's so true of that line I quoted up there, like this method of expanding characterizations by imagining you're interviewing your characters, and this one time he didn't get much in the way of verbal response but his character did try to come over the table and knife him, which is certainly characterization information to explore. I haven't read as many of David Gerrold's novels as I'd like, but what I've seen of his work, I like. And I still do.

I wiki'd the movie to see what it had to say about the novel. It was, unshockingly, based partially on David Gerrold's real life experiences adopting a son. Here's the part that's pissing me the hell off:

David Gerrold is gay and out as gay and adopted a son as an out, gay man. There's two versions of his written story Martian Child: in the novelette, the protagonist's sexuality is not mentioned; in the novel, the protagonist is, like Gerrold, gay. In the movie? THEY STRIPPED THE GAY. They made the protagonist a widower, dead wife two years ago, plus a vague female love interest hanging around. They straightened him up! Polished the gay right off so they could make a fucking family-friendly flick.

FUCK YOU, HOLLYWOOD. FUCK YOU VERY MUCH. WHAT THE FUCKING FUCK.

RAGE

Apr. 20th, 2009 12:35 am
jmtorres: (cusack)
I just went from being heart-warmed to being infuriated in three point one four seconds flat.

I watched this movie called Martian Child in which John Cusack plays a believably eccentric science fiction writer ("So instead of becoming a well-adjusted normal person, I became a sort of successful, deranged person. And I don't know which is better but it doesn't really matter because you don't get to choose," is one of the early lines, which is really so very true about being, well, any kind of fiction writer, I think). This writer adopts a kid who believes he's from Mars, and they have all sorts of touching life lessons about what it means to be human and how really, not going to float away, you are my son forever and ever.

It's sweet.

In the credits I saw it was based on a book by David Gerrold. I know David Gerrold's name, I recognize him as the guy who wrote that old Star Trek episode "The Trouble with Tribbles," I have a book on writing that he wrote that is full of the kind of that's so true of that line I quoted up there, like this method of expanding characterizations by imagining you're interviewing your characters, and this one time he didn't get much in the way of verbal response but his character did try to come over the table and knife him, which is certainly characterization information to explore. I haven't read as many of David Gerrold's novels as I'd like, but what I've seen of his work, I like. And I still do.

I wiki'd the movie to see what it had to say about the novel. It was, unshockingly, based partially on David Gerrold's real life experiences adopting a son. Here's the part that's pissing me the hell off:

David Gerrold is gay and out as gay and adopted a son as an out, gay man. There's two versions of his written story Martian Child: in the novelette, the protagonist's sexuality is not mentioned; in the novel, the protagonist is, like Gerrold, gay. In the movie? THEY STRIPPED THE GAY. They made the protagonist a widower, dead wife two years ago, plus a vague female love interest hanging around. They straightened him up! Polished the gay right off so they could make a fucking family-friendly flick.

FUCK YOU, HOLLYWOOD. FUCK YOU VERY MUCH. WHAT THE FUCKING FUCK.


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jmtorres: From Lady Gaga's Bad Romance music video; the peach-haired, wide-eyed iteration (Default)
So dreamwidth's cross-poster for the web interface now seems to be available. Dreamwidth users can go here: http://www.dreamwidth.org/manage/settings/?cat=othersites to add other journal services to post to when they post at dreamwidth. It looks like up to 5 accounts on other sites. Then at the bottom of the entry posting form, you get this set of options:

http://jmtorres.dreamhosters.com/images/dreamwidthpostingoptions.gif

This is my first test of the cross-poster. I'm using the <lj-cut> tag instead of dreamwidth's <cut> tag at this time because <lj-cut> still works on on DW--as far as I know, all the old LJ tags work on DW, although DW's tags are cooler (in a DW user tag, you can, optionally, specify what journal service the username is on). Hopefully in time the cross-poster will be able to translate DW's tags into the tags of services we're cross-posting to. That would be awesome!

Also I'm hoping that eventually I'll get to write my own custom text for the link back to the DW entry from LJ.

Right, let's hit the button and see how this baby works!

ETA: Oh, hey, so the LJ-cut doesn't work at all on cross-posted! *pause*

*for kicks* [personal profile] jmtorres, [personal profile] jmtorres, [personal profile] jmtorres

Right, so, making that img a link instead of an embed for the courtesy, since the lj-cut doesn't work./ETA

Well.

Apr. 20th, 2009 03:20 am
jmtorres: Quinn from Sliders asleep with book open on his chest. Text: Sweet dreams. (book)
It's possible Memory is not the best book to read when you're depressed.
jmtorres: (stand-in)
Yes! No! Yes! No! Noooooo. But yes. But no. )

Uh, so, Chuck brings out my manic all caps of glee and horror? Yeah.

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jmtorres: From Lady Gaga's Bad Romance music video; the peach-haired, wide-eyed iteration (Default)
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