^Its ends similarly in the book (the family taking him), but imo leaves it to the reader to determine if they were "bad guys".
6/1/2010 5:53:01 PM
words
6/1/2010 9:10:57 PM
6/1/2010 10:37:54 PM
I loved the book.
6/1/2010 10:39:49 PM
Good point about it possibly being someone who recently died and what not. I can buy that and i recall the kid seeing all of the shoes, so it's possible the father just didn't see that and realize what was going on.And, I know why he wanted to get into the basement. It just seemed very obvious what was going on, and that the kid realized it. Yet there he was, ending up in a bathroom ready to kill his son. Not going out the back. Not listening to his son who wasn't being forward enough to just tell him what he saw/thought, not having his son keep a look out while he went in the house. His actions were full of stupid. I don't agree that the movie made it clear that they didn't see people often. I'd actually say the movie made it seem like they DID see people pretty often. It was difficult to tell how much time had passed during the movie. And while the buildings/towns were desolate and what not, they ran across people throughout the entire film. Starting with the cannibals/guy he killed. Then the house of cannibals, the "dog/people" that caused the father to want to leave the bunker (which turned out to be the people at the end), then the old man, then the cannibals chasing down the people who seemed to not be cannibals.Maybe I missed something (and let me know if i did) and the movie somehow suggested that all of that took place over a year and those were their only encounters with people. But from what I saw, it could have just as easily taken place over a couple of weeks.[Edited on June 1, 2010 at 11:29 PM. Reason : .]
6/1/2010 11:21:08 PM
6/1/2010 11:40:03 PM
^A kid that age seeing what he had seen might be too traumatized to act how one would think he should.
6/3/2010 5:31:45 PM
A kid that age growing up in the suburbs, spending his evenings at soccer practice and swim club suddenly thrown into that lifestyle... absolutely. He would be traumatized because it would be so drastically different than his day to day life.A kid who has never known any other way of life? i don't think so. he has no frame of reference for what is "normal" for most people. for example his father (who knew what society was like before the disaster) didn't grow up seeing bodies and cannibals. The kid should be 100% accustomed to seeing dead bodies and knowing that cannibals are around, know that it's smart to stay away from people you don't know, etc. And he should have picked up skills, learned "tactics/strategy" from his father along the way. I mean, at what point to you start expecting a little, idk, assistance from the kid? "You check out that pile of crap, I'll check out his pile" "you stand outside the door while I check it out. You see anybody, come and get me."I would feel very odd and uncomfortable if someone told me I had to go prepare a dead body for a viewing tomorrow. I really thing I would be too weirded out to do it. But I bet if my family had been in the funeral parlor business for 3 generations and I grew up around it, my ability to be around that would probably be second nature. I'd probably be able to easily talk about a dead body like it's.. idk, a thing - differently than most people would anyway. Have no problem moving it around, putting make-up on them, dressing them, etc. In the latter situation, it would be something I grew up with and was very accustomed to doing. You know, just another day of preparing a body for the deceased's loved ones to see their remains.I'm also drawing on some personal experience of growing up in a less than ideal neighborhood and seeing and hearing about all kinds of screwed up shit from as far back as I can remember. There gets to be point where you're just jaded to stuff (fairly early on) and it doesn't have the same emotional impact it once did.dead people and cannibals should be "the same old thing" for the kid. I don't believe he was realistically portrayed. And that may have been intentional for the viewer/reader to relate to him in certain ways and to see certain things through him. but none the less, I didn't like it. and beyond that, i thought his whining was just flat out annoying at times and I didn't care for the fact that he was essentially a 10-12 yr old infant.[Edited on June 3, 2010 at 8:48 PM. Reason : .]
6/3/2010 8:44:59 PM
Late to the party, but I just finished the book last week. Not really that impressed. That's all I have to say about that.
6/5/2010 3:33:21 AM
6/5/2010 8:44:15 PM
thanks for the info. in regard to how the book differs.
6/5/2010 10:39:02 PM
6/6/2010 3:27:34 AM
I read the book.... wasn't really a fan. Kind of reminded me of Old Man and the Sea, which I also didn't like.I also realize I am very shallow when it comes to books. I am more of a Stephen King or J. R. R. Tolkien type of guy. I think it's because I am not good at using my imagination. A lot of you mention that you liked the fact that it didn't tell what happened (the apocalypse) and how everything came to be, because either it didn't matter to you or you like to use your imagination to figure out how they got there. I really prefer it when authors describe everything down to the most minute detail.
6/6/2010 10:23:18 AM
that is one of the saddest things i've ever read
6/6/2010 9:04:33 PM
^ the book, or that postinterestingly, one of the foundations of most good writing is "show, don't tell"
6/6/2010 9:14:21 PM
just watched itglad i only paid $1.09
6/6/2010 11:41:36 PM
duro, I think you should read the book...one of the things that comes through in the book that doesn't come through as much in the movie is the sheer force of the kid's good nature DESPITE growing up in the miserable world he's grown up in. McCarthy purposely makes the kid a stubbornly benevolent character, not a hardened cynic. Though McCarthy has sometimes been labeled something of a nihilist (which is, as usual, completely inaccurate), a huge part of the book version of The Road is the testament to the survival of--as corny as it may sound--love, even after most of the world has turned to ruins. The boy has a resilient, indomitable love both for his father and for what remains of humanity in general. That really comes through in the book, most notably in the book version of the scene with Robert Duvall's character.I say this in response to your suggestion that the boy wouldn't be traumatized growing up in the world.
6/7/2010 10:44:56 AM