The most famous idiom found in a horror movie- well, except perhaps "You scared the shit outta me!"- is "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.", the sentence typed over and over by the sneaky Jack Torrance in The Shining. He was supposed to be working on his novel! That's why he refused sandwiches from Wendy, so he could concentrate! Gawd, what a jerk. First he sets up his special "must have quiet" writing area in the main hall, in the middle of everything, then it comes out that he's just been fooling around with typography the whole time.
Anyway. "All work..." may not be a familiar expression outside the shores of the ol' USA- so what was the phrase translated to in non-domestic releases of the film? Check it out!
FRANCE
Mind you, I got all of these from The Internet, and as we all know The Internet has been known to lie (I'm looking at YOU, Nigerian widow who promised me millions of dollars)...but there you go.
Did you see this:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.amazon.com/Work-Play-Makes-Jack-Dull/dp/8887381070/ref=wl_it_dp_o?ie=UTF8&coliid=INV9LCRKLHXJN&colid=8EYO3CF1TW10
I kinda wanna get it but if it's what I think it is, I don't wanna waste 10 bucks on THAT, y'know?
-Jason
Everything needs to be translated into Sweathog, dammit.
ReplyDeleteFinal Girl, I absolutely love the scene when Shelley Duvall is flipping through those typed pages. Fantastic.
ReplyDeleteAnd for those who went to delve even deeper into The Shining, have yins checked out this mind-bending essay: http://mstrmnd.com/log/802
ReplyDeleteYou're gonna need a full day to wade through, plus maybe some magic brownies.
Ah, Jason, thank you so for that clip. I do believe I've found everyone's Christmas present...
ReplyDeletehttp://uncyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/All_work_and_no_play_makes_Jack_a_dull_boy
ReplyDeletea very accurate definition
Here in Brazil the translation is almost the same as the original expression, but it rhymes:
ReplyDelete"Só trabalho sem diversão, faz de Jack um bobão." :)