I saw the movie... it was awesome. had just the right amount of action. I thought the story was fine.
Any historians in particular? I can find no references to this at all. Any searches just seem to bounce back to this thread.SkullCap said:Throat slashed over bible; Bible then ripped to shreds; and neighbors going outside and stitching Bible back together the next day. This all happened the reason medieval historians often did not write about such incidents was this mentality, "Hey, their peasants. Who cares? Now rich families on trial? That gets the people's attention." If it wasn't for many other historians the world might not have ever known.
This conversation piqued my curiosity, so I did some digging. I couldn't find any evidence of this throat cutting practice anywhere on the internet. So I consulted my Encyclopedia Britannica (complete set!) and found nothing there either. But I persevered and eventually came across "John Foxes Book of Martyrs" published in 1563. (http://www.hrionline.ac.uk/johnfoxe/index.html)jabrwock said:Any historians in particular? I can find no references to this at all. Any searches just seem to bounce back to this thread.
I'm especially curious considering literacy rates in 1550's England were less than 10% for the "general" population, and printed bibles (in English! an amazing new development!) were so new and valuable that they were actually chained to the pulpit...
I'm reasonably certain I never called Avatar "transcendant." It was pretty good (I might've even put a "damn" in the middle there) was my basic estimation.Dan Oles said:So Bob, let me get this straight...
Blue skinned aliens who learn to paint with all the colors of the wind...transcendent.
Man carries the last Bible across a post-apocalyptic landscape...trite.
Why is it that "Avatar" keeps coming up as the reference point here? The two movies have nothing to do with one another. Is there some sort of "meme" out there wherein "Eli" is an "anti-Avatar" or somesuch?You can't rate Avatar highly and Book of Eli low for the same reasons. Avatar you claim to be above reproach. Book of Eli is below consideration.
Not exactly...But both movies are equally unabashedly spiritual.
Avatar: Tree Goddess (clearly supernatural)
Book of Eli: Bible and God/Mohammed and Koran
"Avatar" IS a bit trite, just not as much so as "Eli." 'Trite' just means "done to death," really.But of course Avatar isn't trite because its not Christian.
Uh... wow?You are a bigot.
Bob, here's the reason why I think Avatar is constantly brought up in relation to Book of Eli:MovieBob said:Why is it that "Avatar" keeps coming up as the reference point here? The two movies have nothing to do with one another. Is there some sort of "meme" out there wherein "Eli" is an "anti-Avatar" or somesuch?
A lot of people disagree with you. Why is that such a bad thing? Why did you just talk about Avatar? Was that the biggest wrong you saw, the comparison? Or was everyone else too right to talk to? Questions are always worth asking.MovieBob said:I'm reasonably certain I never called Avatar "transcendant." It was pretty good (I might've even put a "damn" in the middle there) was my basic estimation.Dan Oles said:So Bob, let me get this straight...
Blue skinned aliens who learn to paint with all the colors of the wind...transcendent.
Man carries the last Bible across a post-apocalyptic landscape...trite.
Why is it that "Avatar" keeps coming up as the reference point here? The two movies have nothing to do with one another. Is there some sort of "meme" out there wherein "Eli" is an "anti-Avatar" or somesuch?You can't rate Avatar highly and Book of Eli low for the same reasons. Avatar you claim to be above reproach. Book of Eli is below consideration.
Not exactly...But both movies are equally unabashedly spiritual.
Avatar: Tree Goddess (clearly supernatural)
Book of Eli: Bible and God/Mohammed and Koran
"Avatar" actually goes out of it's way to make it clear that NOTHING supernatural or spiritual is going on - a big plot-point at the start of Act 3 is devoted to explaining that the esoteric-sounding aspects of Na'vi culture that the humans had been interpreting as their religion was actually a matter of natural-science, a kind of biological-internet that only 'sounded' supernatural in the terms that Na'vi described it.
"Avatar" IS a bit trite, just not as much so as "Eli." 'Trite' just means "done to death," really.But of course Avatar isn't trite because its not Christian.
Uh... wow?You are a bigot.
loved might be a bit fare but i went to see it after complaining about booby bob's silly review and i did realy like it. strong acting.hero21b said:I loved this movie too *high five*Badassassin said:i just saw it and i fucking loved it...
i don't even give a crap that it was a samey apocalypic movie... seeing the trailer what else was i expecting.
