My reviewer criteria. I like light, entertaining novels. I like smaller scale stories rather than epics. I like character focused novels featuring pleasant characters, with a minimum number of unpleasant ones. I greatly value clever and witty writing. I like first person, or close third person narratives. I dislike a lot of "head jumping" between POVs and flashbacks. I want a story, not a puzzle. While I am not opposed to violence, I dislike gore for the sake of gore. I find long and elaborate fight, action, and battle sequences tedious. Plot holes and things that happen for the convenience of the author annoy me. And I fear I'm a born critic in that I don't mind pointing out what I don't like in a story. However, I lay no claim to be the final arbitrator of style and taste, you need to decide for yourself what you like or dislike in a book.
Your opinions are always welcome. Comment below.
The Lightkeepers (2009) Written and Directed by Danial Adams C
I found the film here on YouTube. It may not be here when you see this review, who knows? You can find the Rotten Apple reviews of the movie here as well. To save you a click, its tomatometer score is 20% and popcornmeter score is 45%.
As I mentioned above, I had come across this movie from a different direction some years ago - from the novel it is adopted from. I'm not a movie person, so I didn't follow up on it at the time, and only watched it now, because I could do so for free.
From the scores I've quoted, it should be clear that this is not a very good movie. But what really annoys me is this Danial Adams fellow. Not only is he apparently a bad director, but he pirated the story and claimed it as his own. Almost. If you wait, the very final entry on the end credits reads; "Story Inspired by "The Woman Haters" by Joseph C. Lincoln." Inspired by? That's a bold-faced lie in little print. It was Joe Lincoln's The Woman Haters from 1911, beat by beat.
I haven't read the book in some time, but I have it, and glancing through it; from the opening scene to the end of the book, I could see episodes in this movie that follow the story line of the book, including using the same names for the characters. Anything this Adams wrote would have been what would have been expected adopting a novel to a movie. Why, there are illustrations in my copy of the book that could just as well illustrate scenes in the movie. The only thing that this Adams fellow changed is the back story for the young "woman hater" for no good reason. It's just as trite as Joe's.
I watched part of a Mansfield Park movie based on the Jane Austen novel, and it was less faithful than The Lightkeepers, but was still considered an adoption of that novel. Now, I will admit that adding "From the Novel, The Woman Haters, by Joseph C. Lincoln" somewhere on the movie poster and in the opening credits would not likely have sold more than three additional tickets, unlike putting Jane Austen's name on a movie that only vaguely resembles the book. But still, to put in small print at the very end of the movie, when everyone has left, that it was "inspired" by Joe Lincoln's book is a lie. The bright side is that Joe Lincoln seems to have dodged a bullet, in that this movie is bad movie.
The Lightkeepers is bafflingly lame in execution: A number of cuts don't match, and the entire film has a herky-jerky stop-and-start lack of momentum. - Chuck Bowen, Slant Magazine
The movie is about a lighthouse keeper on Cape Cod who "hates" women for reasons that we learn over the course of the movie. A mysterious young man washes up on the shore from a passing steamer, who gives an obviously fake name, and who is in no hurry to leave the lighthouse, also for reasons we learn over the course of the movie. The lighthouse keeper's assistant has just quit, so the young man takes his place, temporarily. They bond over their disgust of womenkind, a disgust that is tested, and found wanting, when two women take a nearby cottage for five weeks.
As the critic I quoted above suggests, the pacing of this movie is off. The events almost seemed like they took place in just the span of three or four days, rather than over a summer. Scenes run on too long, with too few scenes to suggest the passage of any time at all. Costumes and the settings were authentic looking, but very limited, I suspect because Cape Cod is a very crowded place these days, and if it was shot on location, they would likely have few angles to shot the lighthouse and beach from without having to do a lot of CGI stuff in post to eliminate its modern surroundings. I'm no judge of acting, but I guess it was serviceable, though not with a lot of chemistry, in my opinion.
The Woman Haters is far from my favorite Joe Lincoln story, so it is not surprising that I wasn't very fond of the movie made from it. It seemed an odd choice, given all of the good Joe Lincoln books...
Joseph Lincoln and his books are pretty much forgotten these days, the fate of almost every author, no matter how popular they happened to be in their age. Indeed, popularity in their time almost guarantees it. And yet, there was one more Joe Lincoln story made into a movie in this century...2009 to be exact. I can also watch it on YouTube, but for $3.99. It's called The Golden Boys, a film adoption of Joe Lincoln's Cap'n Eri, However, it tomatometer rating is 31% and popcornmeter rating is 22%. Even with good actors, it seems to be hard to drag Joe Lincoln's stories into the 21st century.