A: Radio Play: Memorable Quotes
37 posts
• Page 2 of 2
Yeah, I just saw the links in another thread. I should have investigated more before going mental. I'm on a modem, so it was tough streaming it, but I got through a bit of it before switching it off. I don't quite like it. Lyra sounds like Malfoy in the way she spits out each line, and Asriel sounds too mechanical -- like he's really reading the lines instead of feeling them. Of course they couldn't sound like they do in my head ... so maybe I'm just not a radio-play person. This doesn't bode well for any movies, though.
There's a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious—makes you so sick at heart—that you can't take part. You can't even passively take part. And you've got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you've got to make it stop. And you've got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you're free, the machine will be prevented from working at all
-
AlexSP - Invincible Starlight
- Posts: 1241
- Joined: Mon Nov 25, 2002 11:45 pm
- AOL: ARosecatcher
- Location: Lahti, Finland
i agree about Asriel actually although generally i thought it was really good. What I'm wondering is how are they going to do Mary and the mulefa when they get to it? Don't know if anyone's posted this yet but I thought it was so funny i made it my signature:
Does it matter if it's self-raising?
- Alice
- Grazer
- Posts: 49
- Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2003 11:34 am
- Location: UK
Asriel: Who is this!?
Lyra: Roger Parslow...he's my friend - not that you're really interested - Goodbye!
Lyra: Roger Parslow...he's my friend - not that you're really interested - Goodbye!
"A man does not show his greatness by being at one extremity, but rather by touching both at once." - Blaise Pascal
"Better a cruel truth than a comfortable delusion" - Edward Abbey
"Better a cruel truth than a comfortable delusion" - Edward Abbey
-
Townie - Village Idiot
- Posts: 1199
- Joined: Sun Apr 04, 2004 3:33 pm
- Location: On the rocky shores of England...
Did you notice that was an extremely old thread? Please read the Ten Commandments (they are posted everywhere).
Why are you everywhere? And never doing things right?
Anyhow, again: read the commandments (link in the Newbie forum), post sensible posts in English and don't be bumping extremely old threads.
Why are you everywhere? And never doing things right?
Anyhow, again: read the commandments (link in the Newbie forum), post sensible posts in English and don't be bumping extremely old threads.
-
DutchCrunch - Witch
- Posts: 657
- Joined: Sun Dec 18, 2005 12:32 am
- Location: the Netherlands
*LOL* These are great! I'll have to find a way to listen to these after I'm done with the audiobooks... (Yes, I admit it. I'm addicted to HDM.)
~Lady Greenie~
~Lady Greenie~
-
ladygreenie - Grazer
- Posts: 30
- Joined: Thu May 04, 2006 11:52 am
- Location: my mind... where else?
The radio play is available fairly cheap most places. The library might have it if you look. I wouldn't keep your hopes too high however, the quality of the plays is, frankly, poor, to say the least. I gave up half way through TSK, feeling that life was too short to listen to such rubbish. You might feel different of course...
If you can't find it anywhere, and you turn out to be a good and nice and regular poster, then I might consider putting my copies on MP3 CD or DVD for you...
If you can't find it anywhere, and you turn out to be a good and nice and regular poster, then I might consider putting my copies on MP3 CD or DVD for you...
We must build the republic of heaven in our world...
Is this heaven?...No, it's Iowa
I sell discount books, so sue me
Times are tight, and starting a band is good way to kill some time until the economy picks up
Is this heaven?...No, it's Iowa
I sell discount books, so sue me
Times are tight, and starting a band is good way to kill some time until the economy picks up
-
Ian - The Frog Prince
- Posts: 4044
- Joined: Fri Mar 25, 2005 8:34 pm
- Location: The Starlite Club
A classic example of rules for the sake of rules.Did you notice that was an extremely old thread? Please read the Ten Commandments .......don't be bumping extremely old threads.
This is the kind of thread which people should be free to add to at any time, as long as they do not repeat something already quoted.
-
furbaby - Angel
- Posts: 987
- Joined: Sat Apr 15, 2006 11:17 am
Of course I'll feel different! The radio plays - TSK specifically - were my first exposure to HDM and the main reason why I went and bought the set and read it four times in the ensuing nine months.The radio play is available fairly cheap most places. The library might have it if you look. I wouldn't keep your hopes too high however, the quality of the plays is, frankly, poor, to say the least. I gave up half way through TSK, feeling that life was too short to listen to such rubbish. You might feel different of course...
Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by the age of eighteen (Albert Einstein)
The Book of Enitharmon
Currently reading: Vanity Fair by William M Thackeray
The Book of Enitharmon
Currently reading: Vanity Fair by William M Thackeray
- Enitharmon
- Ageing Drama Queen
- Posts: 6220
- Joined: Wed Apr 09, 2003 1:13 pm
- Yahoo Messenger: swanofkennet
- AOL: SwanOfKennet
- Location: New Liverpool, town of pie, peas and gravy
Really? I quite enjoyed the plays but in the same way I enjoy pretty much anything connected with a thing I like, even if it's bad, or even derogatory. That's why I can enjoy even bad adaptations - the original's there for me to enjoy, the adaptation is just like listening to/watching something a bit similar. Or something.
But anayway, I do remember feeling that no one who didn;t already like HDM could possibly think much of them from the radio plays. I imagined R4 listeners raising their eyebrows at the apparent low quality of this story that had become so popular. I imagined myself hearing them uninitiated and think, 'But they're no better than Harry Potter!'.
Maybe they were better than I thought. In any case, well done for seeing past the worse elements of the plays...
But anayway, I do remember feeling that no one who didn;t already like HDM could possibly think much of them from the radio plays. I imagined R4 listeners raising their eyebrows at the apparent low quality of this story that had become so popular. I imagined myself hearing them uninitiated and think, 'But they're no better than Harry Potter!'.
Maybe they were better than I thought. In any case, well done for seeing past the worse elements of the plays...
Stay out of Camberwick Green.
- Kyrillion
- Megamouth Sraffie (get custom title)
- Posts: 1299
- Joined: Wed Sep 24, 2003 8:47 pm
- Location: Hove actually
Re: Radio Play: Memorable Quotes
listening to books is like braille reading music. just a terrible, complete loss
There's a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious—makes you so sick at heart—that you can't take part. You can't even passively take part. And you've got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you've got to make it stop. And you've got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you're free, the machine will be prevented from working at all
-
AlexSP - Invincible Starlight
- Posts: 1241
- Joined: Mon Nov 25, 2002 11:45 pm
- AOL: ARosecatcher
- Location: Lahti, Finland
Re: Radio Play: Memorable Quotes
you haven't heard the audiobooks narrated by pullman then alex. listening to a book is the same as listening to a story being read...
p.s. stick to one account, you're technically playing sock puppet.
p.s. stick to one account, you're technically playing sock puppet.
"o stars, isn't it from you that the lover's desire for the face
of his beloved arises? doesn't his secret insight
into her pure features come from the pure constellations?"
- from rainer maria rilke's third elegy
sign up and help edit+create his dark materials wiki articles for bridgetothestars!
http://www.bridgetothestars.net/wiki/index.php
of his beloved arises? doesn't his secret insight
into her pure features come from the pure constellations?"
- from rainer maria rilke's third elegy
sign up and help edit+create his dark materials wiki articles for bridgetothestars!
http://www.bridgetothestars.net/wiki/index.php
-
jessia - Sraffie Queen
- Posts: 10999
- Joined: Sat Feb 08, 2003 5:07 am
- Website: http://cuaroninspired.wordpress.com/
- Location: the colonies
Re: Radio Play: Memorable Quotes
Sorry to post in an old topic. Just listened to TAS radio play, it was comedy gold.
Lee Scoresby‘s ghost: It’s good to do a bit of hand to hand combat. Even if we’re both lacking hands. Yeeehaw!
Mary: My treeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! *crash*
Mary: Can you see Dust?
Serafina: No. Until the wars began I’d never even heard of it.
Mary: I made an amber spyglass!
Lyra: Pan are you fixed now? Is this what you will always be?
Pan: Yes. I’m a pine martin!
No Name: YOU are ALIEEEEEEEEVE?
No Name: YOU’RE. OFFERING. TO. TELL. ME. A. STORYEEEEEEEEEEE? EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE.
Lee Scoresby‘s ghost: It’s good to do a bit of hand to hand combat. Even if we’re both lacking hands. Yeeehaw!
Mary: My treeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! *crash*
Mary: Can you see Dust?
Serafina: No. Until the wars began I’d never even heard of it.
Mary: I made an amber spyglass!
Lyra: Pan are you fixed now? Is this what you will always be?
Pan: Yes. I’m a pine martin!
No Name: YOU are ALIEEEEEEEEVE?
No Name: YOU’RE. OFFERING. TO. TELL. ME. A. STORYEEEEEEEEEEE? EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE.
Nurture your mind with great thoughts; to believe in the heroic makes heroes.
- Benjamin Disraeli
- Benjamin Disraeli
-
tyche - Gallivespian Spy
- Posts: 284
- Joined: Fri Nov 09, 2007 5:13 am
- Location: NZ
37 posts
• Page 2 of 2
Return to “%s” His Dark Materials Adaptations
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 131 guests
Powered by phpBB © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007 phpBB Group
Content © 2001-2011 BridgeToTheStars.Net.
Images from The Golden Compass movie are © New Line Cinema.
Images from The Golden Compass movie are © New Line Cinema.