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"the" movie ...years later ... review
"DaveS" wrote I do know that Redford has a real feel for the inter-mountain West. I loved "downhill skier" too. Dave same here. beautifully filmed. i thought "jeremiah johnson" was spectacular. yfitons wayno |
"the" movie ...years later ... review
On Dec 18, 3:55*am, DaveS wrote:
On Dec 17, 9:12*pm, Giles wrote: On Dec 17, 9:27*pm, DaveS wrote: On Dec 17, 11:51*am, Larry L wrote: Well, I tend to run a little behind, I admit. Last night I finally gave into boredom to the point of watching a DVD of "A River Runs Through It" that was given to me several years ago.. I had never seen it before, or read the book ( I have it too, a gift ) After years of hearing others blaming this movie for an upsurge in fly fishing fad I expected something entirely different ... relative to fly fishing. Honestly I didn't see a single thing that would make ME want to fly fish if I didn't already. * *And as for visiting Montana, this movie shows much of it's worst side, imho. * *Although not to the extent portrayed, at this point in time, Montana does have deep rooted "get drunk and fight for lack of anything else to do" cultural problems.... *that are far less than appealing. There are also many 'geographical' irregularities in the movie ... distances covered by Model A in a blink that are a long drive even today, in reality. * I'd give the movie both thumbs down Any Way .... I think that the FFing fad we went through either had it's roots elsewhere than "the movie" OR our culture is even more desperate for something real to cling to than even I believe it to be. Boy I don't know. I really liked the film and still can picture different scenes. Particularly the obsessed hunting quality of the journalist brother's fishing style. Also the portrayal of the famdamily and the bro's family, *those ARE like some of the Western folk like when I came out from NJ. And the bar in Helena? dead on. Did the Lolo stuff put you off? Yeah there were scary people like that. Still probably are *out on the edge. The edge of lawlessness? . . . reminded me of Park City when the main business was still the mine and the 30 cars of high grade shipped out each week. Where you could work the mine if you couldn't make tuition for a semester. Smoke a joint and no one cared, the ski lodge just barely making it and Ziggy (keep the knives away from him) Vet of the 10th Mountain division soaking out his old bones and gin in the communal tubs at the ex-whorehouse we all holed up in. Pop Jencks for ice cream, and a decent doc in the dispensary if he was sober. *I loved that film and should rent it this weekend. It reflected accurately I feel the unapologetic West I fled to after each winter week of classes at BYU. And the truth be told, these people were not that different than the working people I grew up with, several of whom died too early like the one brother and a very few who went on to edamucated middle class respectability like the other brother. I have no idea why that movie was so popular with yuppies. I do know that Redford has a real feel for the inter-mountain West. I loved "downhill skier" too. Dave That movie was popular with yuppies because it was the time of yuppies. *Post adolescent males have always been suckers for a good romance......and it was that in spades.....or even a bad one. *Norman Maclean was not a prolific author but he had a keen sense of romance. He wrote a very good story and Redford made a very good movie out of it......notwithstanding the objections of a proud confessed sociopath. As for the abject nonsense about "the movie" ruining fly fishing by bringing hordes money dripping idiots out into the streams......well, abject nonsense is the stuff on which the bulk of human wisdom is built. *Money dripping idiots have been flitting about from one thing to another since time immemorial. *Anybody here ever read Fitzgerald? Twain? *Hemingway? *Shakespeare? *Chaucer? You want someone with a real feel for the west, try DeVoto. giles- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - We've agreed on this before, DeVoto d' man. Can't be helped.....it's bound happen from time to time despite our best efforts. :) Way ahead of his time. I understand that the Southesk collection of that Scotsman Earl (who Devoto speaks of when he writes about the Fur companies) has been purchased by the Royal Alberta Museaum. This stuff was collected on the Northern Plains in the 1850s and has not been shown in North America before. DeVoto got some unique and early insights from the artist that traveled with the Earl including evidence of the transformation of some Eastern tribes, into plains horse people. (Lennie lenape) The only work of DeVoto's I have at hand is "The Western Paradox: A Conservation Reader." A hasty perusal of the index (interrupted by several delicious forays into the body of the text) reveals no mention of Carnegie, let alone the artist who accompanied him. I don't recall Carnegie from any other of DeVoto's works I've encountered. The Royal Alberta Museum's website makes no reference to an artist on the trip that I can find. Even more surprising, Carnegie