Hey Mr. Wolf, I'm truly saddened that I missed this but I'm hoping you can get a chance to get to late questions.
I wanted to tell you that I am genuinely grateful to you and the film adaptation for introducing me to the wonderful world of noir. It remains my favorite genre and it served as a catalyst for my love of film, literature and art in general. I still contend that Who Framed Roger Rabbit ranks among the very best noir pictures made in the last few decades.
Which writers, films, music or paintings colored your conception of the world of Roger?
Do you feel the adaptation has changed your internal perceptions of the characters as you create new material, or do their original voices, faces and mannerisms still remain fresh and viable to you? I can't imagine, for example, anyone but Bob Hoskins as Eddie Valiant now.
Finally, where do you typically write and what gets you in the mood to create?
kugfersez3 karma
Hey Mr. Wolf, I'm truly saddened that I missed this but I'm hoping you can get a chance to get to late questions.
I wanted to tell you that I am genuinely grateful to you and the film adaptation for introducing me to the wonderful world of noir. It remains my favorite genre and it served as a catalyst for my love of film, literature and art in general. I still contend that Who Framed Roger Rabbit ranks among the very best noir pictures made in the last few decades.
Which writers, films, music or paintings colored your conception of the world of Roger?
Do you feel the adaptation has changed your internal perceptions of the characters as you create new material, or do their original voices, faces and mannerisms still remain fresh and viable to you? I can't imagine, for example, anyone but Bob Hoskins as Eddie Valiant now.
Finally, where do you typically write and what gets you in the mood to create?
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