emigran
Practically Family
- Messages
- 719
- Location
- USA NEW JERSEY
Great thread...
a young couple kept saying "we're pregnant." I
This was fully of ironic moments and the anachronisms were doubtless deliberate. The dialogue was so far tongue-in-cheek that it's a wonder you could understand any of it.O Brother, Where Art Thou (2000)
The line about “not being an option” strikes me as not something from that period.
Perhaps I’m not bona fide to know for sure!
This was fully of ironic moments and the anachronisms were doubtless deliberate. The dialogue was so far tongue-in-cheek that it's a wonder you could understand any of it.
By the way, I loved this picture, and the Coen brothers are tops in my book!
The drumming rhythm you describe doesn't really have much to do with actual Native American drumming either, at least not the drumming I've heard. It's just another Hollywood cliché, a sound cue to inform the audience that "natives" (African, American, or otherwise) are nearby. So is Tarzan's "vine swinging", by the way. In Burroughs' novels he described Tarzan as traveling through the upper canopies of the trees rather than trying to fight his way through the thick growth on the ground, but never once mentioned vines as I recall.Tarzan the Ape Man... Original with Weismuller and O'Sullivan 1932... Quite adventurous for its time with some excellent wildlife footage (Even if Tarzan was using a vine-covered trapeze in some scenes)
One thing that drove me CRAZY was the use of Native American drumming rhythms throughout the whole movie:
"BUM dum dum dum, BUM dum dum dum... as the sinister background ,music to any threating circumstance...
I much prefer Mythbusters' version: "Failure is always an option."Whenever I hear someone say "failure is not an option" I feel like saying, "yeah it comes as standard equipment".
The drumming rhythm you describe doesn't really have much to do with actual Native American drumming either, at least not the drumming I've heard. It's just another Hollywood cliché, a sound cue to inform the audience that "natives" (African, American, or otherwise) are nearby. So is Tarzan's "vine swinging", by the way. In Burroughs' novels he described Tarzan as traveling through the upper canopies of the trees rather than trying to fight his way through the thick growth on the ground, but never once mentioned vines as I recall.
. "