Thanks for this trailer...the film was one of those defining moments in my boyhood when cinema and theatre crossed over and storytelling with characters and ideas became all important.
Fantastic job, and one of my all-time favorite films. It's the first film I can remember that made me spontaneously(and surprisingly to my 6th grade self, ) burst into tears....
@@kakashi101able Not that the 1992 version is bad, but the 1939 version ultimately handles the characters of George, Lennie and Curley's Wife (Named 'Mae' in the 1939 version) handles them a bit better. The scene where Lennie crushes Curley's hand to a pulp, the 1939 version shows Lennie horrified at his own strength, while in the 1992 version, Lennie angrily growls at Curley's cries of pain.
Thanks for this trailer...the film was one of those defining moments in my boyhood when cinema and theatre crossed over and storytelling with characters and ideas became all important.
Well done to the editor and producers - great work! In the spirit of the times too
Thanks so much! The transfer back to 16mm film came out great, too!
Fantastic job, and one of my all-time favorite films. It's the first film I can remember that made me spontaneously(and surprisingly to my 6th grade self, ) burst into tears....
Is it better than the 1992 version?
@@kakashi101able Not that the 1992 version is bad, but the 1939 version ultimately handles the characters of George, Lennie and Curley's Wife (Named 'Mae' in the 1939 version) handles them a bit better. The scene where Lennie crushes Curley's hand to a pulp, the 1939 version shows Lennie horrified at his own strength, while in the 1992 version, Lennie angrily growls at Curley's cries of pain.
Amazing
Excellent job. Thanks.
That's the Lennie i imagined when i red the book
It looks really good.
An Aaron Copeland score!
Mickey