My theory is that they are shooting with the spoons and then some team of poor schmucks gets the lucky assignment of burning 12+ hour days 7 days a week to make the spoons look less spoon.
“lucky” assignment.
It kinda makes sense? Spiderman and Deadpool both they spent a lot of time fixing the mask to make the body language work.
Maybe, although I get the feeling that we may not agree on why.
I mean, I wouldn’t have done the lenses at all. You just nod at them with some subtle contacts or something and go on with your day.
Or you could go the Deus Ex way with it, which I suppose is why I was inserting the whole retractable sunglasses thing into the conversation. Either way I don’t know that it’s worth attempting, even if they look better in the final version through some VFX enhancement or whatever.
Do the lenses. They, aside from the razor blade nails, were the defining characteristic.
Do them right.
Rather than set up a lazy shot-reverse-shot ala Attack of the Clones, every scene Molly is in gives us a background that can be flipped and displayed in the lenses in order to showcase what the character is feeling.
And then cast her with someone who can do a Carl Urban-as-Dredd performance without ever showing us her actual eyes.
But these stills are shot at day and without neon? So, much better than whatever paint-by-numbers checklist they are using to produce this abomination…
Yeah, well, I don’t know much about this thing. I will say that you never judge the look of a thing from set stills.
I will also say I don’t know how you do Neuromancer without devolving into self-parody at this point. I’m just going to go back to my corner and go back to not knowing anything about this until it’s out.
What was that bit about trying to read Hamlet and deciding it was just people sitting around in castles speaking in cliches?
I mean, if they can make a 3rd adaptation of Dune: The Consumable Content Experience then I’m sure someone can find a way to make a Neuromancer that would be me than just a generic block of media - greenlit while pointing to the mere existence of The Peripheral as financial onus.
Well, there’s a very meaningful set of differences there. For one thing, by the time Dune first got adapted there weren’t that many derivatives. Some of the imagery landed in Star Wars, but that was about it, by the time Lynch had his shot.
The issue with Neuromancer is that it’s been adapted dozens, hundreds of times in all but name. Every iconic piece of that story has a hundred spins and spins of those spins elsewhere.
So when you do Paul Atreides you maaay have to contend with the fact that you’re doing Luke Skywalker on LSD. When you do Molly you have to choose which pieces of Trinity, the like five iterations of Motoko Kusanagi, Ellen Ripley, Flynne Fisher and a dozen others, including at least one other version of Molly herself you’re embracing or ignoring. You have to choose where you go with Blade Runner, The Matrix, Ghost in the Shell, Pantheon, Deus Ex, The Peripheral, Cyberpunk 2077, Westworld, Robocop, Shadowrun, Escape from NY, Aeon Flux, System Shock, Minority Report or a bunch of others. There are like four different Keanu Reeves characters you may choose to embrace or dismiss in this process. Just the fact that you’re going to have to work around a bunch of talk about The Matrix and Zion is an issue.
I’m not saying that is or will be the problem with this version specifically. We’ll see what they have when they’re ready to show their homework. I’m saying that would definitely be one of my main anxieties if I had to find the way to do this accurately in 2025.
otoh. One of my all time favorite shows is Batman The Animated Series. They used stuff from pretty much every iteration of Batman and threw in some new ones.
For sure. That said, Batman is on the other end of the spectrum, where a bunch of iterations of THE Batman were already there in the first place. For the most part TAS is conceptually Tim Burton’s Batman: The Cartoon, it just so happens that by 1992 you also could pull from multiple generations of comics and shows as well.
The problem with Neuromancer is it doesn’t have a definitive, iconic iteration, let alone multiple. The closest you get is Johnny Mnemonic, which definitely isn’t it. Blade Runner, Ghost in the Shell or The Matrix are all more of a definitive iteration of Neuromancer than anything Neuromancer (besides the book, obviously).