himself says nothing about an artist who accompanied him in the preface to his book, "Saskatchewan and the Rocky Mountains" (I haven't had time to search the whole volume) http://books.google.com/books?id=MR8...age&q=&f=false Moreover, in the preface he states: "As regards the illustrations, whether on separate pages or attached to the letterpress of the work, the greater number of these are derived from my own sketches and drawings; the exception entirely consisting in those which have been reproduced from photographs, or founded on them with some slight alteration. To the former class belong all, save one, of the illustrations of scenery, every example of which may be relied on as a truthful though imperfect portrayal of Nature, — notwithstanding the roughness of my drawings, and the marvellous improvement in all artistic qualities which they have sustained under Mr. Whymper's skilful hand. To the latter class must be referred the various representations of animals' heads, taken from skulls and stuffed specimens in my possession; also several relating to other objects—viz., Red River Fire-bags,—Cree Whip,—Edmonton Hunter's Dag,—Assiniboine Fire-bag, Knife-sheath, and Pipe, —all of which are engraved from excellent photographs by Mr. Rodgers, of Montrose ; and in addition to these the view of Minnclialia Falls, by Mr. Whitney, a St. Paul photographer, the only landscape for which my own pencil is not originally responsible. Most of the smaller and less elaborate illustrations belong to the former of these classes, being facsimiles, or nearly so, of pen-and- ink memoranda hastily sketched into my journal; the exceptions are as follows :—Buffalo-hide Line,— Whisky, —Snow-shoe and Skida,—sketches only recently prepared by me expressly for the present volume." The Mr. Whymper referred to seems likely to be Edward Whymper, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Whymper who visited the Canadian Rockies himself, 40 years or so after Carnegie, but I can't find anything that suggests that he was with Carnegie, and Carnegie's preface appears to suggest that Whymper's services were rendered after the fact. It isn't clear to me from the above text whether Mr. Rodgers was responsible for the excellent photographs or the engravings made from them but in either case, he too appears to have done his work in preparing the book for publications, not in situ, as it were. So, any idea who the artist was? giles |
"the" movie ...years later ... review
On Dec 17, 12:51*pm, Larry L wrote:
* I'd give the movie both thumbs down Read the book. I enjoyed both, but a good book is always much better than the movie made from it, even if the movie does it justice. Of course neither was _about_ flyfishing, flyfishing and the rivers upon which it was pursued were simply the cord that "ran through it". Jon. |
"the" movie ...years later ... review
On Dec 18, 10:38*am, Jon wrote:
On Dec 17, 12:51*pm, Larry L wrote: * I'd give the movie both thumbs down Read the book. *I enjoyed both, but a good book is always much better than the movie made from it, even if the movie does it justice. Of course neither was _about_ flyfishing, flyfishing and the rivers upon which it was pursued were simply the cord that "ran through it". Jon. McGuffin cheers oz |
"the" movie ...years later ... review
On Dec 18, 8:19*am, Giles wrote:
On Dec 18, 3:55*am, DaveS wrote: On Dec 17, 9:12*pm, Giles wrote: On Dec 17, 9:27*pm, DaveS wrote: On Dec 17, 11:51*am, Larry L wrote: Well, I tend to run a little behind, I admit. Last night I finally gave into boredom to the point of watching a DVD of "A River Runs Through It" that was given to me several years ago. I had never seen it before, or read the book ( I have it too, a gift ) After years of hearing others blaming this movie for an upsurge in fly fishing fad I expected something entirely different ... relative to fly fishing. Honestly I didn't see a single thing that would make ME want to fly fish if I didn't already. * *And as for visiting Montana, this movie shows much of it's worst side, imho. * *Although not to the extent portrayed, at this point in time, Montana does have deep rooted "get drunk and fight for lack of anything else to do" cultural problems.... *that are far less than appealing. There are also many 'geographical' irregularities in the movie .... distances covered by Model A in a blink that are a long drive even today, in reality. * I'd give the movie both thumbs down Any Way .... I think that the FFing fad we went through either had it's roots elsewhere than "the movie" OR our culture is even more desperate for something real to cling to than even I believe it to be. Boy I don't know. I really liked the film and still can picture different scenes. Particularly the obsessed hunting quality of the journalist brother's fishing style. Also the portrayal of the famdamily and the bro's family, *those ARE like some of the Western folk like when I came out from NJ. And the bar in Helena? dead on. Did the Lolo stuff put you off? Yeah there were scary people like that. Still probably are *out on the edge. The edge of lawlessness? . . . reminded me of Park City when the main business was still the mine and