Ah such is life. We are born and act childish and are diapered and we grow old and become foolish and diapered all over again till death unborn! And what a waste of a great and anchient library. But nothing lasts forever.
The pine cone scene with Fuchsia and her father made me remember my one regret from the books. Her death. I know she had to die, along with her innocence; but it's still a cruel blow for the reader. Knowing her fate, I actually became quite tearful while watching her father say "I don't know you". I see this adaptation as a separate entity from the books, and have groan (nyuk) to enjoy it as such. For me, this scene actually works better visually than how it plays out on paper.
have always wondered about the deeper meaning of the books... It seems to be a parable about coming of age and rejecting the world of one's parents ? Especially in the third book, Titus Alone... what do you think?
I don't know, I couldn't get a deeper meaning, the books were that strange. To be honest I'm not much of a reader, and found a lot of it hard to understand. I loved some of it, I skimmed quite a lot.
There were lots of different conclusions as to what it could have all been about. I Always thought it was all about how power corrupts, how mad parents can be, and how the children suffer for it.
@xxtiaan Also musty and even drab. That's how I pictured Gormenghast when I read the books. Although I read the books a long time ago I don't remember Fuschia being quite so silly though...I always thought her more sad than anything else.
i cry every time when lord groan forgets who fuchsia is...
KeitoHarajuku 3 days ago
Ah such is life. We are born and act childish and are diapered and we grow old and become foolish and diapered all over again till death unborn! And what a waste of a great and anchient library. But nothing lasts forever.
screwthenet 1 year ago
that pinecone/library scene was so sad...yet so beautiful.
StoliDassah 1 year ago
SPOILER WARNING
The pine cone scene with Fuchsia and her father made me remember my one regret from the books. Her death. I know she had to die, along with her innocence; but it's still a cruel blow for the reader. Knowing her fate, I actually became quite tearful while watching her father say "I don't know you". I see this adaptation as a separate entity from the books, and have groan (nyuk) to enjoy it as such. For me, this scene actually works better visually than how it plays out on paper.
MuninRaven 1 year ago
The part with Groan and Fuschia is soooo sad. :(
Chrissy0Chris 1 year ago
have always wondered about the deeper meaning of the books... It seems to be a parable about coming of age and rejecting the world of one's parents ? Especially in the third book, Titus Alone... what do you think?
anisete46 1 year ago
@anisete46
I don't know, I couldn't get a deeper meaning, the books were that strange. To be honest I'm not much of a reader, and found a lot of it hard to understand. I loved some of it, I skimmed quite a lot.
There were lots of different conclusions as to what it could have all been about. I Always thought it was all about how power corrupts, how mad parents can be, and how the children suffer for it.
Rowan07001484 1 year ago
@anisete46 all stories are the same, it boils down to good vs evil
but the gormenghast series is especially layered and complex
the first book could be read as a political tale
steerpike is a revolutionary who wants to overthrow the established order of things (this isnt really shown in the series but is in the books)
I love how its so complex and multilayered everyone takes from it something different.
xxtiaan 1 year ago
@xxtiaan all stories are not good versus evil, come now dont be so general
ionnit 1 year ago
Maaan, I really hate Steerpike. Destroying all these fragile people! That scene with Fuschia and her Father always chokes me up. :-(
Artoveli 1 year ago
I always said I'd go mad without books, but I didn't really mean it! LOL
tiffers1912 2 years ago
what amazing acting....
thalkettoth 2 years ago
its OK but I agree far too glossy compared to the descriptions in the book.
liamohara 2 years ago
agreed,, all the extirior shots were all far too colourful, it needs to be way more gothic and dark
xxtiaan 2 years ago 5
@xxtiaan Also musty and even drab. That's how I pictured Gormenghast when I read the books. Although I read the books a long time ago I don't remember Fuschia being quite so silly though...I always thought her more sad than anything else.
Morgana0x 1 year ago
@Morgana0x youre right! musty, decaying, oppressive even, but shot with beauty, you have my gormenghast in your head! give it back!
yeah fuschia was more alienated in the book, sort of an "ive got asbergers" character
xxtiaan 1 year ago
when were this show made??
dobrorodnaya 2 years ago
oh man that scene with fuscha and her father had me all choked up
xxtiaan 2 years ago
wonderful acting...
thalkettoth 2 years ago
boy in darkness is another gormenghast side project thats worth a read features titus.
xxtiaan 2 years ago
poor Sepulchrave :-(
fucsia89 2 years ago
5:55 was so funny in the books
k1ttycat 2 years ago
I hate when identical twins dress indentically. They're also complete morons which is just great. :0)
JRM is great in this. Love him. I really should read the books...I have one somewhere...
Starbits7 2 years ago
this does not give the strangeness of the books justice, jonothan rhys-meyers does a good job though. too glossy though
callanhead 3 years ago
This whole production is so delightfully strange.
dkstojentin 3 years ago 8
Yeh it's based on a couple of books, which are evn stranger
Rowan07001484 3 years ago
@dkstojentin You should read the books. They are even stranger.
Morgana0x 1 year ago