Story remains rich as ever and performances can be great, but there are a few clunkers.
Read the whole story
Read the whole story
"Saying Fahrenheit 451 is not about censorship is like saying 1984 is not about censorship. What book did you even read?
Actually, he's right, according to Bradbury: the censorship angle was not his primary focus. Check it out: http://www.laweekly.com/news/ray-bradbu ... ed-2149125
"Fahrenheit 451 is not, he says firmly, a story about government censorship. . . . Bradbury, a man living in the creative and industrial center of reality TV and one-hour dramas, says it is, in fact, a story about how television destroys interest in reading literature.
I first read Fahrenheit as an adult, for interest and not for any school curriculum, and I was surprised when reading it to find myself thinking, "This is about reality TV and omnipresent advertising and the inability to concentrate on anything worthwhile because of the noise, visual as well as auditory, that keeps us all distracted." The censorship angle was that the government had decided that being distracted was good, and so was encouraging and demanding that . . . but it was the people who were doing it to themselves.
I was impressed. I'd expected something far more simplistic.
That's a big oddity. A society that eliminates books, but everyone seems to be able to read? That suggests technical and engineering literature still exists, just not thought provoking 'stories'. A technical society must have written language. Commerce needs signs and prices. Shucks, they need street signs. You can't run any kind of business or government bureaucracy without lots of writing.I could never accept the premise of the story, as much as I tried I couldn't accept that reading would be outlawed.
You cannot have a complex vast technologically advanced society without complex solutions. Complex solutions cannot be had without reading and writing.
I read the story, and gave it a C and the grade hasn't improved in the past 25 years since I've read it.
It just isn't that good.
ctrl+f, hound, 0 results...
A disappointment already.
Not one comparison with Truffaut's 1966 film version? (Which, IMHO, still holds up pretty well.)
Oskar Werner played a great Montag, although Julie Christies dual roles was a bit mixed.
Still worth watching.
Fahrenheit 451 (the book) follows from the same idea as Aldous Huxley in Brave New World (Revisited) - governments (or power structures) controlling and suppressing the demands of ordinary people by endless distraction with superficial matters, that ordinary people *happily* accept (cf. Montag's wife).
You only have to look around us to see it now, and the same basic idea was formulated by Neil Postman in the book "Amusing Ourselves to Death".
Death of the Author was just some guy’s opinion, you know?I mean ... good for Ray! He's certainly entitled to his opinion, and I'm sure he could point out textual evidence and write one hell of a essay about it.
I could never accept the premise of the story, as much as I tried I couldn't accept that reading would be outlawed.
You cannot have a complex vast technologically advanced society without complex solutions. Complex solutions cannot be had without reading and writing.
I read the story, and gave it a C and the grade hasn't improved in the past 25 years since I've read it.
It just isn't that good.
Edit: some typos
I could never accept the premise of the story, as much as I tried I couldn't accept that reading would be outlawed.
You cannot have a complex vast technologically advanced society without complex solutions. Complex solutions cannot be had without reading and writing.
I read the story, and gave it a C and the grade hasn't improved in the past 25 years since I've read it.
It just isn't that good.
Edit: some typos
Apart from Truffaut's, the best Fahrenheit 451 adaptation is Equilibrium with all gun-kata. Actually, any movie can use some gun-kata.
I could never accept the premise of the story, as much as I tried I couldn't accept that reading would be outlawed.
You cannot have a complex vast technologically advanced society without complex solutions. Complex solutions cannot be had without reading and writing.
I read the story, and gave it a C and the grade hasn't improved in the past 25 years since I've read it.
It just isn't that good.
Edit: some typos
I can see having a government-approved list of "acceptable" books as consistent with Bradbury's vision. Given that the purpose of the screens in the book is to act as the opiate of the masses, I can see the Bible being permitted; the easiest way for a government to manipulate the public is through religion.
Besides, if you were really going to select a small handful of books for your citizens to have access to, would you really select The Bible and Moby Dick? Wouldn’t you choose books with absolutely nothing that would prompt them to question the nature of the world, of people (or, as the Bible says “the hearts of men”), of drama and ambition?
Besides, if you were really going to select a small handful of books for your citizens to have access to, would you really select The Bible and Moby Dick? Wouldn’t you choose books with absolutely nothing that would prompt them to question the nature of the world, of people (or, as the Bible says “the hearts of men”), of drama and ambition?
To be honest, I think it's probably the best here to employ Occam's Razor and conclude that the simplest explantion for including Moby-Dick is as a little in-joke reference since Ray Bradbury wrote the screenplay for the film adaptation of the book in the 1950s. I doubt there was any more thought to it than that.