Yeah… Finally got around to reading Hamlet and “it’s just a bunch of cliches”
But my main reservation with this adaptation is not which artistic choices are being made or the direction they decide to take things or even the difficulties in adapting the story (actually argued the other side of all this in FAVOR of the latest Dune) - and more that the source material was (likely) chosen simply for being a rich vein of dork-culture ore, one intended to be quickly and easily processed into a homogenized block of monetized consumer content…
The end result, once stripped of all pedigree and drained of any residial artistic expression, left as little more than a thumbnail to be scrolled past and forgotten alongside other milquetoast sci-fi projects like Travelers, or Continuum, Solo, etc…
An adaptation with nothing to say; “art” as a meaningless multimedia content experience
I genuinely don’t know enough about the project to know if that tracks. As with anything, I’m willing to give it the benefit of the doubt until it’s an actual thing and see if they figured out something that doesn’t seem obvious.
I’m just… you know, also ready for it to suck for all those reasons, too.
Im not happy about the look of the shades, but what bothers me so far is that lack of inherent menace, the sense of barely constrained violence of Molly.
She needs to radiate imminent death. So far, I’m just seeing an attractive woman in a “futuristic” suit with shiny sunglasses. Molly wasent just “shades and blades,” she was someone jacked to the nines, lithe and ferocious.
The stills aren’t doing her justice. Hopefully live action does.
I would have made the mirror shades a little bigger and more angled but also clearly embedded in her face, and the mirror surface look a lot nicer. The key is that the shades should completely obscure any facial expressions she would be making around her eyes in order to look cold. I’d also make her hair darker, but maybe in an unnatural shade of blue-black.
Wait, they’re actually doing the eye lenses? That’s always been my “would look goofy on film” thing.
I guess they’ll be retractable? I don’t remember if they were supposed to be retractable in the book.
My theory is that they are shooting with the spoons and then some team of poor schmucks gets the lucky assignment of burning 12+ hour days 7 days a week to make the spoons look less spoon.
“lucky” assignment.
It kinda makes sense? Spiderman and Deadpool both they spent a lot of time fixing the mask to make the body language work.
Could have at least done them as metallic looking contacts over her eyes instead of these silver spoons, this looks goofy as hell
No… Hell no.
She had her tear ducts reversed so she spit out her tears.
Yeah this adaptation is fucked.
Maybe, although I get the feeling that we may not agree on why.
I mean, I wouldn’t have done the lenses at all. You just nod at them with some subtle contacts or something and go on with your day.
Or you could go the Deus Ex way with it, which I suppose is why I was inserting the whole retractable sunglasses thing into the conversation. Either way I don’t know that it’s worth attempting, even if they look better in the final version through some VFX enhancement or whatever.
Do the lenses. They, aside from the razor blade nails, were the defining characteristic.
Do them right.
Rather than set up a lazy shot-reverse-shot ala Attack of the Clones, every scene Molly is in gives us a background that can be flipped and displayed in the lenses in order to showcase what the character is feeling.
And then cast her with someone who can do a Carl Urban-as-Dredd performance without ever showing us her actual eyes.
Experimental? Edgy? Overly difficult? Artistically pretentious even?
Maybe.
But these stills are shot at day and without neon? So, much better than whatever paint-by-numbers checklist they are using to produce this abomination…
Yeah, well, I don’t know much about this thing. I will say that you never judge the look of a thing from set stills.
I will also say I don’t know how you do Neuromancer without devolving into self-parody at this point. I’m just going to go back to my corner and go back to not knowing anything about this until it’s out.
Neuromancer without devolving into self-parody…
What was that bit about trying to read Hamlet and deciding it was just people sitting around in castles speaking in cliches?
I mean, if they can make a 3rd adaptation of Dune: The Consumable Content Experience then I’m sure someone can find a way to make a Neuromancer that would be me than just a generic block of media - greenlit while pointing to the mere existence of The Peripheral as financial onus.
Maybe next time then.
