Imatge de l'autor

Douglas C. Kenney (1946–1980)

Autor/a de Bored of the Rings

6 obres 3,422 Membres 40 Ressenyes

Sobre l'autor

Inclou aquests noms: Douglas C. Kenny, Douglas C. Kenney

Crèdit de la imatge: Doug Kenney

Obres de Douglas C. Kenney

Bored of the Rings (1969) 2,969 exemplars
Caddyshack [1980 film] (1980) — Screenwriter — 402 exemplars
National Lampoon 1964 High School Yearbook Parody (1974) — Editor — 45 exemplars
The Best of National Lampoon, No. 1 (1972) — Editor — 4 exemplars

Etiquetat

Coneixement comú

Nom normalitzat
Kenney, Douglas C.
Nom oficial
Kenney, Douglas Clark Francis
Altres noms
Kenney, Doug
Kenney, Douglas
Data de naixement
1946-12-10
Data de defunció
1980-08-27
Lloc d'enterrament
Newtown Village Cemetery, Newtown, Fairfield County, Connecticut, USA
Gènere
male
Nacionalitat
USA
Lloc de naixement
West Palm Beach, Florida, USA
Lloc de defunció
Hanapepe Valley Lookout, Kauai, Hawaii, USA
Causa de la mort
fall from cliff
Llocs de residència
New York, New York, USA
Los Angeles, California, USA
Educació
Gilmour Academy
Harvard University (BA|1968)
Professions
actor
screenwriter
editor
Organitzacions
National Lampoon (co-founder)
Biografia breu
Writer and Actor. Born in West Palm Beach, Florida. Doug was a student at Harvard University and was a member of the Signet society and editor of the Harvard Lampoon. He co-founded National Lampoon magazine in 1970. Doug edited the magazine and wrote much of its early material. Doug was one of the originating forces of what was to become known during the 1970s as the "new wave" of comedy, a dark, irreverent style of humor. He used it as the basis for the magazine. He was Editor-in-Chief from 1970 to 1972, Senior Editor 1973 to 1974, and Editor from 1975 to 1976. Doug co-wrote Animal House and Caddyshack, two of the highest grossing comedies of all time. He also played the role of "Stork" in Animal House, the nerdy frat brother who leads a marching band, during the parade scene, into a brick wall. Another best-selling classic of his was the cult favorite "Bored of the Rings", the book was a best-seller. Doug and fellow co writers received a nomination from The Writers Guild of America for his National Lampoon's Animal House screenplay. When Caddyshack opened to negative reviews in July 1980, Doug became deeply depressed, he began using increasing amounts of cocaine. Concerned friends took Doug to Hawaii to relax, after all his friends departed and he was once again alone, a friend that was about to travel back to Hawaii to stay again with Doug, got a telephone call stating that Doug had went missing. Doug had fallen from a thirty-foot cliff called the Hanapepe Lookout. Police found his abandoned vehicle the following day, but it was not until three days later that his body was discovered. His death was classified as "accidental" by Kauai police. He was 33 years old.

Membres

Ressenyes

The concept was great, the execution not so much. Maybe partially due to the fact that it was written in the 70's...
 
Marcat
zizabeph | Hi ha 37 ressenyes més | May 7, 2023 |
I believe that when I first encountered this book, it was about the time it was first published, in my mid-teens. At the time, I thought it was marvelously witty. Recently, I was given a copy as a gift on the occasion of the 68th birthday, and so had occasion to re-read it. Interestingly, I did not find it nearly as entertaining as I had remembered.

What I found is that the humor was crude and forced. I was also annoyed the same gags being constantly repeated. The names of places and characters from LOTR were parodied by long-defunct brand-names that sounded similar. The songs or poems from the original source material were especially laden with these, and the occasional bit of song or verse that Tolkien had rendered in one of his constructed languages (i.e., Quenya, Sindarin or the Black Speech of Mordor) were generally just strings of old brand-names. Example: "A Elbereth! Gilthoniel" in Bored of the Rings comes out as "A unicef clearasil". I thought this was quite overdone. It might have been amusing at first, but it went on for 160 pages.

Then there are the endless references to the meals that the adventurers make along the way. "After a hasty meal of frankincense and myrrh", "The company arose and, after a hurried breakfast of yaws and goiters", "an austere breakfast of eggs, waffles, bacon grapefruit, pancakes, hot oatmeal, fresh-squeezed orange juice, and goden cheese blintzes", "a frugal breakfast of loaves and fishes", "after a leisurely meal of apple cheeks and cauliflower ears", and more. It might have gotten a chuckle the first two or three times, but it went on throughout the book, and quickly became tiresome.

While I can't give high marks to this book on its own merits, I do find it interesting to see how my tastes in reading have changed over the years. Just to be clear, I can still appreciate a good parody, but I think that this book fails in that.
… (més)
 
Marcat
Ailurophile | Hi ha 37 ressenyes més | Nov 25, 2022 |
Not what I was expecting. I wanted some funny inside jokes for people who read the books. Instead, it used LOTR to poke fun at other things and made it obscene in the process. It wasn't even that funny, and I found it harder to follow than the original.
 
Marcat
afrozenbookparadise | Hi ha 37 ressenyes més | Apr 22, 2021 |

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Estadístiques

Obres
6
Membres
3,422
Popularitat
#7,440
Valoració
3.1
Ressenyes
40
ISBN
63
Llengües
12

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