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jazzyjay posted:Hobbit bonden This is the real casting sin of the adaptation.
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# ? Oct 2, 2023 19:42 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 18:40 |
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Raskolnikov2089 posted:There were a number of Horatio Hornblower TV movies that came out in the late 90s that are worth a watch. Nothing on the quality of M&C of course, but still well made. I enjoyed these and the Sharpe tv series too. The Hornblower ones used to be on youtube but looks like they got smacked https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hornblower_(TV_series)
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# ? Oct 2, 2023 19:57 |
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I've enjoyed Dead Calm and All is Lost, which are modern sailboat movies, but still very much sailing movies. Submarines are way easier to film. Das Boot has all the nautical fun anyone could ask for. It's kind of interesting as a bookend to A/M now that I think about it.
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# ? Oct 2, 2023 22:36 |
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Finished up Clarissa Oakes/The Truelove last night, felt a bit light on to be honest but keen to see where it heads next, the biggest thing was the revelation about the higher placed spy from Clarissa, but I'm surprised more wasn't made about the way Stephen received that information, it just feels waaaay too fortuitous to have such important information just fall in to his lap like that but I don't see how anyone could have planned that in advance so I guess we'll see
screaden fucked around with this message at 23:01 on Oct 2, 2023 |
# ? Oct 2, 2023 22:52 |
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I'm glad to see POB captured the essence of Boston:
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# ? Oct 17, 2023 00:53 |
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Deeters posted:I'm glad to see POB captured the essence of Boston: one of the rare fucks well two
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# ? Oct 17, 2023 07:37 |
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ChubbyChecker posted:one of the rare fucks Because it's Boston (I remember reading an article saying that 1800s profanity was notably different than ours, way more about religious blasphemy than the sexual/scatological profanity of today. It was specifically about the show Deadwood but since Aubrey-Maturin is set even earlier, I would think the same would apply. So "drat your eyes" is probably more accurate than "gently caress you").
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# ? Oct 17, 2023 13:34 |
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The best f-bomb is the "gently caress Old Harte" song from (iirc) Master & Commander
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# ? Oct 17, 2023 14:31 |
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Kylaer posted:Because it's Boston I've read similar about Deadwood, and a quick doublecheck reveals that they were talking specifically about cowboys in the American West. Sailors, especially on a multicultural crew like the Royal Navy employed/pressganged, wouldn't necessarily have that same religious background. The earliest use of the phrase "I don't give a gently caress" dates to 1790!
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# ? Oct 18, 2023 18:56 |
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I vaguely remember reading a Milch interview where he said they considered period swearing in the writing for Deadwood but it sounded too goofy to the modern ear, like everyone was Yosemite Sam.
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# ? Oct 18, 2023 19:47 |
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Yeah, some stuff that sounds tame or goofy today would be shocking then, but to some degree the reverse was true. "You smell like poo poo" would be less an insult and maybe more like constructive criticism, and slanderous comments tended to only work if they had a ring of truth to them. All the cuckhold insults were pretty period accurate though, in particular making horns with your fingers.
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# ? Oct 18, 2023 21:04 |
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Phy posted:The earliest use of the phrase "I don't give a gently caress" dates to 1790! ok I'm curious now, where's this from specifically?
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# ? Oct 19, 2023 19:10 |
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Psion posted:ok I'm curious now, where's this from specifically? Killick.
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# ? Oct 19, 2023 20:32 |
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That mumping villain!
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# ? Oct 21, 2023 04:29 |
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Psion posted:ok I'm curious now, where's this from specifically? From the Wikipedia article on "gently caress": gently caress posted:A 1790 poem by St. George Tucker has a father upset with his bookish son say "I'd not give [a gently caress] for all you've read". Originally printed as "I'd not give ------ for all you've read", scholars agree that the words a gently caress were removed, making the poem the first recorded instance of the now-common phrase I don't give a gently caress.
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# ? Oct 23, 2023 19:35 |
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withak posted:I vaguely remember reading a Milch interview where he said they considered period swearing in the writing for Deadwood but it sounded too goofy to the modern ear, like everyone was Yosemite Sam.
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# ? Oct 23, 2023 19:43 |
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Which it is real examples of cursing in the old west: https://www.notesfromthefrontier.com/amp/frontier-cussing quote:Calling someone a “flannel-mouthed chiseling chuckleheaded gadabout coffee boiler” meant they were a no good, smooth-talking, dishonest, ignorant, jawflapping, lazy rear end. A “rag-propered lickfingers” was an over-dressed rear end-kisser.
