Michael Stuart Kelly Posted October 12, 2007 Share Posted October 12, 2007 MSK:~ Sorry, I must; her as well as him. She was not a born-lecturer. She was a born-writer. She didn't start lecturing until after she stopped writing (books, anyways.) Same for the Long-Playing intellectual...descendent. --- Now I'm getting confused as to whethr we're talking recording-devices and technology, or people and ideas. LLAPJ:DJohn,I am talking specifically about Rand's earth-shattering ability to lecture before she was born. Maybe Peikoff couldn't, but he was not Rand.(It that still seems weird, it is because I am poking light fun at Rand-worshipers.)Michael Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Dailey Posted October 14, 2007 Share Posted October 14, 2007 (edited) MSK:~ Um, er, I must have missed those. What did she say...then? "Let there be 'thinking'"?(A non-'worshipping', though 'revering', Admirer)LLAPJ:D Edited October 14, 2007 by John Dailey Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael Stuart Kelly Posted October 15, 2007 Share Posted October 15, 2007 John,Don't you know anything? Before Rand was born, she proclaimed to the universe, "A shall be A." And it was so.Michael Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Michael Stuart Kelly Posted October 28, 2007 Share Posted October 28, 2007 I decided to list the credits for The Making of the Fountainhead as a reference. Each screen shot will be in a different quote box.THE MAKING OF THE FOUNTAINHEADOPENING CREDITS:Warner Bros. Entertainments Inc.PresentsA John Little/Robert AndersonFilm THE MAKING OF THE FOUNTAINHEADCLOSING CREDITS:Narrated byJOHN LITTLEEdited byJOHN LITTLE&ROBERT ANDERSONSpecial ThanksDR. LEONARD PEIKOFFMIKE MENTZERAnd Especially:DENISE, KEVIN& STEPHEN ANDERSONTERRY, RILEYTAYLOR, BRANDON& BENJAMIN LITTLENorthern River Productions Canada Inc.(www.northernriverproductions.com)© 2006 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.All Rights ReservedSo long as I had the DVD on, I decided to go ahead and give the full credits for The Fountainhead, also. The link I just gave goes to the IMDB credits page and gives a vastly more complete listing, including many performers and technicians who were not credited on screen.THE FOUNTAINHEADOPENING CREDITS: WARNER BROS. PICTURESPresentsGARY COOPERPATRICIA NEALINTHEFOUNTAINHEADa novel byAYN RANDwithRAYMOND MASSEYKENT SMITHROBERT DOUGLASHENRY HULLRAY COLLINSMORONI OLSENJEROME COWANA Warner Bros. – First National PictureScreen Play byAYN RANDFrom her Novel“THE FOUNTAINHEAD”Director of PhotographyROBERT BURKS, A.S.C.Art Director . . EDWARD CARREREFilm Editor . . . DAVID WEISBARTSound by . . OLIVER S. GARRETSONDialogue Director . . JACK DANIELSSet Decorator . . . WILLIAM KUEHLSpecial Effects byWILLIAM McGANN, DirectorEDWIN DuPARHANS F. KOENEKAMPJOHN HOLDEN, Art DirectorWardrobe by . . . MILO ANDERSONMakeup Artist . . PERC WESTMOREOrchestrations . . MURRAY CUTTER(seal): IATSE (International Association of Theatrical Stage Employees and Moving Picture Machine Operators)(seal): RCA SOUND SYSTEM(seal): APPROVED mpAA CERTIFICATE No. 13358The story, all names, characters and incidentsportrayed in this production are fictitious. Noidentification with actual persons, living ordead, is intended or should be inferred.Copyright MCMXLVIII by Warner Bros.Pictures, Inc. All rights reserved.Music byMAX STEINERProduced byHENRY BLANKEDirectedbyKING VIDORCLOSING CREDITS:THE ENDA WARNER BROS. –FIRST NATIONAL PICTUREMichael Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
william.scherk Posted February 25 Share Posted February 25 On 10/12/2007 at 1:05 PM, Selene said: John Dailey said: ~ No two ways about it: whatever it's 'flaws' as one subjectively evaluates it in mere terms of 'likes-dislikes', this movie, then, as well as now, is heads-and-shoulders of a different and 'higher' calibre than most movies made before, then, and since. I said that Gary Cooper was 'adequate' in handling his part and I praised his co-actors higher re their handling theirs. I must add that, movie-buff that I am, I'm not aware of any other actor that YET can really handle (in a more 'believable' manner, which is not to be confused with "I'd prefer/like-more to see 'X' doing it" ) his part better than he did, regardless that some see Cooper as 'wooden' (not I) in doing it. --- An aside: maybe a thread should be started to distinguish the diff between someone showing passion...and, merely showing scene-chewing emoting. ~ If I didn't make it clear, Cooper was 'adequate'...and playing Roark: that's no small feat. God help the actor who plays Galt in the upcoming Atlas Shrugged. Excellent observation regarding the "...diff between someone showing...passion...and, merely showing scene-chewing...emoting." Cooper did more with micro-facial actions and his total kinesics than most actors do with a "heart wrenching sob scene". I happened to sit in on my colleauge's "The Art of Oral Interpretation" course many years ago and chose Roark's jury summation as my end term performance project. Coop's cadence was not the best, but his iron certainty as to his principles connected to his legal contractual connection in his summation was stunning in its clarity. It took eight [8] minutes in the movie. I extended the time for cadence purposes when I did it and I was more animated. However, it is an intense speech and one of the most difficult tasks to perform it is to sustain it, which he did. Our Adam ... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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