Sorry. They didn't have the technology to make movies in 1408. :-( And if they could have, they probally would've been unwatchable. You see, in 1408, they did'nt have movies OR movie theatres. What they had was a little more old school. All they had were cave walls and rocks. They would take these rocks and create stories by engraving pictures of actions into the cave walls. The the young kids and others would come into the cave and sit in front of the wall. They would have a narrator (yes, in 1408, sounded like Morgan Freeman or C3P0) and he would start at the first picture and tell them the story as seen on the wall. Then when they came out with pens and paper and the capability of writing a real book for the first time, it all changed! The first book written (in 1408) was called 'Harry Caveman And The Scoceror's Round Stone'. All the cave dwellers gathered around the pile of rocks (this was before fire, so they just set the rocks up and pretended they were warm) and the Reader Of The Book (Richard Dryfess) began reading, for the first time ever, the Harry Caveman & the Scorceror's Round Stone book to all the cave's people. He read and they reacted with great enthusiasum. When he's finished, The Reader Of The Book ask the young caveboy, Tyrranasorris Rex Reed, what he thought of the book. Rex replies, "I thought it was awesome, but not NEAR AS GOOD AS THE CAVE WALL... ;P
2007-07-15 17:09:30
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answer #2
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answered by Army Of Machines (Wi-Semper-Fi)! 7
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