Ray Bradbury is bloody brilliant (writrer of Fahrenheit 451)
- Chuymatt ( @Chuymatt@beehaw.org ) 10•4 months ago
That one made me so depressed as a kid.
Those tears were the soft rains then
- Oka ( @Oka@lemmy.ml ) English5•4 months ago
I was already a depressed kid. But the story hit different. Most kids stories have happy endings, and Ray Bradbury was probably the first author I read that had more thought provoking stories.
- CaptObvious ( @CaptObvious@literature.cafe ) 2•4 months ago
Same here. Bradbury was always a little darker and more horror oriented than I usually liked. Growing up in the 60s and 70s, this one was a little too possible.
- Mossy Feathers (They/Them) ( @MossyFeathers@pawb.social ) 8•4 months ago
I love the animated version (this one is missing English subtitles, but it’s a much higher quality than other versions; here’s one with English subs).
I think the former version is maybe an AI remaster of a recently discovered film reel? Either that or it’s been recolored by hand. I know they found a film reel with There Will Come Soft Rains a few years ago, however iirc the colors were very faded and almost non-existent. Anyway, I think that’s why the colors on the former are different than the latter in some places.
Thanks for that, I’m gonna check that out!
- henfredemars ( @henfredemars@infosec.pub ) English5•4 months ago
I love this short story!
- PinGZ ( @PinGZ@infosec.pub ) 5•4 months ago
Absolutely love Ray Bradbury’s work. I’ve read this a few times and it always hits different. Great his time the “ouch” was this future was sad and lonely in 2026…