This time, from one of the funniest movies evar, Office Space. The result scares me a little. 🙂
Lawrence
This time, from one of the funniest movies evar, Office Space. The result scares me a little. 🙂
Lawrence
Just watching one of my favorite movies of all time, Willy Wonka and Chocolate Factory. I’ve looked over the ‘net for a list of the literary references that Wonka uses during the film, and not found any complete lists. I’m a bit curious as to whether they only used public domain quotes, or whether they had to jump through the hoops that a modern producer would need to in order to clear the copyright on so many quotes. Many of them (Shakespeare is used a few times) are clearly public domain, but others are not so clear (O’Shaugnessy and others). Anyone know of such a resource? I’ll put on my reference librarian hat and find one if no one knows of one.
Just another great example where borrowing works from others made the movie more interesting, and raised it above the norm. Hopefully the remake won’t have to drop the sort of playful quotations for fear of lawsuits.
File in the “my goodness the Internet is a large den of insanity” file: the strangest LiveJournal ever…this reads like Buffalo Bill from Silence of the Lambs meets Beavis. Just…wow.
I find all I want to do is sleep. 🙂 I should be doing about a billion things (not the least of which is finishing the article from the Master’s Paper), but somehow all enthusiasm is gone for the moment.
I guess I should just revel in the week, and sleep. Betsy keeps telling me I deserve it, so it must be true. Right?
For anyone interested, my pictures of the UNC SILS graduation are up now.
We’ll return to our regularly scheduled updates and musings shortly.
To all the 2004 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Information and Library Science Master’s Degree recipients!
I look forward to seeing tons of you over the summer, and many more over the course of the next bunch o’ years at conferences and such.
Thanks to everyone who helped me get this far (you all know who you are).
…but I’ve been overwhelmed by visitors and family and graduation festivities! Graduation is tomorrow here at UNC-Chapel Hill, so the town has been invaded by families of all shapes and sizes.
Ah…who am I kidding. I’m just late posting because I’ve been playing with my new 40-gig iPod for the last 8 hours. 🙂 Yay for graduation presents! And thanks to everyone out there who chipped in for it..Betsy went above and beyond the call to rake in the dough for it. You are all very, very special.
It occurs to me that some of you may have borrowed media of a sort from me over the last couple of years (books, movies, etc…). Before everyone scatters to the four winds, I’d love to get that stuff back. 🙂 You probably know who you are….
Miramax, a film company owned by the Walt Disney Corporation and home to such diverse films as Kill Bill and Shakespeare in Love has pulled the distribution of Michael Moore’s latest film Farenheit 9/11.
Why? Because they “expressed particular concern that it would endanger tax breaks Disney receives for its theme park, hotels and other ventures in Florida, where Mr. Bush’s brother, Jeb, is governor” according to the story via the NYT.
Wow…this is wrong on so many levels that I can’t even begin to list them. Isn’t there something that should protect this speech from political retaliation of this sort? A company, based in a state, fears retaliation from the governor because the film that said company is producing is critical of his brother, who happens to be the president of the US.
Wow.
…and check out the most excellent article from Eli Edwards on the Internet Archive, soon to appear in Information Technology and Libraries.
A very, very good summary of the issues dealing with the archival of the Internet, as well as some insightful things about the role of libraries/librarians and the public/private dynamic. Great stuff, Eli!