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  • Posted by Rex_Little 2 years, 11 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Yes, but they made cuts in it she didn't like. She wouldn't grant the right to make a movie of AS unless she had control over cuts, and no producer would give her that. Probably just as well; would she have allowed Galt's speech to reduced to anything remotely reasonable for a movie?
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  • Posted by $ DriveTrain 3 years ago
    Gary Cooper was horribly miscast as Roark and it left out a ton (of necessity, given time constraints,) but otherwise it was an ok adaptation.
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  • Posted by $ splumb 3 years ago in reply to this comment.
    Rand based Toohey on Harold Laski, an Oxford-infected Brit.
    Robert Douglas, a RADA-trained Brit, was the actor who played Toohey.
    I think he made perfect sense.
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  • Posted by bobbitchen34 3 years ago
    I saw the movie about 10 years ago on TMC ( I think). Having previously read the book I found the movie enjoyable. Don't think it would have been as good the other way around.
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  • Posted by $ splumb 3 years ago in reply to this comment.
    Just like Anglo-Saxon eddas.
    They're better read or told as tales.
    Guess that's why as much as I love Tolkein's books, I really dislike the movies.
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  • Posted by freedomforall 3 years ago in reply to this comment.
    Probably no one who would want to either for reasons of:
    a) philosophical disagreement, or
    b) survival of their career.

    Sometimes the written word is not intended to ever be dialog.
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  • Posted by freedomforall 3 years ago in reply to this comment.
    Even I wouldn't go to the theater to see Galt's speech in its entirety. ;^)
    (I did go to the theater to see AS III. I was overseas when ASI and ASII were in US theaters and they were not available there.)
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  • Posted by $ blarman 3 years ago
    But it IS a romance - it's all about falling in love with self interest. ;)
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  • Posted by freedomforall 3 years ago
    The Fountainhead film was my first introduction to Ayn Rand's work.
    In spite of the film's limitations, I was hungry for more. Some time later a friend recommended that I read Atlas Shrugged.
    I loaned him a copy of the Fountainhead film to watch.
    He has built a number of buildings since then.
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  • Posted by 3 years ago in reply to this comment.
    I've never been a big Patricia Neal fan. As I was reading the book, I just thought she doesn't have the level of beauty described. Lauren Bacall would have been better, in my opinion.
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  • Posted by Arthgallo 3 years ago
    one of my favorites, but I prefer the book. Been madly in love with Dominique forever. :)
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  • Posted by mccannon01 3 years ago in reply to this comment.
    I can't disagree with all you say here, but I still liked the movie in general. I thought Patricia Neal was a bit "wooden" or robotic playing Dominique and I thought the same watching her in "The Day The Earth Stood Still". IMHO, she gets that blank stare like she's concentrating on remembering her lines instead of saying them more naturally like would be expected from an actress on the big screen.
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  • Posted by skidance 3 years ago
    I thought the Roark character was lackluster, Dominique too self-pitying, and Toohey too aristocratic for their roles. I'd imagined some shabby "intellectual," such as Bernie Sanders, in the Toohey role
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  • Posted by 3 years ago in reply to this comment.
    It's so strange to think of it as a "love story" as that is typically defined these days, but I think I see what you mean when you say "romantic fiction as Ayn Rand defined it." I must say I much prefer her definition.
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  • Posted by $ puzzlelady 3 years ago
    I own the film on videotape that plays on my antique computer. And yes, it is romantic fiction as Ayn Rand defined it. In her inimitable style, the romance is embedded in a philosophical/political/intellectual plot line of heroes and villains personifying Rand's values. I can't see any actor other than Gary Cooper in the lead role. I love the last line: "Mrs. Roark."
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