the 30 cars of high grade shipped out each week. Where you could work the mine if you couldn't make tuition for a semester. Smoke a joint and no one cared, the ski lodge just barely making it and Ziggy (keep the knives away from him) Vet of the 10th Mountain division soaking out his old bones and gin in the communal tubs at the ex-whorehouse we all holed up in. Pop Jencks for ice cream, and a decent doc in the dispensary if he was sober. *I loved that film and should rent it this weekend. It reflected accurately I feel the unapologetic West I fled to after each winter week of classes at BYU. And the truth be told, these people were not that different than the working people I grew up with, several of whom died too early like the one brother and a very few who went on to edamucated middle class respectability like the other brother. I have no idea why that movie was so popular with yuppies. I do know that Redford has a real feel for the inter-mountain West. I loved "downhill skier" too. Dave That movie was popular with yuppies because it was the time of yuppies. *Post adolescent males have always been suckers for a good romance......and it was that in spades.....or even a bad one. *Norman Maclean was not a prolific author but he had a keen sense of romance. He wrote a very good story and Redford made a very good movie out of it......notwithstanding the objections of a proud confessed sociopath.. As for the abject nonsense about "the movie" ruining fly fishing by bringing hordes money dripping idiots out into the streams......well, abject nonsense is the stuff on which the bulk of human wisdom is built. *Money dripping idiots have been flitting about from one thing to another since time immemorial. *Anybody here ever read Fitzgerald? Twain? *Hemingway? *Shakespeare? *Chaucer? You want someone with a real feel for the west, try DeVoto. giles- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - We've agreed on this before, DeVoto d' man. Can't be helped.....it's bound happen from time to time despite our best efforts. * * * *:) Way ahead of his time. I understand that the Southesk collection of that Scotsman Earl (who Devoto speaks of when he writes about the Fur companies) has been purchased by the Royal Alberta Museaum. This stuff was collected on the Northern Plains in the 1850s and has not been shown in North America before. DeVoto got some unique and early insights from the artist that traveled with the Earl including evidence of the transformation of some Eastern tribes, into plains horse people. (Lennie lenape) The only work of DeVoto's I have at hand is "The Western Paradox: A Conservation Reader." *A hasty perusal of the index (interrupted by several delicious forays into the body of the text) reveals no mention of Carnegie, let alone the artist who accompanied him. *I don't recall Carnegie from any other of DeVoto's works I've encountered. *The Royal Alberta Museum's website makes no reference to an artist on the trip that I can find. *Even more surprising, Carnegie himself says nothing about an artist who accompanied him in the preface to his book, "Saskatchewan and the Rocky Mountains" *(I haven't had time to search the whole volume) http://books.google.com/books?id=MR8...dq=inauthor:%2... Moreover, in the preface he states: "As regards the illustrations, whether on separate pages or attached to the letterpress of the work, the greater number of these are derived from my own sketches and drawings; the exception entirely consisting in those which have been reproduced from photographs, or founded on them with some slight alteration. To the former class belong all, save one, of the illustrations of scenery, every example of which may be relied on as a truthful though imperfect portrayal of Nature, — notwithstanding the roughness of my drawings, and the marvellous improvement in all artistic qualities which they have sustained under Mr. Whymper's skilful hand. To the latter class must be referred the various representations of animals' heads, taken from skulls and stuffed specimens in my possession; also several relating to other objects—viz., Red River Fire-bags,—Cree Whip,—Edmonton Hunter's Dag,—Assiniboine Fire-bag, Knife-sheath, and Pipe, —all of which are engraved from excellent photographs by Mr. Rodgers, of Montrose ; and in addition to these the view of Minnclialia Falls, by Mr. Whitney, a St. Paul photographer, the only landscape for which my own pencil is not originally responsible. Most of the smaller and less elaborate illustrations belong to the former of these classes, being facsimiles, or nearly so, of pen-and- ink memoranda hastily sketched into my journal; the exceptions are as follows :—Buffalo-hide Line,— Whisky, —Snow-shoe and Skida,—sketches only recently prepared by me expressly for the present volume." The Mr. Whymper referred to seems likely to be Edward Whymper, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Whymper who visited the Canadian Rockies himself, 40 years or so after Carnegie, but I can't find anything that suggests that he was with Carnegie, and Carnegie's preface appears to suggest that Whymper's services were rendered after the fact. It isn't clear to me from the