Well, there’s a very meaningful set of differences there. For one thing, by the time Dune first got adapted there weren’t that many derivatives. Some of the imagery landed in Star Wars, but that was about it, by the time Lynch had his shot.
The issue with Neuromancer is that it’s been adapted dozens, hundreds of times in all but name. Every iconic piece of that story has a hundred spins and spins of those spins elsewhere.
So when you do Paul Atreides you maaay have to contend with the fact that you’re doing Luke Skywalker on LSD. When you do Molly you have to choose which pieces of Trinity, the like five iterations of Motoko Kusanagi, Ellen Ripley, Flynne Fisher and a dozen others, including at least one other version of Molly herself you’re embracing or ignoring. You have to choose where you go with Blade Runner, The Matrix, Ghost in the Shell, Pantheon, Deus Ex, The Peripheral, Cyberpunk 2077, Westworld, Robocop, Shadowrun, Escape from NY, Aeon Flux, System Shock, Minority Report or a bunch of others. There are like four different Keanu Reeves characters you may choose to embrace or dismiss in this process. Just the fact that you’re going to have to work around a bunch of talk about The Matrix and Zion is an issue.
I’m not saying that is or will be the problem with this version specifically. We’ll see what they have when they’re ready to show their homework. I’m saying that would definitely be one of my main anxieties if I had to find the way to do this accurately in 2025.
otoh. One of my all time favorite shows is Batman The Animated Series. They used stuff from pretty much every iteration of Batman and threw in some new ones.
For sure. That said, Batman is on the other end of the spectrum, where a bunch of iterations of THE Batman were already there in the first place. For the most part TAS is conceptually Tim Burton’s Batman: The Cartoon, it just so happens that by 1992 you also could pull from multiple generations of comics and shows as well.
The problem with Neuromancer is it doesn’t have a definitive, iconic iteration, let alone multiple. The closest you get is Johnny Mnemonic, which definitely isn’t it. Blade Runner, Ghost in the Shell or The Matrix are all more of a definitive iteration of Neuromancer than anything Neuromancer (besides the book, obviously).
Salient points, all.
Yeah… Finally got around to reading Hamlet and “it’s just a bunch of cliches”
But my main reservation with this adaptation is not which artistic choices are being made or the direction they decide to take things or even the difficulties in adapting the story (actually argued the other side of all this in FAVOR of the latest Dune) - and more that the source material was (likely) chosen simply for being a rich vein of dork-culture ore, one intended to be quickly and easily processed into a homogenized block of monetized consumer content…
The end result, once stripped of all pedigree and drained of any residial artistic expression, left as little more than a thumbnail to be scrolled past and forgotten alongside other milquetoast sci-fi projects like Travelers, or Continuum, Solo, etc…
An adaptation with nothing to say; “art” as a meaningless multimedia content experience
I genuinely don’t know enough about the project to know if that tracks. As with anything, I’m willing to give it the benefit of the doubt until it’s an actual thing and see if they figured out something that doesn’t seem obvious.
I’m just… you know, also ready for it to suck for all those reasons, too.
Neuromancer… parody
I’d watch the hell out of a Snowcrash movie!!
If you haven’t read it, look up Stephenson’s “The Diamond Age.”
I love a good book recommendation, thank you!
Im not happy about the look of the shades, but what bothers me so far is that lack of inherent menace, the sense of barely constrained violence of Molly.
She needs to radiate imminent death. So far, I’m just seeing an attractive woman in a “futuristic” suit with shiny sunglasses. Molly wasent just “shades and blades,” she was someone jacked to the nines, lithe and ferocious.
The stills aren’t doing her justice. Hopefully live action does.
Looks like she’s walking out of an Apple store
Is that like “iPhone face” but for sci-fi?
I would have made the mirror shades a little bigger and more angled but also clearly embedded in her face, and the mirror surface look a lot nicer. The key is that the shades should completely obscure any facial expressions she would be making around her eyes in order to look cold. I’d also make her hair darker, but maybe in an unnatural shade of blue-black.