Re: [TV] Wheel of Time series
Posted: Thu Sep 02, 2021 9:22 pm
I assume the memes will be epic.
That is not dead which can eternal lie, and with strange aeons bring us some web forums whereupon we can gather
http://garbi.online/forum/
I meant to add to this. The first 3 books works as a stand alone trilogy if they decide not to do the whole series.Zaxxon wrote: Thu Sep 02, 2021 6:42 pmYes, yes, no, yes.Holman wrote: Thu Sep 02, 2021 6:40 pm Utterly innocent question:
I've never read a word of Robert Jordan. Is the series complete? Do the showrunners have a total thing to work with, and is it possible to film it? Is it adaptable to what we do with fantasy these days?
(Obviously I own a copy of Google, but I think I'll get more nuanced opinions here.)
I’m struggling to accept that Lan would make that kind of grand and dramatic entrance. Or that the Winespring Inn would be that hopping or that diverse, at least at that point in the story.Smoove_B wrote:
14 books... 20 seasons, maybe, if the seasons were a full 24 episodes and each episode was a full hour.But, anyone hoping for any movie/TV version of the WoT to adhere closely to the books is delusional. It would take 20 seasons or more of a TV show to adhere in any way closely to the books.
Bombadil I agree with. The Scouring of the Shire I do not. That part was important. It was the vehicle by which he showed how much the main characters had changed and grown over the course of the trilogy. Without it they just came home and... went back to life as usual?JCC wrote: Fri Oct 08, 2021 8:42 pm
I remember how many Tolkien nerds were so upset when Tom Bombadil wasn't in the LOTR movies. I laughed hard at that outrage. How dare they leave out a completely pointless part of the books?! Thank goodness they wrote out the ridiculous, anti-climactic epilogue of Saruman invading the Shire at the end.
My read is that they are not sure how to sell this series yet. This was pretty much them saying 'Did you know we have Sarah Paulson...I mean Rosamund PIke?!" The teaser really didn't give you much beyond that. Still I am looking forward to this. It'll be interesting at least to see how they tackle this and which themes they go after. Will it be more Young Adult (which it has strong hints of) or will they go deeper? I can't wait to find out.YellowKing wrote: Fri Oct 08, 2021 11:38 pm <shrug> I liked it. I have a feeling if the way someone walked into an inn upsets you, you're in for a rough time.
They have to make the show for the 95% of viewers who *haven't* read the books, so if they need to add a bit of dramatic flair to tell the viewer "Lan and Moiraine are important to the plot" then I'm OK with it.
I think it's more that the feel of the whole thing was off. The atmosphere was wrong.YellowKing wrote: Fri Oct 08, 2021 11:38 pm <shrug> I liked it. I have a feeling if the way someone walked into an inn upsets you, you're in for a rough time.
I am also picking up a YA vibe - I think it's related to so many of the promotional shots we've seen so far are filled with teens eyeballing each other longingly.malchior wrote: Sat Oct 09, 2021 9:55 am Will it be more Young Adult (which it has strong hints of) or will they go deeper? I can't wait to find out.
Smoove_B wrote: Sat Oct 09, 2021 12:44 pm Related (maybe?) I watched the first season of the Shannara Chronicles (an MTV production) last month, just because.
Blackhawk wrote: Sat Oct 09, 2021 2:33 pm In the first five minutes they dropped the line, "I’m definitely sensing a lot of sweaty elf boy hate." I cringed, and only stuck with it because I enjoyed Allanon, and because there is so little fantasy on TV>
This. We watched all of both Shannara and Sword of Truth. They weren't great, but they got the job done for us.Blackhawk wrote: Sat Oct 09, 2021 4:17 pm It's surprisingly like Legend of the Seeker in that regard. The good points (Zed in Seeker) and the lack of alternative genre content sometimes make it worth the watch.
I first read Eye of the World in 4th or 5th grade... so I'd consider WoT pre-teen.Smoove_B wrote: Sat Oct 09, 2021 12:44 pmI am also picking up a YA vibe - I think it's related to so many of the promotional shots we've seen so far are filled with teens eyeballing each other longingly.malchior wrote: Sat Oct 09, 2021 9:55 am Will it be more Young Adult (which it has strong hints of) or will they go deeper? I can't wait to find out.