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# ? Oct 23, 2023 19:55 |
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My dad still calls people chiselers
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# ? Oct 28, 2023 22:22 |
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Just started on The Commodore and Stephen's return to his home and daughter . I hope Padeen and Brigid have a long and beneficial friendship? That one tiny little reference to her looking in his eyes gives me some hope. The whole build up to that scene is incredible, I've never read something where I've had that palpable sense of dread through such lean writing, an extremely effective beginning. This feels like it's about to break a bit of a dry spell of the past few books which is nice, and the return of Clarissa Oakes is very welcome
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# ? Nov 1, 2023 08:58 |
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screaden posted:Just started on The Commodore and Stephen's return to his home and daughter . I hope Padeen and Brigid have a long and beneficial friendship? That one tiny little reference to her looking in his eyes gives me some hope. The whole build up to that scene is incredible, I've never read something where I've had that palpable sense of dread through such lean writing, an extremely effective beginning. This feels like it's about to break a bit of a dry spell of the past few books which is nice, and the return of Clarissa Oakes is very welcome The description of Brigid's first sea voyage is one of my favorite passages in the books.
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# ? Nov 1, 2023 10:21 |
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yaffle posted:The description of Brigid's first sea voyage is one of my favorite passages in the books. Just recently got through that part, absolutely love it.
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# ? Nov 1, 2023 21:37 |
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https://arstechnica.com/science/2023/11/lost-letters-of-18th-century-french-sailors-have-been-read-for-the-first-time/ Great Britain still not hesitating to read other fellow's mail a few hundred years in the future.
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# ? Nov 7, 2023 07:08 |
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Coming to the end of The Commodore and man this one is kind of sad? Everything to do with the slave ships (the description of them throwing the children overboard to be torn apart by the sharks was rough), the realisation of their aging, pretty much everything to do with Stephen's life and health, Jack being disappointed with his supposed promotion and his marriage, I have a horrible feeling none of this will end well in the next 30 or so pages. I did really like that passage where Stephen overhears Jack playing outside at Ashgrove and realises he has been moderating his playing in order to play alongside Stephen and his damaged hands.
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# ? Nov 15, 2023 00:49 |
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screaden posted:Coming to the end of The Commodore and man this one is kind of sad? Everything to do with the slave ships (the description of them throwing the children overboard to be torn apart by the sharks was rough), the realisation of their aging, pretty much everything to do with Stephen's life and health, Jack being disappointed with his supposed promotion and his marriage, I have a horrible feeling none of this will end well in the next 30 or so pages. I did really like that passage where Stephen overhears Jack playing outside at Ashgrove and realises he has been moderating his playing in order to play alongside Stephen and his damaged hands. Yes I just posted that passage on the previous page, it really is excellent. I just teared up again reading it. And don't worry too much, things generally work out okay in A-M.
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# ? Nov 15, 2023 01:16 |
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How much of the idea that it’s rude to ask about someone’s life, even when it’s seemingly frivolous questions between friends, in social interactions taken from actual regency era society? I haven’t really been able to tell how much of this is based on historical ideas of propriety, how much of it is based on Stephen’s specific character as an intelligence agent, or how much is just coming from O’Brian’s own desire to hide his past. I’ve only read through The Wine Dark Sea so far for context.
Drunkboxer fucked around with this message at 12:38 on Dec 5, 2023 |
# ? Dec 4, 2023 16:17 |
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Drunkboxer posted:How much of idea that it’s rude to ask about someone’s life, even when it’s seemingly frivolous questions between friends, in social interactions taken from actual regency era society? I haven’t really been able to tell how much of this is based on historical ideas of propriety, how much of it is based on Stephen’s specific character as an intelligence agent, or how much is just coming from O’Brian’s own desire to hide his past. I’ve only read through The Wine Dark Sea so far for context. Idk about actual regency society but it’s what you’d expect from novels of the period. Like think of Pride & Prejudice where pretty much all the conflict is based on superficial misreadings of other peoples emotions that could be easily cleared up if anyone was straight with each other, which they can’t be because it would be unthinkably offensive . Like nobody dares to be so impolite as to ask Bingley why he’s hosed off leaving the sister in the lurch, or to ask Darcy what his problem is with Wickham. It would be rude to answer truthfully and rude to have to lie. So instead the question never gets asked and Darcy and Lizzie have a shouting match. which serendipitously helps fix everything but whatever. Or later on when Lady Catherine rocks up demanding to know what Lizzie’s intentions are with Darcy and even though she’s Lizzie’s social superior and has good reason to want to know, Lizzie basically says “my life is none of your business, gently caress off”. Maturin definitely keeps his past close to the chest as well. There’s a funny bit (forget which book) where Jack is banging on and on about what he was doing during the Revolution and then asks Stephen what he was up to back then. Stephen spends a couple paragraphs calling back the memories of youth and the heady utopian idealism of those days before Robespierre and Napoleon and then his eventual answer is like “uh. med school I guess” skasion fucked around with this message at 18:40 on Dec 5, 2023 |
# ? Dec 5, 2023 00:56 |
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skasion posted:Idk about actual regency society but it’s what you’d expect from novels of the period. Like think of Pride & Prejudice where pretty much all the conflict is based on superficial misreadings of other peoples emotions that could be easily cleared up if anyone was straight with each other, which they can’t be because it would be unthinkably offensive . Like nobody dares to be so impolite as to ask Bingley why he’s hosed off leaving the sister in the lurch, or to ask Darcy what his problem is with Wickham. It would be rude to answer truthfully and rude to have to lie. So instead the question never gets asked and Darcy and Lizzie have a shouting match. which serendipitously helps fix everything but whatever. Or later on when Lady Catherine rocks up demanding to know what Lizzie’s intentions are with Darcy and even though she’s Lizzie’s social superior and has good reason to want to know, Lizzie basically says “my life is none of your business, gently caress off”. A conversation is not an interrogation with two parties taking turns asking questions.
