TMA_1 Posted October 29, 2006 Share Posted October 29, 2006 Don Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
3ngel Posted October 30, 2006 Share Posted October 30, 2006 I understand your point TMA-1, but your explanation justifies at all, all the "attitudes" towards the prequels. The point is that, if the prequels announced themselves like a "different way", there would be no problem. In this case we have the Dune, and the prequels. Two different things. No problems, no "attitudes".The problem arise when those as***, dare to say that those s***s are canons, hindering the Encyclopedia, and almost the reprinting of the original Dune novel. You know? I'm almost not being able to find a print of the first book anywhere. But that's only a corollary.Until when they'll admit their books are only a "presumed diversive", totally SEPARATE from THE SIX BOOKS, i'll continue to have that attitude, against persons who had done of ignorance the goal of their life (socio/political/antropological questions? Please, it's a joke? What are you talking about?). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TMA_1 Posted October 30, 2006 Author Share Posted October 30, 2006 totally 3ngel.Another thing I want to mention. It is all just fiction, and shouldnt be taken too seriously. This is obvious, but its always good to mention. Also though because it is fiction, you can do whatever you wish with it! its your world, your creation to do with as you please. there is no canon, the real canon is in your head, what you rationalize in your own mind. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SpiceGuid Posted October 31, 2006 Share Posted October 31, 2006 I agree with 3ngel, the clash originates from Brian Herbert, he had two possible directions:1. documenting, studying, read the originals again and again, amass a more than confortable amount of general knowledge, work, work again and again, then try imitating his father, mimick him and modestly beg our pardon in case we still think he doesn't compare, that would be the "try my best" approach2. warn us he's not his father, he has his own writing style, he has a new and modern audience to please, like it or leave it, that would be the "my own way" approachThe problem is Brian Herbert pretends he's doing his best when actually he does his own way.Same about the sequel: how can Brian pretend he writes the same book his father would have wrote?Having first-hand notes means nothing, a DUNE novel is all about elaboration, perfection lies in details, a draft DUNE plot by Frank Herbert is a nugget, not a gold mine. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrFlibble Posted November 2, 2006 Share Posted November 2, 2006 Also though because it is fiction, you can do whatever you wish with it! its your world, your creation to do with as you please. there is no canon, the real canon is in your head, what you rationalize in your own mind.Very true. But the thing is, it's not BH and KJA's world. It's Frank Herbert's world, and they go around as if it were entirely their own. And the ambitious statements that their writing is "as if FH wrote it himself" (="canon") are simply preposterous. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SpiceGuid Posted November 5, 2006 Share Posted November 5, 2006 I have no problem with Brian Herbert doing what he wants with the Dune license, he has the legal rights to do. And canon means nothing to me. What bothers me is the bold claims "as if FH wrote it himself". May be it's a marketing trick that can't be avoided, i remember the promotion of DUNE, a movie by David Lynch, yet the gimmick was "FH has been involved at every level", and yes FH was involved (in making concessions after concessions), then David Lynch has been forced to even more concessions, until not so much remains from the novel. It was a Dino De Laurentis movie yet it has been promoted as a Frank Herbert movie made a reality by David Lynch."as if FH wrote it himself" is what you are selled.What you buy is another thing, good or not so good, but never what advertised. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Caid Ivik Posted November 8, 2006 Share Posted November 8, 2006 What's bad on not-copying the style of the father? The only problem of prequels is that they're just boring... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TMA_1 Posted November 9, 2006 Author Share Posted November 9, 2006 ahh sometimes they can be entertaining, in my opinion at least. They are just too melodramatic and contrived. my first post is best, I stick by it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SpiceGuid Posted November 10, 2006 Share Posted November 10, 2006 I see the same thing happening with film these days, and in all pop culture forms of entertainmentNot only entertainment.News and magazines tell real-life stories rather than give facts and comment things by domain experts.Nowadays, anything elaborate enough is perceived as academic, an undesirable scholar authority, thus any speech and any writing turns to a show, more personal, more visual, nothing is more appalling than the abstruse and the terse.That's a fact of modern life, it's not new, it's just worse everyday, you can't fight it, you learn to live with it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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