Related (maybe?) I watched the first season of the Shannara Chronicles (an MTV production) last month, just because. What little of the WoT we've seen so far seems (to me) to be tilting more in that direction than GoT. It's hard to say though as we really haven't seen too much. Considering Jordan himself said the WoT was influenced/inspired by the Lord of the Rings, I think it could be walking a fine-line. While I wouldn't label LotR as a YA series, legions of teens were reading it - as I suspect is the case for the WoT as well. I didn't start until college, but had I been exposed to the WoT when it came out (I was in high school), I have no doubts I would have devoured it. Whereas LotR is completely missing female characters (total bro-fest) the WoT is definitely more contemporary - especially for the roles women play in the overall story. I mean, it's not a leather goddess fever dream like the Sword of Truth series, but who knows?
I guess my point is, when you have a story about teens it seems likely there's going to be a chance it's going to tilt towards teen drama.
I'm not sure how I ended up here, but I'm now filled with a desire to re-watch Legend of the Seeker and I need to process that.
Wow. I would not have touched this book as a 10 year old. Your parents were either really cool or you had older siblings that were.Archinerd wrote: Sat Oct 09, 2021 10:08 pm I first read Eye of the World in 4th or 5th grade... so I'd consider WoT pre-teen.
We saw it at the library and thought the cover was cool, and that the book was incredibly long. Three of us took turns reading it, which took awhile since we had to alternate checking out the only library copy.
I agree. WoT was never gritty fantasy (and shouldn't be), but something seems 'off' with the tone from what we've seen so far. I'm also still going to watch.RunningMn9 wrote: Sun Oct 10, 2021 12:00 am Whether a book is YA or pre-teen, isn't a function of how old you where when you read it. WOT isn't Harry Potter. This show is going to be a disaster. I'm still going to watch.
I'm pretty sure the primary target audience is people who know what Game of Thrones means.RunningMn9 wrote: Tue Oct 12, 2021 9:11 pm As for the target audience of the show, presumably part of the target is the people that know what the Wheel of Time means.
I haven't watched the preview, but my conception of how the characters looked is probably very much oriented towards the Michael Whelan covers.rittchard wrote:When that preview came on, I had absolutely no idea what I was watching. I thought it was some Asian fusion martial arts movie lmao.
When I finally saw it was Wheel of Time, I was a little stunned. I appreciate diversity casting but I'm not sure it will work for me with this series. I kind of grew up with really distinct images of what some of the characters looked like in my head (which is actually rare for me), but aside from Moiraine, none of them look like what I imagined. I also never pictured any sort of martial arts battles when I read the books lol.
I'm sure it will be fine in the end, it was just a bit jolting for me.
I think you're correct. Double-checking seems to reveal that Darrell K. Sweet is the primary Cover Artist, until his passing.Blackhawk wrote: Wed Oct 13, 2021 9:12 am I thought Whelan only did one cover (the last one), as the original cover artist had died (Whelan is one of my favorite cover artists.) I actually have a couple of his collections.
Cover art is weird when it's not on the book, perspective and composition are a mess when viewed like this.Pyperkub wrote: Wed Oct 13, 2021 11:18 amI think you're correct. Double-checking seems to reveal that Darrell K. Sweet is the primary Cover Artist, until his passing.Blackhawk wrote: Wed Oct 13, 2021 9:12 am I thought Whelan only did one cover (the last one), as the original cover artist had died (Whelan is one of my favorite cover artists.) I actually have a couple of his collections.
I didn't realize they were filming in Prague, but it sounds like they're really committed to the long haul - which makes sense. Keep moving while the momentum can help carry you forward.Want to make the next Game of Thrones? This is how it begins. Viewers have become accustomed to a kind of scale, or realism, that creeps toward the actually real. “It's not like we can go say, ‘Oh, you know, Game of Thrones, season one, they only spent this,’ ” Mike Weber, an executive producer of The Wheel of Time, says. “The audience expectation is coming off of the last season of Game of Thrones, not the first season.” For the first season of Thrones, HBO spent about $6 million an episode, a number that steadily climbed from there. Amazon and The Wheel of Time? They're starting at upward of a reported $10 million per episode—for eight total, the first of which will begin streaming in November—just to get out of the gate.
Same here hoping it is not a mess. The clip above looks like it involves Shadar Logoth. That's the halfway point in the book loosely. I am curious how much of EOTW they cover because I don't know how they get to the Blight in 8 episodes. I guess we'll see how deep the knife goes into the plotting. It'll be interesting because the first three books have the best flow. All the waste is introduced progressively from book four on.Smoove_B wrote: Thu Oct 21, 2021 11:51 amI didn't realize they were filming in Prague, but it sounds like they're really committed to the long haul - which makes sense. Keep moving while the momentum can help carry you forward.
There are some additional pictures that look great. Still hopeful it's not a mess.