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Posted by andrewtorkbaker 9 hours ago

Show HN: Get alerts for good seats at 70mm IMAX showings of The Odyssey(imaxxing.io)
29 points | 46 commentspage 2
sajithdilshan 8 hours ago|
[flagged]
gdulli 7 hours ago|
You're never going to watch it, but you're waiting for it to be on Netflix? You can start not watching it already.
estearum 7 hours ago||
Also cracks me up that, for this person, wokeness is what ruined... [ checks notes ] The Devil Wears Prada 2...

The grievances know no bounds

suho-han 9 hours ago||
great work!!
andrewtorkbaker 9 hours ago|
Thank you - let me know if you snag some seats!
hiworld6543 7 hours ago|
[flagged]
resoluteteeth 7 hours ago||
> Waste of time to get these alerts for a movie that has no historical accuracy or value.

The odyssey itself wasn't trying to be historically accurate; it's basically fantasy. Why would you expect that a movie adaptation would be historically accurate?

slybot 6 hours ago||
In this context, the book itself is the history rather than the story as a foundational western narrative. The movie diverge in many grounds from the book, and it is sad that most people will only watch the movie rather than read the original work.
ButlerianJihad 6 hours ago||
> rather than read the original work.

Look, given that the so-called "original work" is in ancient Greek, I don't think any ordinary American today is going to take the time and effort to actually "read the original work".

Even if you were to learn the Greek language well enough to "understand" the original book, you wouldn't really understand it, would you? Because it makes so many intertwined culture references, to the landscape, to the gods and myths of the period. So, what is better: for people to sit down and try to grind through the book, or to make a living production as a modern adaptation, for modern audiences to enjoy?

Furthermore, the Odyssey would have been performed by a singer or poet in its time. People in Greece wouldn't have been reading it on paper! That would be absurd even then! So, it would already be a performance, an interpretation, and it would surely be adapted by those performers to the place-and-time. There is surely a lot of space between the oral tradition that Homer originated to the written word.

Personally, I have immensely enjoyed O Brother, Where Art Thou? as a modern adaptation to Americana. I cannot pretend to understand the original, or the intricacies of the Coen Brothers' adaptation, but I love the performances, the singalong songs, and the production values of the modern film, and it gives me more insight and appreciation for the ancient epic as it was.

slybot 6 hours ago||
The language is not the problem here, I also cannot understand ancient greek. Let aside the casting, it impose a modern morality instead of the original moral arguments. The movie portrays Odysseus in a completely different manner. Homer's Odysseus is intelligent, deceitful, resilient, cruel... While in the movie Nolan's "modern" themes served rather than Homer's original.

I don't know if I am the only one, but it feels like trying to rewrite a historical epic with someone's own themes. I don't say one is better or worse, but it just doesn't feel right.

add-sub-mul-div 7 hours ago||
Incredible comment. The success of this movie is driving people insane. There was no reason this had to be a culture war.