Tep will love me, as I saw De-Lovely on her rec and enjoyed it.
Then she'll hate me, as I join P-C and the splendiferous JZ in Magnolia love.
It's going to be hard on her, I fear.
Mal ,'War Stories'
A place to talk about movies--Old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
Tep will love me, as I saw De-Lovely on her rec and enjoyed it.
Then she'll hate me, as I join P-C and the splendiferous JZ in Magnolia love.
It's going to be hard on her, I fear.
The NYT says if Catwoman dies, it'll take African-American actresses' bankability down with it.
[Hmm. My first reading was that they were generalizing about all AA actresses, but on second reading maybe it's just Ms. Berry who'll crash and sink.]
She's the only one with bankability, so yeah, probably her.
It's unfortunate that she, with her limited skill set, is being used generalize for the bankability of black actresses. The movie will fail both because it sucks and she's not bankable. She hasn't been bankable of yet!
Thing is -- who else is there? I think she's a great excuse to say that black women can be bankable, but I agree with the article -- she's pretty much a sex object. Black women have been able to be sexy. That's not news. But she's not even a black Charlize Theron.
In the zero-sum calculations of the movie industry, Ms. Berry's bankability as a star will be judged largely on whether she can "open" "Catwoman," a Warner Brothers film — meaning whether she can make it a financial winner. If it succeeds, it will place her among a rarefied group of top-paid female stars, only a few of them established box office draws, and signify yet another achievement for African-American actors.
This makes it sound like her success would be a landmark for black female actors, but her failure would be her own.
"This movie presented to me a whole new challenge, something I haven't done," she said in an interview. "It allowed me an opportunity to hopefully prove — if I'm really lucky, if the movie god is watching — that a woman, especially a woman of color, can open one of these summer movies."
She's got her Oscar, so now she wants to prove she can succeed as a sex object in a terrible, shallow, exploitive summer movie? Who's she been taking career advice from, Cuba Gooding Jr?
If she makes Snow Bitches next.....
I think I'm having a neurolapse because I keep thinking that Angus Macfadyn is a really good actor.
I thought he was good as Robert the Bruce in the otherwise stinky Braveheart. He's good as Orson Wells in Cradle Will Rock.
Ah, Collateral makes me crazy. Sounds like a good concept, I like watching Mann's movies (he has the best soundtracks), and I really dislike the two stars.
I like Jamie Foxx well enough. I'm excited to see Collateral primarily for Michael Mann's work, more than either of the two stars.
But what I'm really excited to see Jamie Foxx in is Ray. I saw a preview for that at I, Robot and was amazed in just a few seconds by Foxx's channeling of Ray Charles.
I may be the only person in the world who's kind of "meh" on Magnolia. Didn't hate it, didn't love it to itty-bitty pieces. In all honesty, I found it shiny but ultimately forgettable.
Okay, and see, this:
"When you talk about Halle Berry, it's all about her sexuality," said Todd Boyd, a professor of critical studies at the University of Southern California School of Cinema-Television. "That ties into a historical representation of black women as being either a Mammy character or someone like Halle Berry, who is represented as a sexual object."
He added, "Her popularity as of late is curious because of the overriding sexual component that, in my mind, takes attention away from what would normally be conversations about acting skill."
Seems to imply that Halle Berry has acting skills which aren't being discussed. Which, frankly, is not the case.