This is topic Moore gets sick of his work being ruined and slams V for Vendetta in forum Books, Films, Food and Culture at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by Book (Member # 5500) on :
 
http://www.comicbookresources.com/columns/index.cgi?column=13

For a long time Alan Moore's great work has been turned into lackluster films. His stance has been: "As long as I could distance myself by not seeing them, enough to keep them separate, take the option money, I could be assured no one would confuse the two. This was probably naïve on my part."

I had high hopes for V for Vendetta, but this sounds like every other Moore debacle. [Frown]

Here are a few of my favorite quotes:


quote:
The "League" was very well received, critically and commercially. Moore had sold the movie options before the first issue had been solicited. But the lawsuit shocked him to the core. Moore seems amused by this now, though at the time he was not.

"They seemed to believe that the head of 20th Century Fox called me up and persuaded me to steal this screenplay, turning it into a comic book which they could then adapt back into a movie, to camouflage petty larceny." This led to Moore giving a ten-hour deposition - he believes he'd have suffered less if he'd "sodomised and murdered a busload of children after giving them heroin."

quote:
Alan gave some details about bits of the V For Vendetta shooting script he'd seen. "It was imbecilic; it had plot holes you couldn't have got away with in Whizzer And Chips in the nineteen sixties. Plot holes no one had noticed."

What Moore found most laughable however were the details. "They don't know what British people have for breakfast, they couldn't be bothered. 'Eggy in a basket' apparently. Now the US have 'eggs in a basket,' whish is fried bread with a fried egg in a hole in the middle. I guess they thought we must eat that as well, and thought 'eggy in a basket' was a quaint and Olde Worlde version. And they decided that the British postal service is called Fedco. They'll have thought something like, 'well, what's a British version of FedEx... how about FedCo? A friend of mine had to point out to them that the Fed, in FedEx comes from 'Federal Express.' America is a federal republic, Britain is not."



[ May 23, 2005, 10:05 PM: Message edited by: Book ]
 
Posted by mothertree (Member # 4999) on :
 
Hey book, did you know I have a quote from you in my madowl.com sig?

P.S. I remember Fed Ex was the only company that wouldn't allow its real name to be placed in the movie "Crazy people".
 
Posted by Book (Member # 5500) on :
 
Moi? No, I didn't. I also don't know what madowl is. I'll have to check that out now. [Smile]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
I was pretty sure ever since they announced this that the actual movie would be pretty bad. This just reinforces that idea. But, even if the people involved actually cared about the story, do you think that people could make a pro-anrachy film today without consciously trying to tie it into the current political climate?
 


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