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# ? Dec 6, 2023 13:46 |
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builds character posted:A conversation is not an interrogation with two parties taking turns asking questions. Question and answer is not a liberal form of conversation.
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# ? Dec 6, 2023 16:25 |
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I think that was the quote, anyway, and I have always wondered what was meant by "liberal" in that context.
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# ? Dec 6, 2023 16:26 |
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Notahippie posted:I think that was the quote, anyway, and I have always wondered what was meant by "liberal" in that context. Before political liberalism becomes entrenched in the generation after the Napoleonic wars, “liberal” usually means generous or even free—(etymologically the word carries a connotation of “like a free man”). To continue my comparison from above, Austen uses the word to imply a kind of gentlemanly openhandedness—Darcy is very liberal to his people and tenants—but also to suggest openmindedness—Mrs Bennett is of “illiberal mind” (ie she’s an airhead full of fixed ideas). So I guess Maturin’s suggesting that Q&A is more like constrained interrogation (something he has been through for real) than polite conversation.
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# ? Dec 6, 2023 17:25 |
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Conversational questions carry with them some implied right to know the answer. Especially in a society with more exposure to hierarchy and authority, I can see it rankling. Questioning is what you do to a servant who has hosed up and might be trying to evade notice. So who the gently caress are you to question me?
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# ? Dec 6, 2023 20:42 |
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It just seems so annoying to be limited to anecdotes and riddles during conversation. Asking someone about themselves is a handy crutch to keep a conversation going. skasion posted:
That’s in Wine-Dark Sea, it’s what started me wondering about this. That and the part in Clarissa Oakes where she says she doesn’t like being asked questions about herself because it’s hard to keep all her stories straight (or something to that effect, I can’t find the quote now). That’s the bit that had me wondering how much of it is O’Brian talking through his characters.
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# ? Dec 6, 2023 21:08 |
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Well you could talk about music, books, etc.; you could talk about news and politics -- the dashing exploits of certain naval captains perhaps; you could talk about interesting practical developments that are changing society in interesting ways; you could just gossip about ones peers or servants; you could muse on morality, or Character: whether this or that was indicative of one's character and the goodness or badness of that; you can tut tut and tsk tsk and praise and laud away the hours; you can say how all this bores you and wouldn't you rather like to go take in a more interesting sight and go stare at a bird or tree or some poo poo just as an excuse to not be trapped in a room having these excruciating conversations forever.
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# ? Dec 6, 2023 22:56 |
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Whenever the conversation lags, I just toss off a few jibes about the Pope or perhaps a humorous anecdote about a miserly Scotsman and the conversation is soon humming along with absolute celery. Ha ha. Did you smoke it? I said celery, haha.
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# ? Dec 6, 2023 23:32 |
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The KillJamesBond! podcast has done an episode on the movie. They respond a lot to movie-Hollum's fate to decide against the "dudes rock" Twitter consensus and the very shallow analysis of the professional critics.
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# ? Dec 14, 2023 14:16 |
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Sax Solo posted:The KillJamesBond! podcast has done an episode on the movie. They respond a lot to movie-Hollum's fate to decide against the "dudes rock" Twitter consensus and the very shallow analysis of the professional critics. Amusing, but the one lady making constant Star Trek comparisons was killing me, lol. Deeply painful.
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# ? Dec 15, 2023 01:47 |
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Also, they want me to download an app so I can point out their many mistakes, but gently caress that.
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# ? Dec 15, 2023 02:13 |
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Abi is a theater kid. Theater kids can't be expected to understand things properly.yaffle posted:Also, they want me to download an app so I can point out their many mistakes, but gently caress that.
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# ? Dec 15, 2023 02:31 |
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Sax Solo posted:Conversational questions carry with them some implied right to know the answer. You are impertinent to ask who I am, sir! My second shall call upon yours forthwith.
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# ? Dec 16, 2023 08:53 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 18:40 |
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Sax Solo posted:to point out any mistakes (Sophie Villiers? lol). I'm sure she'd love to hear them. "Sophie Villiers" made my eyebrows shoot up and all the way around to what little hair remains on my bald head
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# ? Dec 17, 2023 10:56 |