I can see having a government-approved list of "acceptable" books as consistent with Bradbury's vision. Given that the purpose of the screens in the book is to act as the opiate of the masses, I can see the Bible being permitted; the easiest way for a government to manipulate the public is through religion.
This is just dumb. Especially when your next statement is that Moby Dick is a highly analyzed classic (implying the Bible isn’t). You don’t have to be religious to see why the Bible is in fact a highly analyzed classic that secular scholars study in-depth.
Besides, if you were really going to select a small handful of books for your citizens to have access to, would you really select The Bible and Moby Dick? Wouldn’t you choose books with absolutely nothing that would prompt them to question the nature of the world, of people (or, as the Bible says “the hearts of men”), of drama and ambition?
It’s a pretty silly choice for the modern movie to make. Ironically, this allowing of some books completely flies in the face of the Truffaut film. At the end of that one, the survivors gather at the end and piece together an oral Bible. They’ve each memorized certain passages, such as the Lord’s Prayer, and they recite it out loud in bits and pieces. It’s a moving moment showing how important the words and ideas are: the people who have escaped oppression will never surrender the ideas and words the books contain even if the books themselves are lost.
I can see having a government-approved list of "acceptable" books as consistent with Bradbury's vision. Given that the purpose of the screens in the book is to act as the opiate of the masses, I can see the Bible being permitted; the easiest way for a government to manipulate the public is through religion.
This is just dumb. Especially when your next statement is that Moby Dick is a highly analyzed classic (implying the Bible isn’t). You don’t have to be religious to see why the Bible is in fact a highly analyzed classic that secular scholars study in-depth.
Besides, if you were really going to select a small handful of books for your citizens to have access to, would you really select The Bible and Moby Dick? Wouldn’t you choose books with absolutely nothing that would prompt them to question the nature of the world, of people (or, as the Bible says “the hearts of men”), of drama and ambition?
It’s a pretty silly choice for the modern movie to make. Ironically, this allowing of some books completely flies in the face of the Truffaut film. At the end of that one, the survivors gather at the end and piece together an oral Bible. They’ve each memorized certain passages, such as the Lord’s Prayer, and they recite it out loud in bits and pieces. It’s a moving moment showing how important the words and ideas are: the people who have escaped oppression will never surrender the ideas and words the books contain even if the books themselves are lost.
Just to add ... if you are trying to control you population though religion, something we have a lot of historical and modern examples of, the absolute first thing you do, every time (In this is historically true, not just theory) is take away ANY access they have to the religions holy book.
Say it's too sacred to be in the hands of most people, print a "revision" and don't translate it from some ancient language, say the old one was influenced by Satan, write it in fucking code ... whatever it takes to ensure NO ONE other then your most powerful priests and leaders have access to your holy book.
The bible was translated to English and mass produced NOT by Catholics, but by Lutheran's (before that was a thing) who were trying to show the general population that all that elegance bullshit wasn't anywhere in there. I will repeat this, and it's important to understand this is just history ... the ONLY reason the Bible got into the hands of the common man was that a bunch of people who wanted the general population to REBEL AGAINST THE CHURCH felt that letting them see the bible was the best way to point out how fucked their organized religion was. And ... it mostly worked.
Think about it. When you pull a woman aside after mass and tell her that god wants her and her 13 year old daughter to be your sex slaves, the LAST thing you want is her to start quoiting the bible and saying "I'm pretty sure he doesn't, in point of fact". You want ABSOULTE and unquestioned authority to know, preach, and interpret the will of god with your clergy.
Interesting. It’s an odd choice for an inside joke since it causes a ton of unnecessary questions, I guess. I’d probably just go with having Moby Dick on a TV somewhere...but OK.
Just to add ... if you are trying to control you population though religion, something we have a lot of historical and modern examples of, the absolute first thing you do, every time (In this is historically true, not just theory) is take away ANY access they have to the religions holy book.
Say it's too sacred to be in the hands of most people, print a "revision" and don't translate it from some ancient language, say the old one was influenced by Satan, write it in fucking code ... whatever it takes to ensure NO ONE other then your most powerful priests and leaders have access to your holy book.
Just to add ... if you are trying to control you population though religion, something we have a lot of historical and modern examples of, the absolute first thing you do, every time (In this is historically true, not just theory) is take away ANY access they have to the religions holy book.
Say it's too sacred to be in the hands of most people, print a "revision" and don't translate it from some ancient language, say the old one was influenced by Satan, write it in fucking code ... whatever it takes to ensure NO ONE other then your most powerful priests and leaders have access to your holy book.