above text whether Mr. Rodgers was responsible for the excellent photographs or the engravings made from them but in either case, he too appears to have done his work in preparing the book for publications, not in situ, as it were. So, any idea who the artist was? giles- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Sounds like we are talking about 2 different people, books etc.. but the Earl of Southesk, was James Carnegie so lets see if they tails connect. I was referring to Bernard DeVoto, the historian and writer, and in particular his 1947 book, "Across the Wide Missouri," focused on the period 1833-1838, and the expedition headed by Willian Drummond Stewart, who brought Alfred Jacob Miller an artist with him. The book contains 96 repros, some in color of contemporaneous paintings by Miller, Bodmer and Catlin. This is a page on Stewart, the "second son . . . of Sir George Steward, 17th. lord of Grandtully, fifth baronet of Murthly." http://www.3rd1000.com/history3/biography/wdstewart.htm` He went out with a Sublette pack train in 1833, went all over Mountain Man country, and even made it to the last trapper rendezvous in 1843. He was ex 6th Dragoon Guards and 15th Kings Hussars, at Waterloo etc. Ah hah! Apparently I mixed up William Drummond Stewart with James Carnegie, 9th Earl of Southesk who collected ethnological material during a hunting trip in 1859-1860 and salted the material away in GB until it was auctioned and the bulk acquired by the Royal Alberta Museum in 2006. http://www.royalalbertamuseum.ca/hum...s/collects.htm Keeping these damn minor British nobles straight is something I am not good at. Now lets see if we are talking about the same DeVoto: Bernard DeVoto (1897-1955) was a Utahn, Uof U, then Harvard then taught at Northwestern. He wrote "Across the Wide Missouri" in 1947, Pulitzer in '48. OK, I get it, "Western Paradox: a Conservation Reader," is a relatively new (?)collection and edit of DeVotos crusading essays on the fading West, published by Yale in 2001. Apparently very popular now. Great, we are at least talking about the same DeVoto. And talk about ahead of his time, yep for sure. Wallace Stegner sure talked him up and Stegner is/was a near God of the West. So, we are referencing two idff books. Mystery solved. Well, conclusion: I need to read "Paradox" and check out Whymper and you might check out "Across the Wide Missouri." The Alberta/Carnegie collection still looks incredible, the Blood women's dress alone is incredible, and the pix in "Across" offer lots. Dave |
"the" movie ...years later ... review
On Dec 17, 7:27*pm, DaveS wrote:
. Did the Lolo stuff put you off? Yeah there were scary people like that. Nothing really "put me off" ..... and nothing "turned me on" As a lover of both fly fishing and the Mountain West, I expected the latter .... given, as I said, the movies reputation for "causing" the fly fishing fad in the years after it came out ... I expected to be itching to go fishing in Montana after watching it ... I wasn't UM, a bit more.... I don't look back on my own drunken, drugging, days as anything even close to "romantic" ... I know too many that died, or otherwise wasted their lives, from that "romance" I don't dispute the accuracy of a story basically about such waste and death, I just don't see the reported appeal that would bring the masses charging to Montana, fry rods in hand. That story could have been set anywhere, ime, and been equally accurate .... and depressing because of that accuracy. |
"the" movie ...years later ... review
On Dec 18, 12:32 pm, DaveS wrote:
On Dec 18, 8:19 am, Giles wrote: Sounds like we are talking about 2 different people, books etc.. but the Earl of Southesk, was James Carnegie so lets see if they tails connect. James Carnegie was the 9th Earl of Southesk, to be more precise. The only 9th Earl of Southesk and the only Earl of Southesk who had anything to do with collecting the items in the Royal Alberta Museum Southesk Collection.....or so it would appear from the latter's website. Sounds like one and the same guy to me. I was referring to Bernard DeVoto, the historian and writer, I know who he is and I thought we had already agreed on that. and in particular his 1947 book, "Across the Wide Missouri," focused on the period 1833-1838, and the expedition headed by Willian Drummond Stewart, who brought Alfred Jacob Miller an artist with him. The book contains 96 repros, some in color of contemporaneous paintings by Miller, Bodmer and Catlin. This is a page on Stewart, the "second son . . . of Sir George Steward, 17th. lord of Grandtully, fifth baronet of Murthly." http://www.3rd1000.com/history3/biography/wdstewart.htm` He went out with a Sublette pack train in 1833, went all over Mountain Man country, and even made it to the last trapper rendezvous in 1843. He was ex 6th Dragoon Guards and 15th Kings Hussars, at Waterloo etc. Ah hah! Apparently I mixed up William Drummond Stewart with James Carnegie, 9th Earl of Southesk who collected ethnological material during a hunting trip in 1859-1860 and salted the material away in GB until it was auctioned and the bulk acquired by the Royal Alberta Museum in 