ASP3: This is John Galt
Ideally, the actor playing John Galt in Atlas Shrugged Part 3 will appear to have jumped right off of the pages of Atlas Shrugged. However, in our quest to find the perfect John Galt, some tough choices may have to be made. That's where you come in.
If you had to choose, which would you consider the number one priority in casting John Galt?
A. As long as the actor looks and acts like John Galt, I don't care what his personal beliefs are.
B. The actor needs to possess a deep understanding of, and passion for, Ayn Rand's ideas first and foremost.
Leave your answer in the comments below.
If you had to choose, which would you consider the number one priority in casting John Galt?
A. As long as the actor looks and acts like John Galt, I don't care what his personal beliefs are.
B. The actor needs to possess a deep understanding of, and passion for, Ayn Rand's ideas first and foremost.
Leave your answer in the comments below.
Previous comments... You are currently on page 26.
Add to that the pure aesthetics of these cars, and the class they add to their movie owners, and you have a perfect choice. It probably wasn't an accident that Francisco drove a Porsche...he didn't give a hoot where his money was going....
P.S. I re-watched both parts last night, and I think you are wrong about their quality and lasting impact. Part 2 is my favorite, and I would like to see a relatively unknown play John Galt in Part 3. Any large actor will bring along viewer's prejudices, and preconceived images, of their past roles.
Somehow I think that the right actor will relentlessly solicit this role, and for all the right reasons.
his choice), and he can portray "the looks" (huge diversity of roles), calm intensity with a mind working behind those eyes. He is 45 y/o, but can easily look 5 to 8 years younger, and could believably be romantically chosen over Francisco and Rearden.
I see mentions of John Corbett and Timothy Olyphant, and I think either would at least look the part, even though they are older than Galt is described (30s, as I recall). No matter who it is though, he should have copper hair, just like Dagny should be angular. It was mentioned so many times in the book, that ignoring it in the movie is just disappointing (see casting of Dagny and others in part 2).
A poorly made movie isn't going to cause people to THINK as much as a well made movie will. When the movie is distracting in its bad-ness, the message gets completely lost.
Somewhere there is a complete unknown who is perfect for this role. Find that guy.
And most late-night emcees would be scared shitless to interview him, eh? :)
As for the special effects, some of them in AS2 were annoying to me, as an engineer... when Dagny's train hit maximum speeds, it probably couldn't have taken those short-radius turns at those speeds... and it would have been pretty easy to create them with more plausible and larger radii. Or bank the turns? Try not to violate TOO many laws of physics, even if the story is fiction. It's not meant to be Science Fiction, too...
Ted Nugent Tom Sellick
If AS3 IS well-made and well-received, I don't want anyone on tour or in a TV interview who would in any way argue against the philosophy of The Book. That would be stupid as well as self-destructive.
Second, JG, as I pictured him during my first three readings of AS, was someone younger than Hank Rearden and maybe younger than Dagny, but not much. Mid-30s at most.
---Someone who's been through engineering and philosophy schools AND had a decade or more to solidify his ethics, morals, philosophy and inventions before realizing the cancerous threat that government has/had become.
Without both ingredients, I think the total effect of AS3 would be greatly diminished.
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