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Joey Cramer is David Freeman, a boy living in a picture perfect Florida town in 1978 with his parents and bratty kid brother. However, he finds his life changed when he is knocked out in the forest for a few minutes, or so he thinks. When he returns home, he finds that it is 1986. David has been missing for 8 years, yet David himself has not aged. David's parents are now eight years older, and his bratty kid brother has grown up into a quite decent 16-year-old. David's quest to find out what happened to him will take him to an alien spacecraft run by a computer named Max.
The first half of the film is structured like an eerie mystery as David and the police try to piece together what happened to David. This is perfectly complemented by Alan Silvestri's eerie score. The film loses some of its mystery later on, but it's still highly enjoyable. The spacecraft looks incredible, and the scenes where David gets to fly the spacecraft are really neat. I think though I liked Max better before he assumed his Pee-Wee Herman voice (voiced by Pee-Wee himself).
The ending nicely tied things up. Too bad we don't get to see what becomes of David's crush on the local girl.
Plot spoiler if you read further:
A few minutes into this film, 12-year-old David Freeman (Joey Cramer) is on an
errand to retrieve his 8-year-old brother, Jeff, when he falls into a gulley and is
knocked out. Regaining consciousness, David returns to his house, thinking only a
few minutes have passed, and instead of his parents and brother finds a locked
door and an elderly couple living there.
Taken to the police station, David is identified by computer records as a boy
reported missing eight years before. Despite the fact that he hasn't aged, he's taken
to the Freeman's at a different house nearby, and when he sees his parents
obviously older, he faints. He returns to consciousness again on a gurney on his
way to a hospital bed. A few minutes later, while his parents are called out of the
room by a somber-faced doctor, David is left alone with his brother Jeff -- who is
now 16.
This is ostensibly a Disney movie for kids -- and later on there is a lot of comedic
Disney hijinks -- but the first half hour of the movie, as David and his family deal
with the trauma of his time relocation, are some of the most heart-rending and
chilling sequences I've seen in any film.
Spoiler over.
This movie reminded me of some of the time-relativity sequences in Robert A.
Heinlein's novel, Time for the Stars. The characters are well written and the actors
do an excellent job, particularly in the scenes between Joey Cramer and Matt
Adler, as 16-year-old Jeff. The distraught parents, Cliff de Young and Veronica
Cartwright, are also excellent -- and Howard Hesseman and Sarah Jessica Parker
round out a great supporting cast.
Special kudos are due to Paul Reubens (best known for his character Pee Wee
Herman) who was originally credited under his own name for lending his voice to a
major character in this film, but had his name removed from the credits, replaced
by the pseudonym "Pall Mall," after Reubens was arrested for alleged indecent
exposure committed in a movie theater seat. (I've never understood how Reubens
was convinced to plead "no contest" to the charge, after theater security cameras
showed him in the lobby buying popcorn at the time of the alleged offense.)
Considering that Disney's Hollywood Pictures division released Powder, directed
by a convicted and confessed child molester, Disney should show some backbone
and restore Reubens real name to the credits.
If you can get ahold of this movie, see it -- and maybe Disney will see fit to release
it again -- on DVD, I hope.
Flight of the Navigator is on a level with the Ray Harryhausen movies, if you're familiar with them. They're movies that are clean enough for the whole family, thought provoking if you let them, and just plain entertaining, without being dull, boring tripe!
If like to watch movies over, and over again. And you'ld like to watch them by yourself, or with your family, get this movie. It's an enjoyable break in your day.
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Starting in Chapter 6 (Collecting Data - The Class and the Array) there are several really annoying errors, for example, on page 105 the author uses "for (int i = 0; i < 11; i++)" to iterate thru a 10 element array. In the section below this (Array bounds checking), the author uses exactly the same code and says this will fail. The first code should be "for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++)". These errors are scattered through out the book. Still this is a good book and I would highly recommend it.
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Despite what I've seen in some other reviews I think the material is very logically presented with just the right level of detail and well thought-out examples. Best of all it is an interesting read; this guy is funny. I learned C++ years ago with this book and it still serves as a great reference when I program.
But if you want to qualify as a dummy capable of learning C++..
I'd say you better have done programming before, or maybe you're more intelligent than most people I can think of.
Otherwise you'll be a very confused dummy?
With that aside - WOW!