There are contemporary variations on this idea, such as the Jehovah's Witnesses with their "governing body" consisting of "faithful and discrete slaves" who continually process the relevant literature and scriptures. By such means they attempt to control the faithful as times require by casting out the "old light" and introducing "new light". Members are strongly encouraged to dispose of materials considered "old light", sometimes to the point of treating such things as if they never existed. I find it all rather creepy and disturbing, but fascinating.
This completely undermines the point of Fahrenheit 451, the point of the censorship wasn't to eliminate any specific idea, it was to eliminate the concept of ideas themselves, why would the government allow some books but not others? I'll hold judgement 'til I see it but it feels like this version is losing nuance in favour of a modern tech/privacy story.The platform even has a few (government approved) ebooks; hope you like The Bible and Moby Dick!
the tech companies could predict our thoughts [...] We demanded a world like this
I could never accept the premise of the story, as much as I tried I couldn't accept that reading would be outlawed.
You cannot have a complex vast technologically advanced society without complex solutions. Complex solutions cannot be had without reading and writing.
...
ctrl+f, hound, 0 results...
A disappointment already.
I've always imagined the hound as kinda like Ravage from the old Transformers cartoon.
Apart from Truffaut's, the best Fahrenheit 451 adaptation is Equilibrium with all gun-kata. Actually, any movie can use some gun-kata.
I was just about to say this but you beat me to it. Equilibrium does a great job of modernizing and adapting F451. It’s also highly entertaining with some great action scenes.
I get the same thing from people who I pester to read Heinlein's Starship Troopers. They say: "...it wasn't only about spaceships and shooting stuff!""Saying Fahrenheit 451 is not about censorship is like saying 1984 is not about censorship. What book did you even read?
Actually, he's right, according to Bradbury: the censorship angle was not his primary focus. Check it out: http://www.laweekly.com/news/ray-bradbu ... ed-2149125
"Fahrenheit 451 is not, he says firmly, a story about government censorship. . . . Bradbury, a man living in the creative and industrial center of reality TV and one-hour dramas, says it is, in fact, a story about how television destroys interest in reading literature.
I first read Fahrenheit as an adult, for interest and not for any school curriculum, and I was surprised when reading it to find myself thinking, "This is about reality TV and omnipresent advertising and the inability to concentrate on anything worthwhile because of the noise, visual as well as auditory, that keeps us all distracted." The censorship angle was that the government had decided that being distracted was good, and so was encouraging and demanding that . . . but it was the people who were doing it to themselves.
I was impressed. I'd expected something far more simplistic.
No, actually, you're completely wrong.I could never accept the premise of the story, as much as I tried I couldn't accept that reading would be outlawed.
You cannot have a complex vast technologically advanced society without complex solutions. Complex solutions cannot be had without reading and writing.
I read the story, and gave it a C and the grade hasn't improved in the past 25 years since I've read it.
It just isn't that good.
Edit: some typos
Your misunderstanding is that in the story, the "leaders" could read and write and were educated in that respect. It was the puling masses who were prohibited from doing so because "ideas are bad".
As long as you have an elite that can direct things, you can run any level of society you want. It actually becomes easier with automation and AI involved, since spoken words can get questions answered immediately and automation takes away a lot of the issues involved in training complicated things. But absent AI, just teach people by rout what they need to know and have them stand in for it.
It's inefficient as hell, yes, but it's not unworkable.
So you're correct that it can't be done without a complex form of communication beyond the verbal. However, they did have that in the story (at least by implication, IIRC), and this modern take elevates the likelihood that it would work even more since you don't need educated drones to do the kind of work that needs to be done. You just need people who are trained to accept and mostly reliably execute verbal instructions.
If you've never been in the military, you might not get that, since it's hard to conceptualize the mindset, but it's attitude, environment and up-bringing. You know differently. These people didn't (at least in the story). With the right upbringing and full social immersion in the mindset, it's certainly possible.
How LIKELY it is to happen is definitely arguable.
I can see having a government-approved list of "acceptable" books as consistent with Bradbury's vision. Given that the purpose of the screens in the book is to act as the opiate of the masses, I can see the Bible being permitted; the easiest way for a government to manipulate the public is through religion.
This is just dumb. Especially when your next statement is that Moby Dick is a highly analyzed classic (implying the Bible isn’t). You don’t have to be religious to see why the Bible is in fact a highly analyzed classic that secular scholars study in-depth.
Besides, if you were really going to select a small handful of books for your citizens to have access to, would you really select The Bible and Moby Dick? Wouldn’t you choose books with absolutely nothing that would prompt them to question the nature of the world, of people (or, as the Bible says “the hearts of men”), of drama and ambition?
