I have a personal attachment to the story and flavor of the Foundation novels themselves. So yes, I am defining "good" partly in terms of preserving some semblance of the source material. I'll grant them some leeway, but not as much as the movie Starship Troopers had.Batman wrote:That depends on your definition of 'good'. I can absolutely see this turning out to be a thoroughly entertaining SciFi action flic-as long as you don't mind it having practically nothing to do with the source material it is allegedly based on (ref the 'Starship Troopers' movie, which was apparently not inconsiderably popular). A true to the source material movie even if possible (which I too doubt) would probably sink like a stone at the box office.Simon-Jester wrote:The only way it will be good is if the director surpasses himself to a degree that is very rare
The reason I feel that stories that bear no relation to the source material are a problem is that they poison the reputation of the source material itself, and because they make it much harder to release a real version of the story later on.
I mean, you could make a damned good movie based on the actual book Starship Troopers, rather than just slapping the name on something generic... but at this point, it is far more difficult to do that because the movie rights have already been taken and used by someone.
Well, it seems reasonable; that trick worked for the old Basilica of St. Peter, didn't it?Eleventh Century Remnant wrote:They made themselves the prize, the last remaining bit of Imperial Glory, too important for his claim to the throne to be blown up, then when he had left to fight a colonial campaign, quietly engineered his death and a succession struggle that prevented anyone else coming to bother them. As far as I recall. There's no way I'm re-reading that pile of drivel to check.