2006. http://www.royalalbertamuseum.ca/hum...s/collects.htm Aha! Keeping these damn minor British nobles straight is something I am not good at. I'm not at all sure that earls are considered minor.....where they are taken seriously at all.....but a look at Carnegie's biographical sketch in Wikipedia suggests that keeping any of them straight is an exercise best left to those with nothing better to do and a strong predilection for self abuse. Now lets see if we are talking about the same DeVoto: Bernard DeVoto (1897-1955) was a Utahn, Uof U, then Harvard then taught at Northwestern. He wrote "Across the Wide Missouri" in 1947, Pulitzer in '48. Yep. Same guy. The only Bernard DeVoto I know of. OK, I get it, "Western Paradox: a Conservation Reader," is a relatively new (?)collection and edit of DeVotos crusading essays on the fading West, published by Yale in 2001. It's actually a great deal more than that. As the editors, Douglas Brinkley and Patricia Nelson Limerick, write in the introduction, "No one who reads Western Paradox--a conservationist manifesto broken off at DeVoto's death at age fifty-eight and published here for the first time--can possibly dismiss it as a hoary relic of a bygone era. That goes for the ten (also fifty years old) Harper's articles and columns included in this volume as well." And, personally, I think it isn't so much a lamentation on the "fading" west. I agree with DeVoto's assessment of the west that so many see as fading, it is not now and has never been anything but a rather simple-minded myth. The reality is much more interesting.....except to those addicted to half-witted romance, I guess. Apparently very popular now. Maybe. I wouldn't know. Great, we are at least talking about the same DeVoto. That's good. And talk about ahead of his time, yep for sure. Wallace Stegner sure talked him up and Stegner is/was a near God of the West. Stegner is worth studying. So, we are referencing two idff books. Well, YOU are referencing at least two.....and maybe more......I wouldn't know for sure. Mystery solved. So it seems. Well, conclusion: I need to read "Paradox" and check out Whymper and you might check out "Across the Wide Missouri." I've read it.....and "The Year of Decision" and "The Course of Empire" and most of his published work on Twain and many of his Harper's pieces and much else. The Alberta/Carnegie collection still looks incredible, the Blood women's dress alone is incredible, and the pix in "Across" offer lots. Yep. Good stuff. g. |
"the" movie ...years later ... review
On Dec 18, 12:32*pm, DaveS wrote:
I was referring to Bernard DeVoto, the historian and writer, and in particular his 1947 book, "Across the Wide Missouri," focused on the period 1833-1838, and the expedition headed by Willian Drummond Stewart, who brought Alfred Jacob Miller an artist with him. The book contains 96 repros, some in color of contemporaneous paintings by Miller, Bodmer and Catlin. This is a page on Stewart, the "second son . . . of Sir George Steward, 17th. lord of Grandtully, fifth baronet of Murthly." http://www.3rd1000.com/history3/biography/wdstewart.htm` I clicked that link. Got a page cannot be displayed error message. So, I still don't know anything about Alfred Jacob Miller or what DeVoto learned from him. I could do a little research and find out for myself, of course, but my first such endeavor today, while interesting and enlightening enough, didn't result in anything germain. Maybe a capsule report from you would help me to decide whether or not the matter is worth pursuing. Thanks. giles |
"the" movie ...years later ... review
On Dec 18, 1:22*pm, Giles wrote:
On Dec 18, 12:32*pm, DaveS wrote: I was referring to Bernard DeVoto, the historian and writer, and in particular his 1947 book, "Across the Wide Missouri," focused on the period 1833-1838, and the expedition headed by Willian Drummond Stewart, who brought Alfred Jacob Miller an artist with him. The book contains 96 repros, some in color of contemporaneous paintings by Miller, Bodmer and Catlin. This is a page on Stewart, the "second son . . . of Sir George Steward, 17th. lord of Grandtully, fifth baronet of Murthly." http://www.3rd1000.com/history3/biography/wdstewart.htm` I clicked that link. *Got a page cannot be displayed error message. Remove the extra character at the end of the URL, dumbass. |
"the" movie ...years later ... review
On Dec 18, 3:33*pm, " wrote:
On Dec 18, 1:22*pm, Giles wrote: On Dec 18, 12:32*pm, DaveS wrote: I was referring to Bernard DeVoto, the historian and writer, and in particular his 1947 book, "Across the Wide Missouri," focused on the period 1833-1838, and the expedition headed by Willian Drummond Stewart, who brought Alfred Jacob Miller an artist with him. The book contains 96 repros, some in color of contemporaneous paintings by Miller, Bodmer and Catlin. This is a page on Stewart, the "second son . . . of Sir George Steward, 17th. lord of Grandtully, fifth baronet of Murthly." http://www.3rd1000.com/history3/biography/wdstewart.htm` I clicked that link. *Got a page cannot be displayed error message. Remove the extra character at the end of the URL, dumbass. Why? Moron. g. |
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