But i was surprised because i only saw the short trailers, so the fact that the book was a bible (not a dumbass, just saw the short trailers) was a great twist on what i thought would just be a same old apocalypic "at each others throats" movie.
and i thought bob did a bad job with this review... he just bashed that it was about religion and philosophy well if that's true why did u see it if you were going to just not stand the religious tone. and besides it wasn't preachy about it. it focused so much more on the social impact that religion has.
over all i was very disappointed by this review, i mean he only complained and didn't speak on denzel's good silent actions, cause he had very little lines for a while in the beginning and it was just phenominal acting
I prefer to be disagreed with, it makes things more interesting. The "wow" is over the fact that A.) this has turned psuedo-"personal" so rapidly and B.) that it's in reaction to THIS movie. I mean, passionate about movies - I get that. But this? Really? A sub-"Tank Girl" generic post-nuke actioner plopped into the January dead-zone is worth accusatory ranting and namecalling? Yeah, that's a little surprising to me.PlasticLion said:A lot of people disagree with you. Why is that such a bad thing? Why did you just talk about Avatar? Was that the biggest wrong you saw, the comparison? Or was everyone else too right to talk to? Questions are always worth asking.
the point is that its not about this movie, its about you. this film was so average yet enjoyable but your reaction to it was so silly and ranty and needlessly negative. and also, when you blatantly throw your superior knowledge of atheism around and even go so far as to screw at a film for having a religious motif you're bound to annoy people.MovieBob said:I prefer to be disagreed with, it makes things more interesting. The "wow" is over the fact that A.) this has turned psuedo-"personal" so rapidly and B.) that it's in reaction to THIS movie. I mean, passionate about movies - I get that. But this? Really? A sub-"Tank Girl" generic post-nuke actioner plopped into the January dead-zone is worth accusatory ranting and namecalling? Yeah, that's a little surprising to me.PlasticLion said:A lot of people disagree with you. Why is that such a bad thing? Why did you just talk about Avatar? Was that the biggest wrong you saw, the comparison? Or was everyone else too right to talk to? Questions are always worth asking.
Also, for what it's worth, "you are a bigot" isn't a question![]()
For some it may have turned personal, but many on here are simply trying to understand why you gave Avatar such a glowing review when technically it's just as cliched as Book of Eli.MovieBob said:I prefer to be disagreed with, it makes things more interesting. The "wow" is over the fact that A.) this has turned psuedo-"personal" so rapidly and B.) that it's in reaction to THIS movie. I mean, passionate about movies - I get that. But this? Really? A sub-"Tank Girl" generic post-nuke actioner plopped into the January dead-zone is worth accusatory ranting and namecalling? Yeah, that's a little surprising to me.PlasticLion said:A lot of people disagree with you. Why is that such a bad thing? Why did you just talk about Avatar? Was that the biggest wrong you saw, the comparison? Or was everyone else too right to talk to? Questions are always worth asking.
Also, for what it's worth, "you are a bigot" isn't a question![]()
Is it? The religious aspect isn't the central driving theme in Avatar. The "communicates with nature" schtick is one of the reasons they can't leave, but it's not the central them. In Eli, the book IS the central theme. It's the only reason Eli is making this journey, and the only reason the bad guys care about him. And, when you read the spoilers, you find out thatfozzy360 said:For some it may have turned personal, but many on here are simply trying to understand why you gave Avatar such a glowing review when technically it's just as cliched as Book of Eli.
Why not? Interesting concept (post-apocalyptic corporation controls "Golden Fleece" (water), protagonist fights to liberate it to save humanity). Bad execution.Plus...Tank-Girl? Really?
What is so wrong about people asking questions and arguing about THIS movie? And Tank Girl...Really? WOW, Bob, WOW!!!MovieBob said:I prefer to be disagreed with, it makes things more interesting. The "wow" is over the fact that A.) this has turned psuedo-"personal" so rapidly and B.) that it's in reaction to THIS movie. I mean, passionate about movies - I get that. But this? Really? A sub-"Tank Girl" generic post-nuke actioner plopped into the January dead-zone is worth accusatory ranting and namecalling? Yeah, that's a little surprising to me.PlasticLion said:A lot of people disagree with you. Why is that such a bad thing? Why did you just talk about Avatar? Was that the biggest wrong you saw, the comparison? Or was everyone else too right to talk to? Questions are always worth asking.
Also, for what it's worth, "you are a bigot" isn't a question![]()