This is definitely on my bucket list for well…anything. Lol. It’s be funny if an Arnold Swarzenegger AI could be used to read some actual Conan lines, from the original pulps.
I'm a big Robert E Howard fan, and I've yet to visit his museum. That is about to change. By the way, that line that you mentioned from the movie was taken out of the Art of War by Sun Tzu.
I am a big Robert E Howard Fan since I was about 13 years old. I am currently almost 71. I have been to the Howard Museum and Robert E Howard Days 10-12 times. I've lost track. I can answer the question about the Schwarzenegger line about the "lamentations of their women". It was definitely not Howard. It was the influence of John Milius, the director of the Conan movie, who added lines like that. He was a huge fan of Genghis Khan and borrowed a lot of the stuff he put in the movie from the Mongol conqueror. Some of the movie was Howard, some was borrowed from an L Sprague De Camp pastiche, but it was Milius who wrote most of the screenplay and added a lot of his own ideas including the "Wheel of Pain" slavery period and the gladiator type combat period, the 1970s type cult storyline, and the Japanese style sword fighting, none of which had anything to do with Howard's invention.
I’m not sure why you showed a copy of Tarzan the Untamed as something Howard wrote. That was written by Edgar Rice Burroughs, creator of Tarzan, and published in 1920.
I started reading "The Shadow Kingdom". I never thought I'd love Sword and Sorcery so much. Does anyone know if there are any PC games based on the Kull canon?
I've driven through Cross Plains for decades and always wondered about the Robert Howard museum.
Very interesting.
I like your videos, from California
This is definitely on my bucket list for well…anything.
Lol. It’s be funny if an Arnold Swarzenegger AI could be used to read some actual Conan lines, from the original pulps.
I'm a big Robert E Howard fan, and I've yet to visit his museum. That is about to change. By the way, that line that you mentioned from the movie was taken out of the Art of War by Sun Tzu.
Great to see the video , makes up just a _little_for not getting there this year.If you ever get to Texas you must make the effort to visit!
凄いなあ!
good job!
Great Arnold impression
I am a big Robert E Howard Fan since I was about 13 years old. I am currently almost 71. I have been to the Howard Museum and Robert E Howard Days 10-12 times. I've lost track. I can answer the question about the Schwarzenegger line about the "lamentations of their women". It was definitely not Howard. It was the influence of John Milius, the director of the Conan movie, who added lines like that. He was a huge fan of Genghis Khan and borrowed a lot of the stuff he put in the movie from the Mongol conqueror. Some of the movie was Howard, some was borrowed from an L Sprague De Camp pastiche, but it was Milius who wrote most of the screenplay and added a lot of his own ideas including the "Wheel of Pain" slavery period and the gladiator type combat period, the 1970s type cult storyline, and the Japanese style sword fighting, none of which had anything to do with Howard's invention.
I’m not sure why you showed a copy of Tarzan the Untamed as something Howard wrote. That was written by Edgar Rice Burroughs, creator of Tarzan, and published in 1920.
I started reading "The Shadow Kingdom". I never thought I'd love Sword and Sorcery so much. Does anyone know if there are any PC games based on the Kull canon?
I don’t believe so. A few based on Conan, of course.
1:03 i bet ya can't say that fast three times.
誕生日おめでとう、ハワード!