Author |
Message |
Registered: March 15, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 5,459 |
| Posted: | | | | OK, before I start I want to point out there will always be exceptions to rules. For example, in this case I know of two films where the possessory credit is definitely part of the title: Frank Miller's Sin City and Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events. I'm talking about all the films where it's not so clear. So do we put the credit in with the title? Do we ignore it like we do other text on the title screen? I've also started a poll in the Feature Request forum asking whether we need a separate field for this information, regardless of whether you class it as part of the title or not. EDIT: As I can't change the poll part, please note where I say BACK BLURB, please read it as OTHER SOURCESApologies, and thanks to RHo for pointing it out. | | | Last edited: by northbloke |
|
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 2,759 |
| Posted: | | | | It would be "Other". While the back blurb may help it is by no means definitive. Use all possible sources to judge which part of the text on the title screen is the actual title. |
|
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 21,610 |
| Posted: | | | | For those of you who MIGHT thiink the black blurb is the answer let me offer two pieces of evidence from the back, which if you are familiar with English and how such things work will be understood.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Lost World" William Shakespeare's "Hamlet"
They are as demonstrated on ONE single line, not one above, below or in any position other that indicated. These possessives are indeed part of the overall title of the titles. but they do not follow the proposed standard of putting everything in quotes and in fact this is the proper way to handle possessives from the standpoint of the Poster data.
Skip | | | ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!! CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it. Outta here
Billy Video |
|
Registered: March 15, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 5,459 |
| Posted: | | | | Not necessarily true Skip, I checked on the back of Sin City and the back blurb actually reads "Frank's Miller's Sin City" (quotes included) which means it's part of the title, not a credit in front of the title. Whereas Alfred Hitchcock's "The Birds" shows that it's in front of the title, not part of it. |
|
Registered: March 14, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 4,685 |
| |
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 21,610 |
| Posted: | | | | Gunnar:
I learned it in school, back when the world and i were a whole lot younger.
Skip | | | ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!! CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it. Outta here
Billy Video |
|
Registered: March 14, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 4,685 |
| |
Registered: March 15, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 5,459 |
| Posted: | | | | I'd like to see them get Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines or How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 hours 11 minutes on one line... |
|
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 13,202 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting skipnet50: Quote: Gunnar:
I learned it in school, back when the world and i were a whole lot younger.
Skip Wait, wait, wait. I thought you said, in a discussion about quotes in the overview, that the quotes were to set the title apart from the rest of the sentence. | | | No dictator, no invader can hold an imprisoned population by force of arms forever. There is no greater power in the universe than the need for freedom. Against this power, governments and tyrants and armies cannot stand. The Centauri learned this lesson once. We will teach it to them again. Though it take a thousand years, we will be free. - Citizen G'Kar |
|
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 21,610 |
| Posted: | | | | That is a different issue entirely. Why do you keep trying to muddy the waters with straw men and extraneous issues NOT relevant to the discussion at hand. Overviews have NOTHING to do with this discussion. We are talking about apples NOT oranges. Skip | | | ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!! CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it. Outta here
Billy Video |
|
Registered: August 22, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,807 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting northbloke: Quote: I'd like to see them get Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines or How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 hours 11 minutes on one line... "Swept Away by an Unusual Destiny in the Blue Sea of August". German Title: "Hingerissen von einem ungewöhnlichen Schicksal im azurblauen Meer im August". | | | -- Enry |
|
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 21,610 |
| Posted: | | | | | | | ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!! CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it. Outta here
Billy Video |
|
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 2,694 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting skipnet50: Quote: For those of you who MIGHT thiink the black blurb is the answer let me offer two pieces of evidence from the back, which if you are familiar with English and how such things work will be understood.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Lost World" William Shakespeare's "Hamlet"
They are as demonstrated on ONE single line, not one above, below or in any position other that indicated. These possessives are indeed part of the overall title of the titles. but they do not follow the proposed standard of putting everything in quotes and in fact this is the proper way to handle possessives from the standpoint of the Poster data.
Skip Allow me to add another wrinkle here: in many cases, the title that is shown on a movie one-sheet, or the cover of the DVD is a graphical illustration. You can't apply rules of grammar to a graphic, because it isn't straight text. For example: there is no question that Sin City is listed as "Frank Miller's Sin City" because Miller himself said it is supposed to be that way. But, you never see it listed on one line. It is always shown as Miller's name above the Sin City part. There are dozens of other examples where the graphic title is shown the same way as Sin City, yet some people are trying to remove what is obviously part of the title because they are following rules that don't apply to a graphic in the first place. | | | John
"Extremism in the defense of Liberty is no vice!" Senator Barry Goldwater, 1964 Make America Great Again! |
|
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 3,436 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting skipnet50: Quote: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Lost World" William Shakespeare's "Hamlet"
They are as demonstrated on ONE single line, not one above, below or in any position other that indicated. These possessives are indeed part of the overall title of the titles. but they do not follow the proposed standard of putting everything in quotes and in fact this is the proper way to handle possessives from the standpoint of the Poster data. Nice spin... But please, try again. | | | Achim [諾亞信; Ya-Shin//Nuo], a German in Taiwan. Registered: May 29, 2000 (at InterVocative) |
|
Registered: March 15, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 5,459 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Rifter: Quote: Allow me to add another wrinkle here: in many cases, the title that is shown on a movie one-sheet, or the cover of the DVD is a graphical illustration. You can't apply rules of grammar to a graphic, because it isn't straight text. For example: there is no question that Sin City is listed as "Frank Miller's Sin City" because Miller himself said it is supposed to be that way. But, you never see it listed on one line. It is always shown as Miller's name above the Sin City part.
There are dozens of other examples where the graphic title is shown the same way as Sin City, yet some people are trying to remove what is obviously part of the title because they are following rules that don't apply to a graphic in the first place. But we're not talking about the graphic representation of the title, we're talking about the text usually found on the back of the DVD cover or at the bottom of the film poster. And in the example stated it does say "Frank Miller's Sin City" on the back cover, whereas on the one being currently discussed it says Rodgers and Hammerstein's "The King and I", on the 50th Anniversary edition anyway. To me this seems a very good way of differentiating between the two types of possessives. |
|
Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 21,610 |
| Posted: | | | | North:
1) The Rules do not back that up at this time. 2) Thgere are clear exceptions to this such as WS's Hamlet, since he gets no other notice anywhere in the film, to leave off the possessive is misleading, it is not KB's Hamlet. If WS had gotten a an OCB credit somewhere I might agree with you, but he did not.
Skip | | | ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!! CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it. Outta here
Billy Video |
|