MovieChat Forums > Throw Momma from the Train (1987) Discussion > why was Larry using a typewriter?

why was Larry using a typewriter?


In 1987, did writers not use computers yet? Or at the very least, electric typewriters or word processors?

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Some writers(myself included... I'm not published yet however^-^) find it more inspiring to use a typewriter. I don't know much about the times but it's also possible that since he was a writer who hadn't published anything for a number of years that he couldn't afford a computer or even a word processor. It's possible that a typewriter was still a viable option.

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It WAS an electric typewriter.

In 1987 word processors were fairly common but by no means universal. Even so, many writers who started writing on a typewriter would still prefer it, even to this day. (As recently as two years ago, David Sedaris talked about still using a typewriter.) While I'd hate to write anything of length without a word processor, now that I've been using one for 20 years, typing on a typewriter is more ... fun. Tactile. You feel like you're MAKING something.

Some writers still prefer to write in long hand, too, and usually have pretty specific preferences as to the type of paper and pen or pencil.

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There were also many references to Larry's character describing himself as an "artist" rather than a writer (the scene with his agent.) Maybe it was to show how he really preferred the "old school" way of writing.

That ain't no etch-a-sketch. This is one doodle that can't be un-did, homeskillet. ~Juno~

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It was a comic gimmick. Gave him a medium in which he could toss unsuccessful book openings into his overflowing trash can. Illustrating to the audience how severe his writer's block was.

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In the 80's it was common to use typewriters because computers were not what they are today and they were possibly very expensive at the time. I can remember many 80's movies where I saw the characters using typewriters, it was not uncommon.

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Some writers, such as I (who have been minorly published) even use pencil or pen and paper to take down their gems of wisdom. But. . .

In 1987 electric typewriters were the norm, not the exception. As late as February, 1995, I was using an IBM Selectric with a daisy wheel at work.

The typewriter in the movie was what the writers of the movie thought a writer would write on.

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What's wrong with using a typewriter? Even today, some still prefer to use old typewriters.

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As I stated above, it was a photographic gimmick. Imagine Larry on a regular computer just hitting the backspace button over and over. Yeeeeah, that would be funnier. Not that tossing crumpled papers into a trash can is high comedy, but it was better (and further illustrated his frustration) than if he was on a laptop or something.

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1987, and the movie was obviously filmed prior - we were all using electric typewriters. Only a few had personal computers, and it was a pain in the ass to wait for space at the computer lab at school.

So, it wasn't a gimmick, it was just the way things were.

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It would have been really painful to write on a PC in 1987.
Even a highend machine from around 1993 (486 DX2-66) usually lagged behind half a page when I was typing fast.

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Also, he was an unpublished teacher- maybe he couldn't afford the latest alternatives
Don't wake me 'cuz I'm dreamin' of angels on the moon...

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If you're a writer and aren't using a typewriter, I highly recommend it. It provides an Internet-free environment, nothing to distract you while you work.

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You can't delete any of you're written gems on a typewriter.


We are the music makers...we are the dreamer of dreams.Willy Wonka

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"You can't delete any of you're written gems on a typewriter."

You mean 'your'?

I wish YOU had deleted something .. What you are saying here is "You can't delete any of you are written gems on a typewriter."

Does this make any sense to you? Do you like writing nonsense?

In any case, when you use a typewriter, it's more REAL, and the 'not being able to delete' is actually a feature. (Plus, you obviously never heard of 'white-out', so you're embarrassing yourself on two separate levels here.. kind of amazing, considering how short your post is)

It makes you type more carefully, hones your craft, and when you have finished your book, novel, story or whatnot, you have a nice bunch of slightly crumpled paper with dirt, stains, notes, typos, Xs typed over misspelled words and such, and it's a mess.

It's a beautiful mess, it's your real creation, it's your baby, it's something real and tangible, it's unique, it has personality, it's gorgeous.

Text on a computer screen is always going to be just text, it's boring, it's always in order, it's always clean and perfect. It has no personality the same way.

Of course you would have to re-type everything anyway, when you use a typewriter, and this is an added bonus, because it gives you an opportunity and an excuse to review everything you've written and maybe make some improvements and corrections along the way.

The end result will be much better than if you just lazily type it on a modern computer and press CTRL+S and go to sleep and then upload it to your publisher the next morning without even reading it again.

Inspiration is important in creativity, and you have to optimize your circumstances to maximise the possibility of maximum inspiration; some people compose music on real analog synths, some people make sure it's 3 am when they start their work, some people open windows and live near a forest, and so on.

Using a typewriter is a big step towards inspiration.

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There's also the added bonus number two; no possibly annoying / interfering electro-magnetic fields or constant noise that a computer makes (even laptops can be surprisingly noisy on a hot weather).

You also don't need electricity whatsoever, so you can do the typing off-the-grid. You also don't have to worry about battery life, about the computer overheating due to warm weather, about hard drive crashes or failures, about the computer crashing in the middle of writing while you haven't saved for a long time, and so on.

Typewriter also gives you a more intimate experience, you're more closely 'in contact' with what you're doing, because you are directly and mechanically manipulating paper - instead of having the distance, where you type something on a keyboard, and after electric impulses have gone through a thousand steps, something seemingly appears on an 'illusory' screen (pixels aren't REALLY real, you know), because the computer has been constructed to make all this happen, but not because you're directly putting a letter somewhere.

Typing is very close to handwriting - there's a lot to be said about creating pixel art, but hand-drawing is always going to be more direct and intimate, and you can immediately do it anywhere without restrictions, as long as you have pen and paper - you don't have to boot to an operating system or launch a word processor or text editor or find the file you were writing to continue, etc.. you can just immediately start smashing the keyboard - what could be more fun than that? What's more user-friendly than such immediacy?

Obviously I recognize the benefits of word processing and text editing, but having done my own experimentations in typing an interesting story on old eight-bit computers and such, I also realize how much more fun it can be to 'downgrade' to something just for the heck of it. And how much inspiration starts to flow when you give up the conveniences and advancements of modern tech.

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