The girl's not playing with a full deck, Giles. She has almost no deck. She has a three.

Buffy ,'Same Time, Same Place'


Buffista Movies 3: Panned and Scanned  

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.


Polter-Cow - Jul 23, 2004 5:34:42 pm PDT #1290 of 10001
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

I watched Tombstone tonight and just loved it. That and Silverado. Neither one seems western to me.

One has that "Mmm, pizza" association and the other has that "Mmm, money" association.


Maysa - Jul 23, 2004 5:51:23 pm PDT #1291 of 10001

Has anyone here seen Two English Girls? I watched that this week (I've been on a Truffaut kick recently) and I think it might be one of the best movies I've seen. It's not as famous as Jules & Jim, but like that movie it's also based on a book by Henri Pierre Roche and it examines a love triangle over a number of years. I actually prefer it to Jules & Jim because in this film all three participants are equally innocent/culpable and there's a heavier, more introspective tone which I liked. It's really beautiful and I recommend it for anyone who likes dark, passionate, and depressing love stories.


Vonnie K - Jul 23, 2004 6:03:24 pm PDT #1292 of 10001
Kiss me, my girl, before I'm sick.

Just came back from seeing Bourne Supremacy. I thought it was excellent, well-made and atmospheric but not in a typical glossy Hollywood way. I was quite taken with Matt Damon's performance (whose acting skill I'd only thought of as so-so before), which was smart, very tightly coiled and internal, giving weight to the moments in which we see a sliver of emotional vulnerability in him.

The movie also contains one of the most gritty and realistic hand-to-hand fight scenes I've seen in recent memories (I was reminded of the holding cell fight scene in Firefly's "Ariel"), and a totally kick-ass car chase through the streets of Moscow.

I also dug Joan Allen's character a lot, despite her scary hair. Allen did a lot with what could have been a rote, colorless character. You know, I sort of want to read a Bourne/Landry fic or two now. Is that very wrong?


Consuela - Jul 23, 2004 8:01:15 pm PDT #1293 of 10001
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Vonnie, I am so going to see that this weekend. Any Bay Area Buffistas up for a Sunday afternoon at the movies?


beekaytee - Jul 23, 2004 8:35:25 pm PDT #1294 of 10001
Compassionately intolerant

One has that "Mmm, pizza" association and the other has that "Mmm, money" association.

::head cocked to the side:: Hm. 'splain?


Strega - Jul 23, 2004 11:37:43 pm PDT #1295 of 10001

So, on Strega's recommendation, I got Them! from the library.

Well, yay! And, er... I don't think that was me. Because I've never seen it. I know about it, but it seems weird that I'd recommend it. Maybe I mentioned it in connection to Planetary?

Matt -- It may or may not help, but in the Donnie Darko commentary, Kelly semi-explains that he didn't expect the storyline he had in mind to be clear to the audience (since he had to cut so much). It was his own explanation, but he seems pretty cool with Lynch-esque theories as being just as valid. Because yeah, when I first heard him talking about, I thought, "How the hell were we supposed to pick that up?"


Sue - Jul 24, 2004 5:39:13 am PDT #1296 of 10001
hip deep in pie

Has anyone here seen Two English Girls? I watched that this week (I've been on a Truffaut kick recently) and I think it might be one of the best movies I've seen. It's not as famous as Jules & Jim, but like that movie it's also based on a book by Henri Pierre Roche and it examines a love triangle over a number of years. I actually prefer it to Jules & Jim because in this film all three participants are equally innocent/culpable and there's a heavier, more introspective tone which I liked. It's really beautiful and I recommend it for anyone who likes dark, passionate, and depressing love stories.

My first question is are you Canadian, because they just showed that on the late movie on CBC on Wednesday. (International Movie Night) I watched an hour of it before I forced myself to go to bed. But it's no definitely on my list of movies to see soon. The CBC seem to be on a Truffault kick for their late movies. In the past few weeks, they've shown, Jules et Jim, Stolen Kisses, and Two English Girls.


Polter-Cow - Jul 24, 2004 6:10:17 am PDT #1297 of 10001
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

::head cocked to the side:: Hm. 'splain?

Um, Tombstone is a frozen pizza and silver is a precious metal.

Well, yay! And, er... I don't think that was me. Because I've never seen it. I know about it, but it seems weird that I'd recommend it.

Oh. D'oh. You recommended It! The Terror from Beyond Space. Oops. It! Them! Who can tell the difference? But anyway, you should see Them! then. But at least that explains why I wondered what kind of crack you were smoking to say that Alien was basically a remake of Them!

I can't wait for this new Donnie Darko now. Hmmm.


Maysa - Jul 24, 2004 6:23:52 am PDT #1298 of 10001

My first question is are you Canadian, because they just showed that on the late movie on CBC on Wednesday. (International Movie Night) I watched an hour of it before I forced myself to go to bed. But it's no definitely on my list of movies to see soon.

No, I'm not Canadian (alas), I just joined Netflix last month.


Lyra Jane - Jul 24, 2004 6:24:41 am PDT #1299 of 10001
Up with the sun

Only Shamylan movie I've seen is Unbreakable, which I actually liked (and seems at odds with the general consensus here.)

I liked Unbreakable; I thought it was an interesting concept and the acting was quite good. And I don't even have the comics geek claim.