I've done about 6 years programming in all sorts of "lesser" scripting and languages and now I feel like I'm on my way to - ENLIGHTENMENT! Now, really.. I'm 2/3 throught the book and I say thank you, thank you, thank you (or was that the copy copy copy constructor chapter?).
Ok, maybe 4 stars is nasty but let me try explain.
Jumping from arrays into advanced pointers by presenting a linked list program without much explanation is nasty too!
(I got over that one, but will you the reader?)
On the other hand, if you want to learn concepts and semantics - get this book. Maybe not everything is explained in detail(that's where you could have done programming before).
Also, can a relatively small book (400 pages) really cover that much in a lot of detail?
On the other hand, what is explained is explained very well - to my opinion. And its fun too!
Maybe Mr. Davis does not have a sense of humor that'll reach everybody - but after a truly hectic chapter I find myself laughing my head off. That's where I pick up on the author's own asides - my neighbour?
I'm really scared of what he thinks of me laughing out loudly by myself..
I'm now ready to hack C++ and understand concepts and semantics that i didn't 4 days ago. I'm not scared of C++ any more!!
Maybe you should try it?
Also, Mr. Davis, thanks for the nacho recipe - the microwave is ready!!
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The author does have a pretty good sense of humor (e.g. Texas is an exotic place for ice hockey). However, sometimes the author's word choices may be awkward, repetitive and a little annoying.
If you are looking for a non-technical easy-to-read book about hockey legends this is a 3-star book for you, but don't expect much more from it.
Ok, I'm a girl, so what do I know about hockey? Well, quite a lot, actually.
While it's true that this book is short, quick and quipped, I think it's packed with a wide assortment of interesting points of significance. I'm a self-taught historian who has a great love for the old PCHA. The stories about the Patrick's and how they formed the league went beyond what I've read in many past histories.
And then there's the Bernie Morris story! Come on! I have wondered for years about the status of Bernie Morris and why he seemed to just "disappear off the map." Well, this book solved that little mystery, and I'd never read any of it anywhere before.
I have always chuckled when I read about Link Gaetz, but I'd forgotten all about him. Well, Mr. Duplacey et al answered that little quiz for me as well. And if anyone didn't have a gawfaw when they read about King Clancy's room check, the special life of minor leaguers on the road and on the ice and all those weird trades and escapades and great lines from "Slapshot", well, where's your sense of humor?
OK, not everything's original and spick-span new, but all least all the great quotes we've heard and loved are gathered here in one place.
Hey, I'm a gal who loves hockey and I like to laugh about it too. And I laughed, big time. So do yourself a favor, buy it. So what if you can read it in an hour and a bit. Like, hockey fans have a wide attention span? This is an hour you'll enjoy. I know I did.
GoGirl
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Good points: 1 - includes DJGPP and RHIDE (a compiler and environment) so that you can work on coding right away. 2 - covers classes quite thoroughly, and devotes several chapters to debugging. I can say quite confidently that I can debug my own code properly. 3 - 500 pages of info is bound to benefit you.
Bad points: 1 - The code contains errors. Once you figure out how to work around them (use "cin >> whatever" instead of "cin > whatever") you'll have a lot more success. It -is- frustrating for the novice, however. 2 - There's no real reference in the book. Unlike some titles, there's no decent list of functions, variable types, etc. You'll need to invest in something like that separately. 3 - Most sections are fairly chaotic. Although the author does have a basic pattern to his chapters consisting of "introduction of topic, practical coding, conclusion/summary", the practical coding section is a mishmash of coding and an assortment of unorganized points that the author couldn't put into a chapter.
Overall, some readers may feel confused after having read this book. A complete novice to C++ may still not know when to use a pointer instead of a global variable, and there were sections in the book that were too advanced for the time they were presented (such as bitwise operations). If you're already a programmer fluent in another language, this book might work for you. If you need to review C++ before an exam, this is your book. For complete newbies, however, skip this one.
This book concentrates entirely in the C# OOP aspects and will give you a good foundation on how to use OOP in the .NET world.
I give 4 Stars because A weekend is not enough time to learn it all, although I could Read the book in a weekend but needed more then that to learn and do the examples.
Another good thing is that the lessons/chapters are time based (an average of 30minutes each) and they are very straight and compact.
Note : The other reader comments seem to be from C++ Weekend Crash Course ?:(?
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BTW: the first example is missing a line wndClass.Size = sizeof(WNDCLASSEX); it won't compile without it.
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