Moby-Dick seems a little out-of-place, though, as a highly-regarded, highly-analyzed classic. If you were to effectively tweak the premise of Fahrenheit-451 to allow for some government-approved books, I'd think it would be books that are blandly entertaining, not thought-provoking.
It's been 20 years since I read it, but my recollection is that there were a couple of references to comic books being allowed. Bradbury was a comics fan, so he wouldn't have meant this to say that all comic books are dumb, empty entertainment -- just that a lot of them are.This completely undermines the point of Fahrenheit 451, the point of the censorship wasn't to eliminate any specific idea, it was to eliminate the concept of ideas themselves, why would the government allow some books but not others? I'll hold judgement 'til I see it but it feels like this version is losing nuance in favour of a modern tech/privacy story.The platform even has a few (government approved) ebooks; hope you like The Bible and Moby Dick!
I can see having a government-approved list of "acceptable" books as consistent with Bradbury's vision. Given that the purpose of the screens in the book is to act as the opiate of the masses, I can see the Bible being permitted; the easiest way for a government to manipulate the public is through religion.
Moby-Dick seems a little out-of-place, though, as a highly-regarded, highly-analyzed classic. If you were to effectively tweak the premise of Fahrenheit-451 to allow for some government-approved books, I'd think it would be books that are blandly entertaining, not thought-provoking.
What? No. What?This completely undermines the point of Fahrenheit 451, the point of the censorship wasn't to eliminate any specific idea, it was to eliminate the concept of ideas themselves, why would the government allow some books but not others? I'll hold judgement 'til I see it but it feels like this version is losing nuance in favour of a modern tech/privacy story.The platform even has a few (government approved) ebooks; hope you like The Bible and Moby Dick!
the tech companies could predict our thoughts [...] We demanded a world like this
His original idea was about TV and mass entertainment and it's influences and nothing to do with censorship and books. Those were by products
Fahrenheit 451 was explicitly about censorship. Like, inarguably, unambiguously about censorship.
You could argue that it's not really about books -- hell, it's not really about TV, either. TV was the form that mind-numbing mass entertainment took in the book because of when it was written, but Bradbury didn't object to TV as a medium; he knew it had the potential to produce great, provocative art, just as it had the potential to produce mindless pabulum.
But it's absolutely about censorship and the suppression of dangerous ideas. That's the entire point of the book.
Saying Fahrenheit 451 is not about censorship is like saying 1984 is not about censorship. What book did you even read?
It's been 20 years since I read it, but my recollection is that there were a couple of references to comic books being allowed. Bradbury was a comics fan, so he wouldn't have meant this to say that all comic books are dumb, empty entertainment -- just that a lot of them are.This completely undermines the point of Fahrenheit 451, the point of the censorship wasn't to eliminate any specific idea, it was to eliminate the concept of ideas themselves, why would the government allow some books but not others? I'll hold judgement 'til I see it but it feels like this version is losing nuance in favour of a modern tech/privacy story.The platform even has a few (government approved) ebooks; hope you like The Bible and Moby Dick!
I can see having a government-approved list of "acceptable" books as consistent with Bradbury's vision. Given that the purpose of the screens in the book is to act as the opiate of the masses, I can see the Bible being permitted; the easiest way for a government to manipulate the public is through religion.
Moby-Dick seems a little out-of-place, though, as a highly-regarded, highly-analyzed classic. If you were to effectively tweak the premise of Fahrenheit-451 to allow for some government-approved books, I'd think it would be books that are blandly entertaining, not thought-provoking.
What? No. What?This completely undermines the point of Fahrenheit 451, the point of the censorship wasn't to eliminate any specific idea, it was to eliminate the concept of ideas themselves, why would the government allow some books but not others? I'll hold judgement 'til I see it but it feels like this version is losing nuance in favour of a modern tech/privacy story.The platform even has a few (government approved) ebooks; hope you like The Bible and Moby Dick!
the tech companies could predict our thoughts [...] We demanded a world like this
His original idea was about TV and mass entertainment and it's influences and nothing to do with censorship and books. Those were by products
Fahrenheit 451 was explicitly about censorship. Like, inarguably, unambiguously about censorship.
You could argue that it's not really about books -- hell, it's not really about TV, either. TV was the form that mind-numbing mass entertainment took in the book because of when it was written, but Bradbury didn't object to TV as a medium; he knew it had the potential to produce great, provocative art, just as it had the potential to produce mindless pabulum.
But it's absolutely about censorship and the suppression of dangerous ideas. That's the entire point of the book.
Saying Fahrenheit 451 is not about censorship is like saying 1984 is not about censorship. What book did you even read?