This is probably really bad, but I only read 100 or so pages of To Kill A Mockingbird. I couldn't get into it.
I'm pretty ashamed of this post.
This is probably really bad, but I only read 100 or so pages of To Kill A Mockingbird. I couldn't get into it.
I'm pretty ashamed of this post.
I had to read a book called "Bridge to Terabithia" in fourth or fifth grade or something; apparently it's one of the all time classic kids' books or something.
I didn't like it at all. AT ALL.
I dunno, maybe it would be different if I read it now, but at the time, I was not a fan.
TRUEFACT: I disliked about 75-80% of the stuff that was required reading in school.
The Godfather
Good Fellas
It's a Wonderful Life
2001
Full Metal Jacket
Taxi Driver
Also, in general, I don't like the Beatles.
When it comes to books, The Great Gatsby is a terrible novel. The paper I was forced to write in school was titled "Who to do?".
It's a pretty fantastic game, at least!
For some reason I came back to this thread, and then MILF stabbed me in the heart.
Signature by rubah. I think.
Thinkiing on it, outside of a couple songs, Lonely Island is crap.
My heart was stabbed when Gatsby was added here. If anyone says Lolita, I might die.
EDIT: It was stabbed more when I played the Gatsby game. I want to find whoever thought it was a good idea to make a game based on Gatsby so I can beat him with The Great Gatsby NES cartridge.
Last edited by champagne supernova; 07-28-2011 at 06:22 PM.
Lord of the Rings book trilogy -- slow-moving verbosity at its finest. I appreciate what Tolkein did for the fantasy genre, but by themselves the LotR series is mediocre.
Catcher in the Rye -- overrated, annoyingly angsty, and boring.
The Great Gatsby -- more overrated and boringness.
Atlas Shrugged -- I enjoyed The Fountainhead, but this book had terrible pacing, poor development, a ridiculously simplified and repetitive message (even for Rand), and was just godawful boring for long stretches.
Lots of crap from AP English that I have tried to purge from my memory (like Jane Eyre or anything by Jane Austen). Notable exceptions are various works of Shakespeare and <i>You Can't Go Home Again</i>, which I unexpectedly enjoyed.
For more modern stuff: A Song of Ice and Fire is overrated and was apparently written by zombie Robert Jordan.
The Da Vinci Code -- poorly written, weird pacing, and an absurd plot masquerading as something based on actual scholarship (which it's not).
I'm not a Catholic, I'm not a Christologist, I'm not even religious, and The Da Vinci Code makes me immensely angry by its mere existence.
Is The Da Vinci Code even acclaimed though? The biggest accolade it has to its name is the fact that it sold a lot of copies and was a crowd pleaser for the type of people who buy books at the supermarket.
I just assumed that was what we were focusing on critically acclaimed work and the critics shat on Da Vinci Code. If you want to get into stuff that has general mass market appeal, I don't think this thread would ever end.
To Kill A Mockingbird is so lovely though. ;_;
Just to add a little more lowbrow works... in the realm of comic books, I hate the Phoenix/Dark Phoenix saga in X-Men and the fact every single reboot of the series has to try to recreate it (and sadly try to find new ways to incorporate it despite most of these revamp series tend to ignore the Shi'ar and other cosmic entities, which makes their justifications of having Phoenix show up just plain sad.) but dear christ people, it wasn't even that good. Just two years of "what the smurf?" in the X-Books, ending with the triumphant removal of the two blandest characters in the entire franchise. I'm starting to think that all Cyclops and Jean Grey fans grow up to work on the X-Men books, cause they can't leave them alone, despite Claremont and other writers trying desperately to write these two characters out of the series several times.
I also would like to add the films:
It's a Wonderful Life
Born Free (throw in the book as well)
Saving Private Ryan - the action scenes are great, and the first part of the movie is amazing but overall, I don't really see what the big deal was.
Requiem for a Dream - a very boring movie with a depressing ending.
Boys Don't Cry - See above.
Forrest Gump - I still plan on getting revenge on those teenage bastards that forced me to watch this when I had to go to a retreat with family.
Ghost in the Shell and Akira, cornerstones of anime films but not nearly as good as the books they are based one. I can give Akira slack cause its incredibly long, but GitS ripped out Shirow Masemune's charm and turned it into a dead serious philosophical mess. The fact they tried to make all his characters look realistic didn't help either, the character designs are awful compared to the original. So basically this is the classic, "The Book is better than the film adaption" rant most nerds make.
Music:
Despite my love of all things 80s that doesn't extend to one band, Bon Jovi can go to hell. Can't stand their twangy rock style. Also Adele is awful. I have to listen to her at work all the time and I can't believe people willingly buy her albums.
True beauty exists in things that last only for a moment.
Current Mood: And it's been a long December and there's reason to believe. Maybe this year will be better than the last. I can't remember all the times I tried to tell myself. To hold on to these moments as they pass...